In 1985, singer Stiv Bators spoke on the album's musical direction, saying: "When we first got together it was a nice mixture of our different personalities. We didn't know what we were supposed to sound like, so we more or less discovered ourselves. On the second album we discovered various different styles we could do, but not in a unified direction. Now we have finally settled in a direction." Initially, the band felt very stimulated playing, writing and recording together. Their first two self-produced albums went "really, really well," according to guitarist Brian James, but
Method to Our Madness was more of a struggle. Furthermore, the band's record company,
I.R.S., wanted to use an outside producer, because the band was "losing its dynamic a bit," said James in 2007.
The Method to Our Madness was produced by
Chris Tsangarides, who had previously worked with
hard rock acts like
Thin Lizzy,
Gary Moore and
Tygers of Pan Tang. The album features, among others; French jazz pianist
Jacques Loussier, at whose Miraval Studios parts of the album was recorded; former
Manfred Mann member
Mike Hugg on keyboards; and the Lords' longtime session and touring keyboardist
Matt Irving from
Manfred Mann's Earth Band. The Lords' manager and label boss,
Miles Copeland, makes a cameo appearance on "Method to My Madness" with a few spoken lines. == Critical reception ==