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Everybody Plays the Fool

"Everybody Plays the Fool"
Everybody Plays the Fool - The Main Ingredient.jpg
Single by The Main Ingredient
from the album Bitter Sweet
B-side "Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me?)"
Released August 1972
Format 7"
Recorded 1972 at RCA's Studio C, New York City, New York
Genre Soul, R&B
Length 3:22
Label RCA Records
Songwriter(s) J.R. Bailey, Rudy Clark, Ken Williams
Producer(s) Luther Simmons, Tony Silvester
The Main Ingredient singles chronology
"Black Seeds Keep on Growing"
(1971)
"Everybody Plays the Fool"
(1972)
"You've Got to Take It (If You Want It)"
(1972)
"Black Seeds Keep on Growing"
(1971)
"Everybody Plays the Fool"
(1972)
"You've Got to Take It (If You Want It)"
(1972)
"Everybody Plays the Fool"
Single by Aaron Neville
from the album Warm Your Heart
B-side "House on a Hill"
Released August 15, 1991
Format Soul
Length 4:25
Label A&M Records
Songwriter(s) J.R. Bailey, Rudy Clark, Ken Williams

"Everybody Plays the Fool" is the title of a popular song written by J.R. Bailey, Rudy Clark and Ken Williams. The song was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category Best R&B Song at the 1973 ceremony.

The first recording of the song to reach the Top 40 in the United States was by the R&B group The Main Ingredient, a trio consisting at the time of Cuba Gooding, Sr., Tony Silvester and Luther Simmons, Jr. Their version of "Everybody Plays the Fool" rose to No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the fall of 1972, and was certified gold by the RIAA. This version also peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard R&B chart and at No. 25 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart. It was the group's highest charting hit single.

Singer Aaron Neville recorded a cover version of "Everybody Plays the Fool" in 1991 which also hit the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, reaching No. 8 in the fall of that year, and it spent 20 weeks on the chart. This was Neville's third Top 10 hit on the pop chart, following "Tell It Like It Is" (1967, No. 2) and his duet with Linda Ronstadt, "Don't Know Much" (1989, No. 2). Neville's single also went to No. 1 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart. In addition, it was a No. 1 single in New Zealand.


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