Bobby Powell lyrics
Artist · 702 listeners per month
Artist's albums
The Bells
1971 · single
Into My Own Thing / Love Man
1971 · single
Peace Begins Within
1971 · single
The Bells
1985 · single
Spread Your Love
1984 · album
C. C. Rider
1981 · single
Cry to Me / There is Something in a Man
1970 · single
Have a Heart / They Don't Know
1970 · single
The Power Of Powell - [The Dave Cash Collection]
2011 · album
Let Me Love You
2010 · album
I Care / Have a Good Time
1966 · single
I'm Gonna Leave You / Done Got Over
1966 · single
Our Love
1967 · single
Just a Matter of Time / Question
1967 · single
Stay in the Bed
1967 · single
Why (Am I Treated so Bad) / Thank You
1967 · single
Funky Broadway '69
1969 · single
That Little Girl of Mine
1965 · single
What Are You Trying to Do to Me / Red Sails
1965 · single
Into My Own Thing
1966 · album
The Best of Bobby Powell - There is Something in a Man
1966 · compilation
I'm Gonna Leave You
1966 · single
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Biography
Blind pianist/singer Bobby Powell -- born in Baton Rouge in 1941 -- started out as a gospel singer in the 1950s. By the outset of the 1960s, however, he'd switched to singing R&B and was signed to Whit Records, where he succeeded right out of the box with "What Are You Trying to Do to Me" b/w "Red Sails in the Sunset" -- the latter didn't chart nationally but was good and popular enough locally to get picked up by Jewel Records for national distribution. He did even better with his second single, a version of "C.C. Rider" b/w "That Little Girl of Mine," which topped the national R&B charts in 1965. Powell's third record, "Do Something for Yourself" b/w "It's Getting Late in the Evening," made it to number 21 on the charts the following year, and in 1967 he once again charted a single with "I'm Gonna Leave You." That marked the end of Powell's string of successes, however, although he still released two singles a year, brushed the charts once more at the end of the decade, and had a number 14 hit in 1974 with "The Bells." During this same period, Powell also cut an LP for Excello and later issued a handful of more singles. Finally, in the 1980s, he gave up R&B and soul music and returned to where he started out, singing gospel music. In 2002, WestSide Records released a compilation of Powell's Whit and Jewel singles. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi