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The Law - Unreleased Second Album (1991)

Track listing:
  1. Too Much Is Not Enough 5:52
  2. I Wanna Make Love To You 6:06
  3. Message Of Love 4:16
  4. Hold On 6:19
  5. Alibi 6:43
  6. Loaded Dice 4:47
  7. Check Mate 4:58
  8. Strictly Off The Record 6:05
  9. Laying Down The Law 4:11

Notes


The Law(Paul Rodgers/Kenny Jones)

often called "The Law II"

there are a few stories surrounding this collection of songs.the first is that this is an unreleased second album withdrawn from release at the last minute.the second is that it was actually recorded before the officially released album,and the third is that these songs are left-overs from the released album sessions. personally i feel the leftovers from the law album theory is most likely regardless of the origin of these tracks i think that they are fantastic and are on par if not better than those on the released album.

The Law was a short-lived, not-quite-realized AOR supergroup centered around vocalist Paul Rodgers (Free, Bad Company, the Firm) and drummer Kenny Jones (the Small Faces, the Faces, latter-day Who). The two teamed up with the idea of using different supporting musicians, in order to allow Rodgers to pursue whatever musical style he felt like. They assembled a core band of studio musicians, including guitarist John Staehely and bassist Pino Palladino, and landed guest spots from guitarists like David Gilmour, Bryan Adams, and Chris Rea. Tired of being a primary source of material (as he usually had been in the past), Rodgers also decided to rely chiefly on outside contributions (from the likes of Adams, Rea, Def Leppard's Phil Collen, and Benny Mardones, among others). The group never really jelled, and the sole Law album — a self-titled effort released in 1991 — was not all that popular. Ironically, its sole hit — the rock-radio chart-topper "Laying Down the Law" — was penned by Rodgers; the album also contained the first recording of Collen's "Miss You in a Heartbeat," later a hit for Def Leppard. Faced with generally disappointing results, however, Rodgers and Jones laid the Law to rest.