Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
The last track on Chuck Berry’s second studio album, One Dozen Berrys (1958). Besides a few famous rockers (“Rock and Roll Music,” “Sweet Little Sixteen”, “Reelin' and Rockin'”) the album was true to its title in featuring different sides of Berry the consummate musician: Chicago-style blues, a somb...
[Verse 1]
When I see those big brown eyes is when I take my cue
It don't take me but a few minutes to get a message through
I talked to you, and you talked to me and we talked to one another
[Chorus]
It don't take us but a few minutes to understand each other
[Verse 2]
If I was twenty-three years old and you were twenty-two
I bet no one would try to run our lives the way they do
We take a chance and try romance, be true to one another
[Chorus]
It don't take us but a few minutes, when we want each other
[Verse 3]
If I was in San Diego and you were in Portland, Maine
I'd fly to you lock, stock and bone in hail and pouring rain
Over the mountains, through the valleys, coming home to each other
[Chorus]
It don't take us but a few minutes to get to one another
[Verse 4]
You would write a love song and play on my guitar
And if you should, in Hollywood, become a movie star
Would you let your heart forget, I loved you and you only
It don't take but a few minutes, when you're feeling lonely
It Don’t Take But a Few Minutes was written by Chuck Berry.
It Don’t Take But a Few Minutes was produced by Phil Chess & Leonard Chess.