Coma (19) – Love And Madness - It's All The Same
Tracklist
A1 | Combination | 3:47 | |
A2 | Not Miles, Only Yards | 6:57 | |
A3 | Between The Mountains | 3:20 | |
A4 | Heavy Hugo | 4:49 | |
B1 | Balkan Bayon | 3:53 | |
B2 | Future Tango | 3:44 | |
B3 | The Birth Of Bodisathva | 4:31 | |
B4 | This Is True | 4:21 | |
B5 | Carneball | 3:17 |
Companies, etc.
- Recorded At – Kling Klang Studio, Aalborg
- Edited At – Puk Recording Studios
Credits
- Accordion – Ib Buchholtz Hansen* (tracks: B1)
- Bass – Lars Holm (6)
- Cover, Design, Photography By – Klaus Burmeister
- Drums, Percussion – Klaus Thrane
- Engineer – Claus Hvass
- Engineer, Producer – Jan Vinther
- Guitar – Viggo Bertelsen*
- Keyboards – Michael Bundgård
- Percussion – Michael Friis (2)
- Photography By [Coma] – Troels Langvad
- Producer – Coma (19)
- Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Jakob Mygind
- Trombone – Frank Sørensen (2), Marianne Krull (tracks: B4)
Notes
Recorded "live in the studio" July 1986 in Kling Klang Studios, Aalborg DK.
Digitally mastered.
Edited in Puk Studios, Randers DK.
Some copies may come with an insert - a small fold-out replica of the LP cover with liner notes inside (uncredited and in Danish).
Digitally mastered.
Edited in Puk Studios, Randers DK.
Some copies may come with an insert - a small fold-out replica of the LP cover with liner notes inside (uncredited and in Danish).
Recommendations
Reviews
- Edited one year agoRespectfully Disagree w/the Seeker - Basically an 80s jazz-rock fusion sound here with polyphonic synths, compression, etc. This LP is mastered hella loud & really jumps out of the speakers. Decent music… soloists are good, playing is sharp, but the compositions are kind of predictable in that 80s fusion sort of way…to my mind this is a decent album but not nearly as inventive or as quirky as their previous LPs.
- This lp is not rock lp but a jazz rock lp that sounds like a cross between Brand X and Steve Coleman. It is an excellent under rated lp better than the very good Amoc lp which is more of a progressive rock lp with some fusion and pop elements added to the songs. Despite being from 1986 it sounds more like an lp from the late seventies whereas Amoc sounds like it is recorded in the eighties. Highly recommended 4 out 5 stars.
The.seeker
Release
Edit Release
New Submission
New Submission
For sale on Discogs
Sell a copy13 copies from $30.93