You're nobody til Somebody loves you Nobody til somebody cares. Find yourself Somebody to love
Lemonade stands everywhere Crackerjack bands Just fill the air And there you are Happy landing on A chocolate bar. See the sugar bowl Do a tootsie roll With the big bad Devils food cake. If you eat too much Brrr brrrr You'll wake up With a tummy ache. On the good ship lollipop It's a night trip Into bed you hop And dream away On the good ship lollipop. Chocolate bars Lemon drops And chewing gum. And let's see now Deviled food cake Oh, boy. See the sugar bowl Do a brrr brr roll With a big bad Devil food cake. If you eat too much Brrr brrrr You'll wake up With a tummy ache
com has an audio clip of "You're Nobody 'Till Somebody Loves You" by Dean Martin on the album listed below.
You're nobody till somebody cares. Ты никто, пока к тебе равнодушны. You may be a king, you may possess the whole world and its gold. Ты можешь быть королём, ты можешь владеть миром и его золотом, But gold won't bring you happiness when you're gettin' old. Но золото не принесёт тебе счастья, когда ты начнёшь стареть. Это столь же незыблемо, как звезды над головой.
You're nobody 'til somebody wants you dead Yeah, you're nobody 'til somebody wants you dead And the list it grows and grows and grows and grows And gro-o-o-o-ows Until it's everyone you've ever-. Never celebrate 'til after the meal Even when you think that you closed the deal Cause when the bill comes and they all look perplexed You didn't sell it you just bought the check
Dean Martin brought "You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You" to the Top 40 in 1964, and it became one of his signature songs. It was written 20 years earlier by Russ Morgan – a bandleader and popular radio host who first released the tune in 1945 with his orchestra – Larry Stock ("Blueberry Hill") and James Cavanaugh ("Christmas In Killarney"). The song insists you haven't lived until you've loved – or been loved by someone else. This was Martin's third hit on the Easy Listening chart. While Russ Morgan was the first to release the song, which peaked at on the pop chart in 1946, Nat King Cole was actually the first to record it on May 19, 1945. Cole didn't release his rendition, however, until 1966 when it was included on his compilation album The Vintage Years. Frankie Vaughan's 1967 cover (the B-side to "There Must Be A Way") hit in the UK.