In Real Life - Randy Crawford

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In Real Life Lyrics

People say one thing
Then they'll do another
In real life
They'll break it to the heart
Of an innocent lover
Now and then
No big surprise
Happens all the time
In real life

There you go
Doesn't he need me?
How can he need me?
Was he ever really there

Feel so cold
Ooh what a shame now
There's no one to blame now
It's the world that is unfair

In real life
People say one thing
Then they'll do another
In real life
They'll break it to the heart
Of an innocent lover
Now and then
No big surprise
Happens all the time
In real life

Why can't I learn my lesson
Must be a little bit slow
I guess I'll always be
The first to cry
But last to know

In real life
People say one thing
Then they'll do another
In real life
They'll break it to the heart
Of an innocent lover
Now and then (now and then)
No big surprise
Happens all they time
In real life

(Repeat until fade)

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Randy Crawford (born Veronica Crawford, February 18, 1952, in Macon, Georgia, USA), is a jazz and R&B singer.

Crawford first polished her craft at club gigs from Cincinnati to St. Tropez, but made her name in mid 1970s in New York, where she sang with jazzmen George Benson on his album "Big Man" 1975) and Cannonball Adderley.

She then led Jazz veterans The Crusaders on the transatlantic big hit "Street Life" (1979). Her follow up solo efforts included "'One Day I'll Fly Away" (1980, Grand Prize for Tokyo International Music Festival); "You Might Need Somebody" (1981); and "Rainy Night In Georgia" (1981); which all became soul standards. Secret Combination (1981) stayed on the Billboard album chart for 60 weeks, after which her profile dipped, despite a return to the Top 10 with "Almaz" in (1986).

Naked And True (1995) brought Crawford back to her roots: it included Benson's "Give Me The Night", and confirmed her soul heritage by featuring Funkadelicists Bootsy Collins, Bernie Worrell and The Fred Wesley Horns. But she enjoyed her highest profile of the decade when rising starlet Shola Ama had a worldwide hit with a cover of "You Might Need Somebody" in 1997.

She still continues to make great R&B hits and performs on various Jazz Festivals around the world. 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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Randy Crawford