The Impossible (album)
The Impossible is the only solo album of English singer Ken Lockie, after dissolving his band, Cowboys International, in 1980. It was released by Virgin Records, in 1981, and was recorded with the help of two of the former Lockie bandmates in Cowboys International, guitarist Stevie Shears and drummer Paul Simon, and other known musicians, like John McGeoch of Siouxsie and the Banshees (guitar), John Doyle (drums), Preston Heyman of Tom Robinson Band (drums), Joe Dworniak of Shake Shake! and I-Level (bass),[1] Jim Kerr of Simple Minds (backing vocals)[2] and Nash the Slash.
The Impossible | |
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Studio album by | |
Released | 1981 |
Genre | New wave, synthpop |
Label | Virgin Records |
Producer | Richard Manwaring, Steve Hillage |
Singles from The Impossible | |
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Track list
A side
- "Dance House"
- "Theme of the Impossible"
- "Footsteps"
- "Under My Skin"
- "Twisting"
B side
- "Too Much & Too Little"
- "Stiletto"
- "Tenderness of Fools"
- "Puppet"
- "As Good as Gold"
Personnel
- Ken Lockie - lead vocals, keyboards
- Stevie Shears - guitar
- John McGeoch - guitar
- Joe Dworniak - bass
- Lee Robertson - bass (only B1)
- Paul Simon - drums (B1)
- John Doyle - drums (A2, B2, B3, B5)
- Preston Heyman - drums (A1, A3, A4, B4)
- Jim Kerr - backing vocals
gollark: I have my own custom webapp for note taking which I never actually use. It's also stuck eternally at about 80% finished like all my programming projects.
gollark: Someone find me a line segment.
gollark: Are there also zom-bees?
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gollark: Have they invented duct tape yet?
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