Wild Horses – The Nashville Album

Wild Horses – The Nashville Album is the seventeenth studio album by British rock band Smokie, released on 25 February 1998 by CMC Records.[1]

Wild Horses – The Nashville Album
Studio album by
Released25 February 1998
RecordedMastertonics Studios in Nashville, Tennessee
GenrePop rock, country rock
Length48:23
LabelCMC
ProducerBarry Beckett
Smokie chronology
Light a Candle
(1996)
Wild Horses – The Nashville Album
(1998)
Uncovered
(2000)

Track listing

  1. "Desperate Measures" (Chuck Jones, Greg Swint) – 3:46
  2. "Wrong Reasons" (Duet with Maggie Reilly) (Rick Giles, Winston Sela) – 3:59
  3. "And the Night Stood Still" (Diane Warren) – 4:02
  4. "She Rides Wild Horses" (Ted Hewitt, Bob Corbin) – 3:30
  5. "When It's the Right Time" (Taylor Rhodes, James Dean Hicks) – 3:49
  6. "Looking for You" (Jess Brown, Jim Denton) – 4:15
  7. "Ain't It Funny How It Works" (John Jarrard, George Teren) – 3:02
  8. "All She Ever Really Wanted" (Steve Seskin, Al Anderson) – 2:56
  9. "No Rest for the Wounded Heart" (Curt Cuomo, Robert Tepper) – 5:33
  10. "When the Walls Come Down" (Kim Carnes, Greg Barnhill) – 3:59
  11. "Goodbye Yesterday's Heartache" (Jim Daddario, Greg Barnhill) – 4:01
  12. "If You Think You Know How to Love Me" (US version) (Mike Chapman, Nicky Chinn) – 5:27

Personnel

Smokie

Additional musicians

Production

  • Produced by Barry Beckett
  • Production coordinator – Regena Warden
  • Recorded at Mastertonics Studios in Nashville, Tennessee by Pete Greene, assisted by David Boyer
  • Special computer editing – David Boyer
  • Mixed at Iliad Studios in Nashville, Tennessee by Pete Greene, assisted by David Boyer and John Koontz
  • Mastered at Gateway Mastering in Portland, Maine by Brian K. Lee
  • "Wrong Reasons" recorded at Mastertonics Studios / Townhouse Studios in London
    • Mixed at Iliad Studios
    • Additional mix at Puk Recording Studio in Denmark
  • Additional mix and recording by Peter Iversen
  • Cover and artwork – Michael Rix and Jens Merch

Charts

Chart (1998) Peak
position
Norway (VG-lista)[2] 19

References

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