The Thrill Is Gone - B.B. King & Eric Clapton

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The Thrill Is Gone Lyrics

The thrill is gone
The thrill is gone
Away

Oh the thrill is gone
Baby
The thrill is gone away

You done me wrong
Baby
You gonna
Be sorry
Someday

Thrill is gone
Baby
The thrill is gone away
From me

Heeey
The thrill is gone
Baby
The thrill is gone away
From me

Although, I'll still
Live on
But so lonely
I'll ... only

The thrill is gone
The thrill is gone
Away for good
I said
Oh the thrill is gone,
Baby
The thrill has gone
Away for good

I know
I'm gonna be over to all
One day, baby
Like I know a
Good man should

I'm free now, baby
I'm free
From your spell
Oh I'm free,
Free

I'm free now
Baby
I'm free
From your spell
And now
That it's all over
All I can do
Is wish you well

I'm already
But I'm over it now

Mmm mmm
Allright
Mmmm
Finally over you

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
B.B. King & Eric Clapton are two well known blues guitarists. The collaboration between these two blues legends is best known for the blues album "Riding with the King" which was released in 2000.

Although Eric Clapton and B.B. King had a 30-plus years friendship originating with a chance meeting and subsequent jam session at New York City's Café Au Go Go in 1967, the idea for a collaborative album only crystallized during the sessions for King's 1997 album Deuces Wild. The resulting record, "Riding with the King", is a stellar event thanks to a wealth of rich material and a solid supporting cast including Jimmie Vaughan, Joe Sample and Steve Gadd.

B.B. King's extensive catalog provides a wellspring of inspiration, including signature songs such as the smoldering "Three O'Clock Blues", alongside lesser-known numbers like the ribald shuffle "Days Of Old", and the Live at the Regal chestnut "Help The Poor". Elsewhere, King and Clapton look to guitarist Big Bill Broonzy (an acoustic "Key to the Highway") and Chicago pianist Maceo Merriweather (the slow-rolling "Worried Life Blues") for inspiration. Even the non-blues numbers are delivered with a rich subtlety befitting these guitar icons' consummate musicianship. John Hiatt's title track becomes a mid-tempo exchange between old friends, while their honeyed vocals on the standard "Come Rain or Come Shine" are worthy of Ray Charles' 1959 version.

"Riding with the King" won the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album.

Official website for B.B. King: www.bbking.com
Official website for Eric Clapton: www.ericclapton.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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B.B. King & Eric Clapton