A Foggy Day

George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin

I was a stranger in the city
Out of town were the people I knew
I had that feeling of self pity
What to do, what to do, what to do
The outlook was decidedly blue

But as I walked through the foggy streets alone
It turned out to be the luckiest day I've known

A foggy day, in London town
Had me low and had me down
I viewed the morning, with alarm
The British museum, had lost its charm

How long I wondered
Could this thing last
But the age of miracles, hadn't past
Yes, for suddenly, I saw you there
And through the foggy London town
The sun was shining everywhere

A foggy day, in London town
Had me low and it had me down
I viewed the morning, with alarm
The British museum, had lost its charm

How long, how long I wondered
Could this thing last
But the age of miracles, hadn't past
For suddenly, I saw you there
And through foggy London town
The sun was shining everywhere

How long, I wondered
Could this thing last
But the age of miracles, hadn't past
For suddenly, I saw you there
And through foggy London town
The sun was shining everywhere

Trivia about the song A Foggy Day by Oscar Peterson

On which albums was the song “A Foggy Day” released by Oscar Peterson?
Oscar Peterson released the song on the albums “A Jazz Portrait of Frank Sinatra” in 1959, “Oscar Peterson Plays the George Gershwin Songbook” in 1961, “The Oscar Peterson Trio Swing the Great Standards” in 1965, “Tenderly” in 2002, “The Canadian Giant” in 2003, “Jazz Manifesto” in 2007, “Complete Jazz Series 1952 Vol. 2” in 2009, and “The Jazz Soul of Oscar Peterson / Plays the Duke Ellington Songbook / Plays the George Gershwin Songbook / Plays the Harold Arlen” in 2013.
Who composed the song “A Foggy Day” by Oscar Peterson?
The song “A Foggy Day” by Oscar Peterson was composed by George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin.

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