Written by: J. Saunders
Written by: L. Mason
Written by: Frank Sinatra
With Rosemary Clooney
Arranged by: George Siravo
From the Album: Columbia Years, 1943-1952
Label: Columbia Records
Recorded: April 8, 1950
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with (Rosemary Clooney) [Both Frank and Rosemary]
(Say, Frank, you wanna take a
walk?)
Sure, sweetie, just pick a
street.
(Picadilly Circus) Aw I'd rather
not. (Champ Elysees) Hey.no. (Times Square?) Nah.
'Cause there's nothing can
compare with
Strolling along Peachtree street
with my baby on my arm.
I got the sweetest peach in
Georgia, and she just came off the farm.
(Strolling along Peachtree
street, I'm happy as can be.)
(I've gotta thank the state of
Georgia, for my baby's family tree.)
[Everybody in Atlanta knows what
a treasure I found,]
I'm gonna set my gem if on the
main stem,
[We'll spread lot of little
peaches all around.]
I feel like a new millionaire,
when I'm walking with my charm,
[Strolling along Peachtree
Street, with baby on my arm.]
(You like Peachtree Street,
Frank?)
Oh I love the place where are
the peach trees?
(We'll have to go back a few
years.)
Well let's turn around.
(Can't you see me in a hoop
skirt,)
(Strolling along Peachtree
street with a colonel on my arm.)
And I can tell that you're from
Georgia, because you got that Georgia charm
(Strolling along Peachtree
street, I'm happy as can be.)
Eh, we're all merry. How come
the sweetest peach in Georgia help Mayville, Kentucky.
(Let's not get it around.) I can be reached.
[We'll be married in Atlanta,
one happy man and his spouse.]
(And just as sure as you're
born, we'll gather some corn,)
[And spread around a lot of
little colonels round the house.]
I feel like a new millionaire,
when I'm walking with my charm.
[Strolling along Peachtree
street, with baby on my arm.}
Hey sugar. (What's the matter,
honey chile?)
Well. I'm getting kinda
tired. Will you rather carry me, or
call a cab?
(Whistle, Taxi!) Thank you sweetie.