Lobo lyrics
Artist · 1 553 939 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Calumet
1973 · album
Wonderful, Wonderful
1997 · album
Best Of Lobo
1996 · album
I'd Love You To Want Me
1996 · album
The Best Of Lobo
1993 · compilation
Greatest Hits
1990 · compilation
If You Could Be Me
2023 · single
Things We Said Today
2023 · single
How Can I Tell Her (Acoustic)
2023 · single
When You Say Nothing At All (Acoustic)
2023 · single
Me and You and a Dog Named Boo (Acoustic)
2023 · single
All Time Great Performances
2022 · album
Let Me Leave You
2022 · album
That Shows You What I Know
2022 · album
Why is it Me
2022 · album
Late Christmas Eve
2021 · single
Faithful
2021 · album
If I Could Do It Over The Acoustic Hits
2021 · album
Timeless The Very Best
2021 · album
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
2021 · EP
A Cowboy Afraid Of Horses
1975 · album
Just A Singer
1975 · album
Me and You and a Dog Named Boo
2014 · single
All Time Greatest Performances
2014 · album
Lobo - His Very Best
2008 · single
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Biography
Best remembered for soft-rock perennials like "Me and You and a Dog Named Boo" and "I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo was the alias of singer/songwriter Roland Kent LaVoie, born July 31, 1943 in Tallahassee, FL. At 17 he joined the Rumors, whose ranks also included future luminaries like country-rock pioneer Gram Parsons, country-pop cut-up Jim Stafford, and noted drummer Jon Corneal. From there LaVoie attended the University of South Florida, joining the Sugar Beats and making his recorded debut on their 1964 single "What Am I Doing Here?" Although the group proved short-lived, it inaugurated a lengthy collaboration between LaVoie and bandmate Phil Gernhard, who would later produce all of Lobo's hits; together they also helmed the Jim Stafford favorites "Spiders & Snakes" and "Wildwood Weed." Stints in the Little-Known Uglies and Me & the Other Guys followed before LaVoie issued his debut solo single, "Happy Days in New York City," in 1969. Two years later, he recorded "Me and You and a Dog Named Boo"; sensing the song's hit potential -- but also wary of succumbing to one-hit-wonder novelty status -- he adopted the Lobo moniker, and after the single cracked the Top Five in the spring of 1971, many assumed the record was the product of a group and not a solo act. The album Introducing Lobo also yielded the minor hits "I'm the Only One" and "California Kid." Whatever his original intentions, LaVoie maintained the Lobo alias for the follow-up, 1972's Of a Simple Man, and the gambit worked; the album scored his biggest chart hit, "I'd Love You to Want Me," as well as another Top Ten smash, "Don't Expect Me to Be Your Friend." With 1973's Calumet, Lobo earned three more Top 40 hits: "It Sure Took a Long, Long Time," "How Can I Tell Her," and "Standing at the End of the Line." However, outside of "Don't Tell Me Goodnight" from the 1975 LP A Cowboy Afraid of Horses, LaVoie's commercial momentum dissipated as the decade continued, and after notching a number 23 hit in 1979 with "Where Were You When I Was Falling in Love," his chart run was over. After a short stay at Elektra, in 1981 he formed his own label, Lobo Records (later rechristened Evergreen), releasing a series of little-noticed singles before retiring from performing in 1985. Lobo returned to duty in 1989 with the Taiwanese release Am I Going Crazy; his popularity in the Far East is still strong. In 1995 he signed to the Singapore-based Pony Canyon imprint for a number of new LPs, including Asian Moon, Sometimes, and You Must Remember This. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi