Jump to content

Edin-Ådahl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Edin-Adahl)
Edin-Ådahl
OriginSweden
GenresPop, contemporary Christian music
Years active1977–1994

Edin-Ådahl were a Swedish CCM band from 1977 to 1994, composed of brothers Bertil and Lasse Edin and Simon and Frank Ådahl.

The group was formed on June 10, 1978 when brothers Simon (born 1957) and Frank Ådahl (born 1960) started playing with Gävle brothers Lasse (born 1954) and Bertil Edin (born 1958).[1]

The group are best known for their 1990 hit "Som en vind" (English: "Like a Wind"). It won the 1990 Melodifestivalen and went on to place sixteenth at the Eurovision Song Contest.[2] The following year, the band placed second in the Melodifestivalen. Simon Ådahl participated in 1995 together with Lasse Edin. Another song, "Revival", rose to No. 3 on Sweden's radio charts.[3]

Their English albums had similar production quality when compared to secular albums, but also poor distribution and "lousy lyrics".[3]

Frank Ådahl was the voice of Simba in the Swedish version of the 1994 animated film The Lion King. Two of the brothers released solo albums on Refuge in 1985. Bertil Edin released Cross the Border, and Simon Ådahl I'm In Touch.[3] Lasse Edin formed a band called The Outsiders in 1990.[3]

Discography

[edit]

Swedish releases

[edit]
  • Edin-Ådahl, (Prim) 1980
  • Alibi, (CBS/Royal) 1982
  • Maktfaktor, (Royal) 1983
  • Tecken, (Prim) 1986
  • Big Talk, (Royal/Cantio) 1989
  • Into My Soul, (Cantio) 1990
  • Reser Till Kärlek, (Cantio) 1991
  • Kosmonaut Gagarins Rapport, (Viva) 1992
  • Minnen: 1980—1992, (Viva) 1994
  • Komplett, (Media Point) 2009

English releases

[edit]
  • Alibi, (Refuge) 1983
  • X-Factor, (Refuge) 1984
  • Miracle, (Refuge) 1987
  • Big Talk, (Royal Music/Refuge) (1989)
  • Into My Soul, (Alarma World Music) (1990)
  • Revival, (Alarma World Music/Cantio) (1991)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Tron ger musiken balans". DN.SE (in Swedish). 2010-07-12. Retrieved 2021-11-25.
  2. ^ Svensktoppen - 1990
  3. ^ a b c d Powell, Mark Allan (2002). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music (First printing ed.). Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. pp. 291–292. ISBN 1-56563-679-1.
Preceded by Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest
1990
Succeeded by