Released: November 13, 1987

Songwriter: Rick Astley Dick Spatsley

Producer: Ian Curnow Phil Harding

The love has gone
The love has gone, will we ever be the same
The feelings wrong, the joy has turned to pain

Wake up beside you, and hear you breathing
And I can feel you in my arms
No one can know just how I'm feeling
Knowing that our love can come to no harm

But as I open my eyes
Then I start to realise
That you're gone and I can't go on

The love has gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain
The love is gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain

What have I done girl, to make you leave me
Didn't I love you for all those years

If you open your eyes
Baby, then you'll realise
That you're wrong, and I can't go on
You know I can't go on

The love has gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain
The love is gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain

Nothing will ever come between us
If you will just take me back once more
I'll show you just how much I love you
If you'll just come walking through that door

The love has gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain
The love is gone, will we ever be the same
The feeling's wrong, the joy has turned to pain

Rick Astley

Richard Paul Astley is a British entertainer, most known for his 1987 sensation “Never Gonna Give You Up” which was the subject of rick-rolling. He recieved a Brit Award for Best Single in 1988 for his hit and a “Best Act Ever” Award at the 2008 MTV EMAs upon its re-emergence into popularity.

Born in Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire on February 6, 1966, Astley’s first taste of music came at the age of 10 and he became known as a drummer throughout school before dropping out at age 16. He played for a local live act entitled “FBI” (with future Conservative Party politician David Morris as guitarist) that gained popularity around London. Astley, a huge admirer of Nat King Cole soon moved to lead vocalist by the time the group garnered the interest of Pete Waterman, a record executive and 1/3 of the Scott-Aitken-Waterman production trio. Waterman hired a 19 year-old Astley as a gofer (assistant) and Morris as a songwriter at his PWL (Pete Waterman, Limited) Studios. He used this time to pull Astley out of his ‘shyness’ and secured them both a contract with RCA Records.

“When You Gonna” with fellow PWL protégé Lisa Carter was his debut release, but it found little success and received no promotion; it was Lisa’s only official output. His first solo release, “Never Gonna Give You Up”, was dropped on July 28, 1987, and turned Astley into an international star. It topped 24 different charts and moved nearly 2 Million copies. Astley’s debut album Whenever You Need Somebody found similar success – it collected Gold or Platinum certifications in 10 different regions, including Platinum 4x in the United Kingdom.