Choosey Beggar Explained

Choosey Beggar
Type:single
Artist:the Miracles
Album:Going to a Go-Go
A-Side:Going to a Go-Go
Released:December 6, 1965
Recorded:Hitsville USA (Studio A): March 9, 1965
Genre:Soul/pop
Label:Tamla
T 54127
Producer:Smokey Robinson
Prev Title:My Girl Has Gone
Prev Year:1965
Going to a Go-Go
Title2:Choosey Beggar
Next Title:Whole Lot of Shakin' in My Heart
Next Year:1966

"Choosey Beggar" was a 1965 song recorded by Motown R&B group the Miracles on its Tamla label subsidiary. It was issued as the B-side of the group's top-20 million-selling single,[1] "Going to a Go-Go", and was taken from the group's Billboard Top 10 Pop album of the same name.

Written by Miracles members Smokey Robinson and Pete Moore and produced by Robinson, this song also became a national hit, reaching number 35 on the Billboard R&B chart. As the song's narrator, lead singer Smokey Robinson, using a play on the old axiom, "Beggars can't be choosers", portrays a man who simply refuses to accept just "any girl":

Beggars can't be choicey, I know...that's what the people say...But though my heart is begging for love ...I've turned some love away..." Only one girl is right for him... "I'm a choosey beggar...and you're my choice..."

Cash Box described it as a "a slow-shufflin' lament about a decidedly one-man woman."[2]

"Choosey Beggar" has inspired cover versions by Debby Boone, and Jazz artist Chazz Dixon, and has been included in the Miracles' compilation album Greatest Hits - Vol. 2, along with several other Miracles "Greatest Hits" compilations.

Personnel Credits

Personnel – the Miracles

Other personnel

External links

Notes and References

  1. Coryton, Demitri; Joseph Murrells. Hits Of The Sixties: The Million Sellers
  2. CashBox Record Reviews . December 18, 1965 . 10 . 2022-01-12 . Cash Box.