Songwriter: Smokey Robinson Ronald White

Producer: Willie Mitchell

I've got sunshine
On a cloudy day
When it get a little cold outside, now baby
I've got the month of May, yeah

Well, I guess that you would say
What in the world make me feel this way?
My girl, you wouldn't believe it but
It's my girl

I've got so much honey, baby
Even the bees envy me
I've got a sweeter song
Than the birds in the trees
Yeah, yeah

Oh, I guess that you would say
What in the world
What in the world
What in the world
Make me feel this way?

My girl, my girl, my girl
I love, I love my girl, my girl

I don't need nobody's money shucks
Fortune or fame, you can have it all, baby
'Cause I got all the riches
In my possession, baby
One man could ever claim

Oh, I guess that you would say
What in the world
What in the world
What in the world
Make me feel this way?

My girl, I love my girl
Ooh, my girl

Al Green

To a greater extent than even his predecessors Sam Cooke and Otis Redding, Al Green (née Albert Greene) embodies soul music’s mix of sacred and secular. He was born to a sharecropping, gospel singing family near Forrest City, Alabama who moved during the Great Migration) of the 1950’s to Grand Rapids, Michigan. He was one of the Seventies' most popular vocalists, selling over 20 million albums and is known today as “the Last of the Great Soul Singers” celebrating age 69 on April 13, 2015.

A silky smooth and lolling falsetto characterizes Green’s unique voice. He received assistance from his contemporary Willie Mitchell to manifest this “new” it contrasted the existing Motown sound which included faster tempos. Green’s gospel-rooted ecstatic cries and moans thus separated him from the herd. Green’s improvisational. His signature songs “Tired of Being Alone” and “Love and Happiness” are rubrics for soulful love narratives. In addition to Willie Mitchell, Green was associated with Mahalia Jackson and the Quiet Elegance act managed by The Temptations.

Green is one of the few singers who began in the church, expanded into popular soul music by severing ties with the church, and then later turned again to singing worship music only in church. In the late-1970’s, he returned to the Baptist church as a preacher. in response to a tragic accident involving his married girlfriend. On the night of October 10, 1974, Mary Woodson White accosted unsuspecting Al Green with boiling grits, severely burning him, before turning Green’s .38 revolver on herself, killing her.

more tracks from the album
From the album