Stranger & Patsy

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
When I Call Your Name 03:14 Tools
Come Back 02:59 Tools
Down By the Train Line 02:45 Tools
Let's Go To The Party 02:45 Tools
When You Call My Name 03:14 Tools
Yeah Yeah Baby 02:56 Tools
The Word Is Wind 02:38 Tools
down the train line 02:38 Tools
Tell It To Me 02:56 Tools
Hey Hey Baby 03:02 Tools
Hog In A Cocoa 03:02 Tools
Hog In Cocoa 02:18 Tools
When I Call Your Name - Original 02:18 Tools
We Two Happy People 03:05 Tools
Your Photograph 03:06 Tools
Yea Yea Yea Baby 02:58 Tools
Hey, Hey Baby 03:04 Tools
Tonight 02:17 Tools
Give Me The Right 03:15 Tools
'Til My Dying Day 02:40 Tools
Word Is Wind 02:42 Tools
Don't Want To Be Hurt 03:15 Tools
Miss Dreamer 02:27 Tools
Satisfy My Love 02:38 Tools
Tom, Dick and Harry 02:36 Tools
Hold Me 02:18 Tools
Why did you 02:18 Tools
When I Call 02:18 Tools
My Love 02:56 Tools
Do You Remember 02:56 Tools
When I Call Your Name - Stanger & Patsy 02:56 Tools
16.Come back. 03:00 Tools
Yea Yea Yea Baby - Original 03:00 Tools
When I Realize 03:16 Tools
Certify My Love 03:00 Tools
Stranger & Patsy / When I Call Your Name 03:00 Tools
Tom, Dick & Harry 03:00 Tools
Most Of All 03:00 Tools
Down The Train Line (Stranger & Patsy) 03:00 Tools
When I Call Your Name - Original - Stranger & Patsy 03:00 Tools
Folk Song 02:52 Tools
Take My Heart 03:00 Tools
When You Call My Name y 03:16 Tools
Hurt By You 03:16 Tools
Hog In A Cocoa - Original 03:16 Tools
When You Call My Name 03:16 Tools
Oh How I Need You 03:16 Tools
You Call My Name 03:16 Tools
Yeah, Yeah, Baby 03:16 Tools
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Stranger Cole was born Wilburn Theodore Cole in 1945 in Kingston, Jamaica, receiving the nickname "Stranger" because he resembled no one else in his family. Cole began his recording career with producer Duke Reid, scoring a hit with his 1962 debut, "Rough & Tough," a full-tilt ska number with a wild harmonica solo. His Louis Jordan revival song, "Run Joe," was a hit in 1965, and featured members of the Techniques on harmony vocals. Stranger frequently used duet partners, most notably Millicent "Patsy" Todd and Ken Boothe, and later in his career, Gladstone Anderson (their version of "Just Like a River" is one of Cole's finest songs), stemming from an apparent shyness in the studio, but Cole developed into a soulful vocalist, and his songs radiate a kid of joyful personality that is rare in most reggae. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.