Think About Love (song)

Last updated
"Think About Love"
DollyThinkAboutLove.jpg
Single by Dolly Parton
from the album Real Love
B-side "Come Back to Me"
ReleasedNovember 11, 1985
RecordedJanuary 1985
Genre Country
Length3:27
Label RCA
Songwriter(s) Richard "Spady" Brannan
Tom Campbell
Producer(s) David Malloy
Dolly Parton singles chronology
"Real Love"
(1985)
"Think About Love"
(1985)
"Tie Our Love (In a Double Knot)"
(1986)

"Think About Love" is a song recorded by American country music artist Dolly Parton, first released on her 1985 Real Love album. The song, written by Richard "Spady" Brannan and Tom Campbell, was an uptempo pop tune, employing (as did most of the other songs on Real Love) synthesizers and other distinctive pop flourishes. It was released as the album's third single in November 1985 and, despite its polished pop production, reached No. 1 on the U.S. country singles charts in March 1986; the single spent a total of fourteen weeks on the chart. The song was Parton's sixteenth number one country single as a solo artist and twentieth overall. [1]

The song was remixed for its single version. The remixed version of the song also served as the title track on Parton's 1986 Think About Love album, which was composed of previously released tracks, many of which had been remixed. The single mix (the version played on the radio and available on 45) has never been released on any CD in the US or abroad. It would turn out to be Parton's last chart-topper on RCA, her label of the previous nineteen years. (She would switch to Columbia Records in 1987).

Chart positions

Weekly

Chart (1985–1986)Peak
position
US Hot Country Songs ( Billboard ) [2] 1
Canadian RPM Country Tracks1

Year-End

Chart (1986)Peak
Position
US Hot Country Songs ( Billboard ) [3] 35

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References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 262.
  2. "Dolly Parton Chart History (Hot Country Songs)". Billboard.
  3. "Billboard Hot Country Songs - Year-End Charts (1986)". Billboard. Retrieved 4 December 2020.