This Crazy Love

"This Crazy Love" is a song written by Roger Murrah and James Dean Hicks, and recorded by American country music group The Oak Ridge Boys. It was released in June 1987 as the second single from the album Where the Fast Lane Ends. The song was The Oak Ridge Boys' fifteenth number one on the country chart. The single went to number one for one week and spent a total of fifteen weeks on the country chart.[1] It was released following the departure of William Lee Golden in March 1987.

"This Crazy Love"
Single by The Oak Ridge Boys
from the album Where the Fast Lane Ends
B-side"Where the Fast Lane Ends"
ReleasedJune 13, 1987
GenreCountry
Length3:05
LabelMCA
Songwriter(s)Roger Murrah, James Dean Hicks
Producer(s)Jimmy Bowen
The Oak Ridge Boys singles chronology
"It Takes a Little Rain (To Make Love Grow)"
(1987)
"This Crazy Love"
(1987)
"Time In"
(1987)

Charts

Chart (1987) Peak
position
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[2] 1
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 2
gollark: The alternative to having it be a GPS server thing would be per-dimension "dimservers" or something providing the dimension name (and possibly server name and metadata), which could work too I guess.]
gollark: The main problem I envision is that I haven't worked out a standard for dimension naming, so it just uses the one it receives the most fixes containing, which can be basically anything the GPS servers want, and that it won't function reliably without a large amount of dimension-enabled GPS servers.
gollark: I've patched dimension support into the GPS libraries in potatOS and my trilaterating GPS server. Would people be interested in dimension support in GPS and/or should I PR it into CC: Tweaked?
gollark: `shell.exit()`
gollark: PotatOS actually had termination completely broken for... probably a few months... and somehow I didn't notice for ages and neither did anyone else.

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 252.
  2. "The Oak Ridge Boys Chart History (Hot Country Songs)". Billboard.
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