I Do Love You - Billy Stewart

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I Do Love You Lyrics

(I do love you)
Ooh-ooh

(I do love you)
(Do, do, do-do-do)
(Yes I do, now)
I do love you
(Do, do, do-do-do)
Yes, I do, now
(I do love you)

Oh, I love-a you so-a right now
(Ooo-hoo)
My-my, my bab-bay
Yeah, yeah, yeah!

Little darlin', I said
I love-a you so right now
Never, never, gonna let
Gonna let, gonna let you go
Not at all

Pretty little baby, I said
I want you to try to understand
(Hoo-ooo-hoo)
A-that I, a-that I, a-that I, want to
Be-eee, be-eee, de-de-de

(Hoo-ooo-hoo)
(Your lovin' man, girl)
(Yes, I do girl)

Now baby
Love-a-me, so-whoa
I don't want you, you to go
No, no, no-no-no
Why don't you listen to me?


I'll take you all-a my kisses
(Deep in love)

(I do love you)
All! my love
(Woo-ooo-hoo)
I pray for your love
Would-a come to me
(I do love you)
Oh, someday

Because, I love you so bad, now
(Woo-ooo-hoo)
It's about to drive-a me mad, girl
(Yes, I do now)

I said
(I said, I do love you)
(Woo-hoo-hoo-hoo)

(I do love you)
(Doo-doo-doo-doo)

For-ev'r
I'll love you
(I do love you)

And a dream true
(Do-hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo)

FADES-

My pretty bab-bay, yeah
Love! (I really love you)
I love-a-you, love-a-you, so a-right now.

~

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Billy Stewart (March 24, 1937 – January 17, 1970) was an American musical artist, with a highly distinctive scat-singing style, who enjoyed popularity in the early 1960s.

Billy Stewart began singing publicly with his mother's group, the Stewart Gospel Singers, as a teenager. He made the transition to secular music by filling in occasionally for the Rainbows, a D.C. area vocal group led by future soul star Don Covay. It was also through the Rainbows that Stewart met another aspiring singer, a very young Marvin Gaye. Seminal rock and roller Bo Diddley has been credited with discovering Stewart playing piano in Washington, D.C. in 1956 and inviting him to be one of his backup musicians. This led to a recording contract with Bo Diddley's label, Chess Records, and Bo Diddley played guitar on Stewart's 1956 recording of "Billy's Blues". Stewart then moved to Okeh Records and recorded "Billy's Heartache" backed by the Marquees, another D.C. area group which was now featuring Marvin Gaye.

Back at Chess in the early 1960s, Stewart began working with A&R man Billy Davis. He cut a song called "Fat Boy". Showing additional promise with his recordings of "Reap What You Sow" and "Strange Feeling", major chart success was not far away. Stewart hit both the pop and R&B charts big in 1965 with the songs, “I Do Love You” and “Sitting in the Park.” His improvisational technique of doubling-up, scatting his words and trilling his lips made his style unique in the 1960s.

In 1966, wishing to appeal to a wider audience, Stewart recorded the LP "Billy Stewart Teaches Old Standards New Tricks" in 1966. The first single released from that album was Billy's radical stand-out interpretation of the George Gershwin classic "Summertime", a top ten hit on both the pop and R&B charts in 1966. The follow-up single was Billy's remake of the Doris Day hit "Secret Love", which just missed the top ten on the R&B chart.

While Stewart continued to record throughout the remainder of the 1960s, his weight problem worsened and he developed diabetes. He also suffered minor injuries in a motorcycle accident in 1969. His life was tragically cut short on January 17, 1970, just 2 months prior to his 33rd birthday, when the car he was driving plunged into the Neuse River in North Carolina, killing him and three members of his band.

Billy Stewart was inducted into the Washington Area Music Association Hall of Fame in 1982. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Billy Stewart