The Lonely Boys - The Songs

The Songs

There are 14 songs on the album, with the only cover version being "So Much In Love", which was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones (although the Stones never recorded a version, The Inmates did).

Side One:

  • Lonely Boys (Gessle) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), Per on lead guitar, Nisse on fuzz guitar. String quartet arrangement by Clarence Öfwerman.
  • I'm Not Like You (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Nisse (with Per), Per on acoustic guitar.
  • Keep the Radio On (This is the Perfect Song) (Gessle) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), MP on 12-string guitar.
  • September Girl (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Nisse.
  • Adam & Eve (Gessle) - Lead vocals Nisse (with Per).
  • I Wanna Be With You (Gessle) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), MP on Mellotron, 12-string guitar & lead guitar.
  • Fuzzy Puss (Instrumental) (Hellberg) - Nisse on fuzz guitar, MP on drums

Side Two:

  • So Much In Love (Jagger-Richards) - Lead vocals Nisse (with Per).
  • Flowers on the Moon (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), Nisse on acoustic-& 12-string guitar, lead guitar, MP on bongos & Mellotron.
  • Let Go of My Heart (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Nisse.
  • Apple in the Mud (Gessle) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), Per on lead guitar, MP on acoustic guitar.
  • Pretty Little Devil (With Angel Eyes) (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Nisse.
  • Genius Gone Wrong (Gessle) - Lead vocals Per (with Nisse), Per on 12-string solo guitar & piano, MP on guitar and 12-string guitar.
  • Days to Come, Days of Gold (Hellberg) - Lead vocals Nisse, Thomas on guitar.

Read more about this topic:  The Lonely Boys

Famous quotes containing the word songs:

    And our sov’reign sole Creator
    Lives eternal in the sky,
    While we mortals yield to nature,
    Bloom awhile, then fade and die.
    —Unknown. “Hail ye sighing sons of sorrow,” l. 13-16, Social and Campmeeting Songs (1828)

    People fall out of windows, trees tumble down,
    Summer is changed to winter, the young grow old
    The air is full of children, statues, roofs
    And snow. The theatre is spinning round,
    Colliding with deaf-mute churches and optical trains.
    The most massive sopranos are singing songs of scales.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)