Just Snap Your Fingers - Marshall Crenshaw

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Just Snap Your Fingers Lyrics

And in the heat of a heart
I'll be right where you want me
We're each other's counterpart

You can count on my love
Until the ultimate end
Snap your fingers and I'll come running
It's your world I'm living in

Out to the distant edge
And back again we've been
There's something in your kiss
That keeps me hanging on
Through thick and thin

On a crowded sidewalk
Or in a room with a view
Anyplace is paradise when I'm with you
Elvis sang it and it's true

Six o'clock in the morning
The first gray light was creeping in
I was half awake and half dreaming
Remembering when

We were halfway around the world
Running down the street in the rain
Under a ladder or two
They almost didn't let us on that train

You can't count on my love
Until the ultimate end
Snap your fingers I'll come running
It's your world I'm living in

With you I'm hanging on
Through thick and thin

Six o'clock in the morning
The first gray light's creeping in
I'm half awake and half dreaming
Remembering again

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Marshall Crenshaw (born November 11, 1953 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American singer, songwriter and guitarist. He grew up in the suburb of Berkley. Crenshaw began playing guitar at age 10 and got his first break playing John Lennon in the off-Broadway company of a musical, Beatlemania. While in New York, he recorded a single for Alan Betrock's Shake Records, Something's Gonna Happen, after which he was signed to Warner Bros. Records. Robert Gordon took Someday, Someway to #76 in 1981, and Crenshaw's version made #36 the next year.

His first album, Marshall Crenshaw, was acclaimed as a pop masterpiece upon release, proving Crenshaw a first-rate songwriter, singer and guitarist. His second album, Field Day, sported a somewhat heavier sound which displeased some listeners, but Field Day is regarded by many critics as Crenshaw's best album, and one of the classic power pop statements, although Crenshaw's work, like Alex Chilton's, transcends the genre. "Some of the stuff I've done you could call power pop," he told an interviewer. "But the term does have sort of a dodgy connotation."

Although Marshall Crenshaw has never sold enormous numbers of records, he enjoys a reputation as one of the finest songwriters of the era, with roots in classic soul music, British Invasion songcraft, Burt Bacharach and Buddy Holly -- to whom Crenshaw was often compared in the early days of his career, and whom he portrayed in the 1987 film La Bamba. In 1989 he compiled a collection of Capitol Records country performers of the '50s and '60s called Hillbilly Music...Thank God, Vol. 1, which was extremely well-received. In 1993 he made an appearance in the cult TV show The Adventures of Pete and Pete, in the role of a guitar-playing meter reader. In 1994 he published a book, Hollywood Rock: A Guide to Rock 'n' Roll in the Movies. He continues to record, and in 1999 released the critically acclaimed #447.

Crenshaw has recently been playing guitar with the reunited members of the MC5. 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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Marshall Crenshaw