Three Hearts

Three Hearts is the second solo album by rock musician and former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch. Just like Welch's previous effort French Kiss, Three Hearts was a commercial success. The album reached number 20 on the US charts in 1979 and went gold. It spawned a hit single, "Precious Love", which peaked at number 19, making it Welch's last top 20 hit. "Church" was also a small hit, and peaked at number 73. Don't Wait Too Long" is a reworking of "Good Things (Come to Those who Wait)", a Welch composition that had been left off the Fleetwood Mac album Mystery to Me.

The album was reissued by Culture Factory in 2013 in a miniature replica LP sleeve, with 3 bonus cuts including the French version of "Precious Love". However, to this day, the 12-inch extended mix of "Precious Love" has never been released on CD.

Track listing
All songs by Bob Welch except where noted


 * 1) "3 Hearts" – 3:23
 * 2) "Oh Jenny" – 4:17
 * 3) "I Saw Her Standing There" (Lennon/McCartney) – 2:53
 * 4) "Here Comes the Night" – 3:03
 * 5) "China" – 3:21
 * 6) "The Ghost of Flight 401" – 3:16
 * 7) "Precious Love" – 3:12
 * 8) "Church" – 3:06
 * 9) "Come Softly to Me" (Gary Troxel, Gretchen Christopher, Barbara Ellis) – 2:42
 * 10) "Devil Wind" – 4:03
 * 11) "Don't Wait Too Long" – 3:50
 * 12) "Little Star" – 3:41

Bonus tracks on 2012 CD re-issue
 * 1) "3 Hearts" [Alternate Version] – 3:20
 * 2) "Une Fille Comme Toi" [French Version of Precious Love] – 3:13
 * 3) "Something Strong" [B-side of Precious Love] – 3:55

Musicians

 * Bob Welch – vocals, guitar, bass guitar, keyboards
 * Todd Sharp – guitar
 * David Adelstein – keyboards, synthesizer
 * Alvin Taylor – drums
 * Mick Fleetwood – drums, percussion (track 6)
 * Christine McVie – keyboards, vocals (tracks 9 & 11)
 * Stevie Nicks – vocals (track 10)
 * Steve Foreman – percussion
 * Gene Page – string arrangements

Technical

 * John Carter – producer
 * Richard Dashut – producer (track 6)
 * Warren Dewey – engineer
 * Ken Perry – mastering
 * Neal Preston, Olivier Ferrand, Sam Emerson – photography