Thrill Has Gone

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B-side
Released24 April 1989 (1989-04-24)[1]
Length3:32
"Thrill Has Gone"
Single by Texas
from the album Southside
B-side
Released24 April 1989 (1989-04-24)[1]
GenrePop rock
Length3:32
Label
Songwriters
ProducerTim Palmer
Texas singles chronology
"I Don't Want a Lover"
(1989)
"Thrill Has Gone"
(1989)
"Everyday Now"
(1989)
Music video
"Thrill Has Gone" on YouTube

"Thrill Has Gone" is the second single released from Scottish band Texas's first studio album, Southside (1989). The song peaked at number 60 on the UK Singles Chart and number 19 in New Zealand, becoming their last top-20 hit there until "Say What You Want (All Day, Every Day)" in 1998.

Jerry Smith, reviewer of British music newspaper Music Week, called this track a "memorable slice of smooth rock/pop... marked by another stunning vocal" equal to band's previous hit "I Don't Want a Lover" and expressed an assurance that it will "bring more success".[2] Edem E. Ephraim and Dennis Fuller of London Boys, being host reviewers of singles column of Number One on 26 April 1989, considered that the song's sound more oriented to the American market, but both singers noticed that it has something.[3] Tim Nicholson of Record Mirror labeled it "dull drag of AOR" and said that the track's title speaks for itself. He wrote: "None of the energy or inspiration of ″I Don't Want a Lover″ lives here, a ball and chain attached to its best leg every time it tries to move forward."[4]

Track listings

Charts

References

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