
#WHO SINGS FILL ME UP BUTTERCUP SONG FULL# #Fill me up buttercup chords and lyrics free. #Fill me up buttercup chords and lyrics freeĮlectrocution is jarring and all consuming, you cant think about anything else while you're being electrified, and he wants to electrify his heart. Intro C E F G C E7 F G Chorus C E7 Why do you build me up (build me up) Buttercup, baby F G Just to let me down (let me down) and mess me around C E7 And then worst of all (worst of all) you never call, baby F G When you say you will (say you will) but I love you still C C7 I need you (I need you) more than anyone, darlin.
FILL ME UP BUTTERCUP THE FOUNDATIONS RELEASE DATE FREE
Free Interactive Chords for Chloe Moriondo - Build Me Up Buttercup (Lyrics) are: C F F G Fm B D - Guitar, Piano & Ukulele Transpose & MIDI 'Life is one grand sweet song so start the music' Ronald Reagan. Nothing about being electrified is comfortable, and neither is being lost in the thicket of unrequited love. #WHO SINGS FILL ME UP BUTTERCUP SONG FREE#Īnd theres something about that feeling that just levels you, really cuts you down to size.Įlectrify my freedom, and if I cant break free from you, please electrify my heart. On this page, hear how Waterloo by ABBA sounds like The Foundations: Build Me Up Buttercup Sounds. Of all places, in all the times, they just happen to be here, now.
Browse 1000s of songs that sound like other songs. Your stomach drops, with the oh so visceral, pit in my stomach feeling. (Chorus): Why do you build me up (build me up), buttercup baby. You begin to get lost in a crowd, and you just so happen to catch a glimpse of your ex. Sing this song with Soon and Very Soon (2x first verse, then 2 AG versus, then 2x first.
#WHO SINGS FILL ME UP BUTTERCUP SONG FREE#. #WHO SINGS FILL ME UP BUTTERCUP SONG FULL#. The absence of original release date information (except for the year of issue) for each track is unfortunate, however, and the annotation is a bit disappointing - on most of these Castle/Sanctuary vault raids of the Pye vaults, there's almost too much information, but here there's too little. Most admirers of the group will be content with a single-disc greatest-hits collection, but for more serious fans this roundup is a valuable service, and the live album - promised for reissue on CD in the late '90s - comes off better here and more credible than most of us remember it. For those inclined to dig this deep, there are indications of unusual and interestingly different dimensions to the group on some of the relatively infrequent original compositions, like the ominous psychedelic-influenced "New Direction," Curtis' Sam Cooke-like "Tomorrow," Colin Young's funky "Give Me Love," and the mighty progressive funk of the instrumental workouts "In the Beginning" and "Where the Fire Burns." Pat Burke's "A Walk Through the Trees," moving the latter's tenor sax into a rare center-stage spot, is also worth hearing, and this group's version of "That Same Old Feeling" (later a hit for their Pye labelmates Pickettywitch) is also worth hearing, if only for the relative prominence of Alan Warner's chiming rhythm guitar. Too many of the other songs have lesser echoes of those two hits, which may be unsurprising given that so many of their recordings were written by the Tony Macaulay- John MacLeod team who wrote "Baby Now That I've Found You" ( Macaulay co-wrote "Build Me Up Buttercup" too, though with Mike d'Abo, not MacLeod). But it's those one or two big hits - in their case, "Baby Now That I've Found You" and "Build Me Up Buttercup" - that are easily the best items here. At their best, the Foundations credibly emulated horn-backed American vocal group soul, often mixed with mainstream British pop influences, flecked with a hint of ska/bluebeat and Georgie Fame here and there. That means there's not only everything from their singles and albums (including the whole of the late-'60s live LP Rockin' the Foundations), but also five solo tracks (most or all of them from the early '70s) recorded by original Foundations lead singer Clem Curtis the mid-'70s single by the New Foundations, led by Curtis and an unnecessary 12" 1989 remix of "Baby Now That I've Found You." Like many such vault-cleaning anthologies of bands with one or two big hits, though, it's musically erratic. Whoever thought the day would come when the Foundations would be honored with a three-CD set? Now that it's found us, though, the job's certainly been done with admirable completeness, the 60 songs including everything they did for Pye - a period that covers virtually everything of interest the band recorded, mostly dating from 1967-1970.