This is not to be confused with the
Southern gospel song written by W.F. & Marjorie Crumley.
The first recordings of "Somebody Loves Me" were a number of popular versions in 1924 and 1925 by
Paul Whiteman,
Ray Miller,
Marion Harris and
Cliff Edwards (aka Ukulele Ike) with the Whiteman version being top-rated.[1]
The Four Lads recording
One of the later better-known versions was by
The Four Lads. This recording was made on August 18, 1952, and released by
Columbia Records as catalog number 39865. It first reached the
Billboard magazine charts on October 18, 1952. It peaked at #22 on the charts.[2]
Bing Crosby - rec. June 14, 1939 - released as Brunswick 02807 in the UK, matrix DLA 1777.[4] A later version was included in his album Some Fine Old Chestnuts (1953).
This is not to be confused with the
Southern gospel song written by W.F. & Marjorie Crumley.
The first recordings of "Somebody Loves Me" were a number of popular versions in 1924 and 1925 by
Paul Whiteman,
Ray Miller,
Marion Harris and
Cliff Edwards (aka Ukulele Ike) with the Whiteman version being top-rated.[1]
The Four Lads recording
One of the later better-known versions was by
The Four Lads. This recording was made on August 18, 1952, and released by
Columbia Records as catalog number 39865. It first reached the
Billboard magazine charts on October 18, 1952. It peaked at #22 on the charts.[2]
Bing Crosby - rec. June 14, 1939 - released as Brunswick 02807 in the UK, matrix DLA 1777.[4] A later version was included in his album Some Fine Old Chestnuts (1953).