Lost Brotherhood Explained

Lost Brotherhood
Type:Album
Artist:Gowan
Cover:Lost Brotherhood.jpg
Released:July 17, 1990
Recorded:1989
Studio:Metalworks Studios and McClear Place, Toronto, Ontario
Genre:Progressive rock, hard rock, Pop rock
Length:45:08
Label:Anthem
Columbia (Canada)
Atlantic (outside Canada)
Producer:Mike Howlett, Eddie Schwartz, Lawrence Gowan
Prev Title:Great Dirty World
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:...But You Can Call Me Larry
Next Year:1993

Lost Brotherhood is the fourth studio album by Canadian musician Lawrence Gowan, originally released in 1990. The album follows a more hard rock oriented sound, with some tracks bearing a resemblance to past material. The album reached multi-platinum status in Canada[1] and spawned the singles, "All the Lovers in the World," "Lost Brotherhood," and "Out of a Deeper Hunger". Alex Lifeson of Rush, Steve Shelski of Coney Hatch, and Ken Greer of Red Rider contributed guitar work for the album.[2]

Personnel

Singles

NameChart (1990)Peak position
"All the Lovers in the World"Canada6
"Lost Brotherhood"44
"Out of a Deeper Hunger"36

External links

Interview

Notes and References

  1. Web site: October 17, 2000. Lawrence Gowan. February 14, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20001017172806/http://www.gowan.org/biography.htm. October 17, 2000.
  2. Web site: The Many Minds of Gowan. Cashbox Magazine Canada. December 23, 2015.