Buddy Holly Maybe Baby Lyrics:
[Humming during intro.]
Maybe, baby, I'll have you.
Maybe, baby, you'll be true.
Maybe, baby, I'll have you for me.
(All for me.)
It's funny, honey, you don't care.
You never listen to my prayer.
Maybe, baby, you will love me someday.
(Love someday.)
Well, you are the one that makes me glad.
And you are the one that makes me sad.
when someday you want me,
(You're the one.)
Well, I'll be there, wait and see.
Maybe, baby, I'll have you.
Maybe, baby, you'll be true.
Maybe, baby, I'll have you for me.
(All for me.)
(Da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da, da, da, da.)
(Da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da, da, da, da.)
(Da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da, da, da, da.)
(Ahh-ahh-ahh.)
Well, you are the one that makes me glad.
And you are the one that makes me sad.
a-when someday you want me,
(You're the one.)
Well, I'll be there, wait and see.
Maybe, baby, I'll have you.
[ Find more Lyrics on http://mp3lyrics.org/y4B ]Maybe, baby, you'll be true.
Maybe, baby, I'll have you for me.
(All for me.)
Maybe, baby, I'll have you for me.
(You for me.)
[MAYBE BABY]
[Written by: Buddy Holly [1] & Norman Petty]
[Performed by [2] : Buddy Holly & the Crickets [3] -1958]
[Appears on: The "Chirping" Crickets (Brunswick-LP)-1957 &
(MCA Expanded-CD)-2004 [4] , The Buddy Holly Story (Coral-LP)-1959,
The Very Best of Buddy Holly (MCA Int'l)-2004 & (Musical Memories)-2006,
The Music of Buddy Holly & the Crickets: The Definitive Story-2005, et al.]
[1] In 1959, with a new and pregnant wife, Holly decided to earn some quick
money by signing on to play in the Winter Dance Party package tour of the
midwest. It was on that tour that Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P. "Big
Bopper" Richardson were killed in a plane crash, on February 3, 1959.]
[2] When Buddy Holly & the Crickets broke through nationally in 1957, they
were marketed by Decca Records under two different subsidiaries, Brunswick
and Coral. Essentially there was no real musical distinction between the
two, except perhaps that the "Crickets" sides had more prominent backup
vocals. The Crickets themselves consisted of Bob Montgomery (guitars &
song-writing), Larry Welborn (upright base) and Jerry Allison (drums &
song-writing) for instrumentation, and the "Picks," as they were known,
doing vocal overdubs for 9 songs on The "Chirping Crickets" album. The
"Picks," John Pickering (tenor), Bill Pickering (tenor) and Bob Lapham
(baritone), were not billed separately until a 1986 compilation.
Unfortunately, the 1978 film, "The Buddy Holly Story," perpetuated myths
by showing the instrumental Crickets singing. The albums The "Chirping"
Crickets (1957) and the self-titled album, Buddy Holly (1958), were the
only new albums featuring Holly to be released during his lifetime. Every
subsequent album was an archival or posthumous collection.]
[3] Covered by: Billy Fury, Bobby Vee, Connie Francis Conway Twitty,
Dave Berry, Don McClean, The Hollies, Jackie DeShannon, Jimmy Gilmer
& the Fireballs, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, The Outsiders,
Skeeter Davis, Waylon Jennings, et al.]
[4] Transcribed from the track on this album.]
Lyrics: Maybe Baby, Buddy Holly [end]