Joan Weber (born 12 December 1935 in Paulsboro, New Jersey, USA - 13 May 19… Read Full Bio ↴Joan Weber (born 12 December 1935 in Paulsboro, New Jersey, USA - 13 May 1981) was an American popular music singer, a one-hit-wonder with "Let Me Go, Lover!".
Weber married to a young bandleader. She was pregnant in 1954 when she was introduced to Eddie Joy, a manager, who in turn introduced her to Charles Randolph Grean, an A&R worker for RCA and Dot Records in New York.
Grean gave a demo of Weber's singing a song called "Marionette" to Mitch Miller, the head of A&R at Columbia Records. Miller took a song entitled "Let Me Go, Devil" and had it rewritten as "Let Me Go, Lover!" for Weber, who recorded it on the Columbia label. The song was performed on the television show, Studio One and caught the public's fancy, reaching #1 in the United States and #16 in the United Kingdom in 1955.
At the time of the song's biggest success, however, she gave birth to a baby daughter and was unable to promote her career. In 1957 another single "Gone" was released. Consequently the song was the only recording of hers to chart, and she was dropped from Columbia's roster.
Weber died of heart failure at a mental institution in Ancora, New Jersey, aged 45.
Weber married to a young bandleader. She was pregnant in 1954 when she was introduced to Eddie Joy, a manager, who in turn introduced her to Charles Randolph Grean, an A&R worker for RCA and Dot Records in New York.
Grean gave a demo of Weber's singing a song called "Marionette" to Mitch Miller, the head of A&R at Columbia Records. Miller took a song entitled "Let Me Go, Devil" and had it rewritten as "Let Me Go, Lover!" for Weber, who recorded it on the Columbia label. The song was performed on the television show, Studio One and caught the public's fancy, reaching #1 in the United States and #16 in the United Kingdom in 1955.
At the time of the song's biggest success, however, she gave birth to a baby daughter and was unable to promote her career. In 1957 another single "Gone" was released. Consequently the song was the only recording of hers to chart, and she was dropped from Columbia's roster.
Weber died of heart failure at a mental institution in Ancora, New Jersey, aged 45.
Joan Weber
Joan Weber Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by Joan Weber:
Le Me Go Lover! (Go . . . go . . . go) Oh, let…
Let Me Go Lover (Go, go, go) Oh, let me go, let me go, let…
Let Me Go Lover ! (Go . . . go . . . go) Oh, let…
Let Me Go Lover! (Go, go, go) Oh, let me go, let me go, let…
Let my go lover (Go . . . go . . . go) Oh, let…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@user-vm4gv3xv6e
잘 들었습니다.
@Maverick4023
Love this song. Found out she died in a mental hospital in the 80s. So sad. I've had a lot of my life in mental hospitals. I hope this great singer is at peace now
@robertstalvey7509
My late Mother used to play this and tell me the story behind it...ALWAYS reminds me of her when I play it...Thanks Mom.
@Johnny53kgb-nsa
My late Uncle and Aunt told me I use to sing along on the radio to this beautiful song when I was very little. Pretty song. Thank you, John G.
@jbarrett7200
Beautiful voice, beautiful song!
@RobertSilvestri86
Priceless. You are a Saint, Bob.
@the45prof98
Not quite, but thanks! :-)
@Bigtooly
im listening to 100 greatest hits of the 1950's this is a stand out, performance
@plunkervillerr1529
It`s refreshing to hear a real singing voice.
@paulmoss4402
ok, she's right on the verge of taking this well over the top. Bravo. lol