(When You Feel Like You're in Love) Don't Just Stand There

1952 single by Carl Smith From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"(When You Feel Like You're in Love) Don't Just Stand There" is a song written by Tacoma, Washington country/western artist Cherokee Jack Henley, as revised by Ernest Tubb. The best known recording is the 1952 single by Carl Smith. The single was Carl Smith's second number one on the Country & Western Best Seller charts, staying at the top for five weeks with a total of twenty-four weeks on the chart.[2]

B-side"The Little Girl In My Home Town"
ReleasedJanuary 1952
RecordedJune 8, 1951[1]
StudioCastle Studio (Nashville, Tennessee)
Quick facts Single by Carl Smith, B-side ...
"(When You Feel Like You're in Love) Don't Just Stand There"
Single by Carl Smith
B-side"The Little Girl In My Home Town"
ReleasedJanuary 1952
RecordedJune 8, 1951[1]
StudioCastle Studio (Nashville, Tennessee)
GenreCountry & Western
Length2:23
LabelColumbia 20893
SongwritersJack Henley, Ernest Tubb
Carl Smith singles chronology
"Let Old Mother Nature Have Her Way"
(1951)
"(When You Feel Like You're in Love) Don't Just Stand There"
(1952)
"Are You Teasing Me"
(1952)
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