Unreleased Madness album
The unreleased Madness album was to be the seventh studio album by the English ska/pop band Madness. In early July they returned from a long grueling tour incorporating Australia and America culminating with some European and UK festivals. Between July and early September they recorded demos for this new album at their Liquidator Studios in North London. From these demos they selected a sequenced track listing of 11 songs to be produced for the finished album. At least one other track was also demoed, indicating there may have been others additionally recorded.
The chosen album was announced with its track listing displayed in Issue XIV of the official Madness "MIS" Nutty Boys fanzine. However, after Issue XIV was printed and before it was posted out to members, the band decided to split up due to musical differences. They announced their break up in late September 1986. Consequently, they abandoned the album before it was about to become finally produced between September and November that year, to then be released the following summer.
Another prominent reason why the album was not completed was because four of the members wished to use the tracks they had written for the next band they were forming. Nonetheless, the full six remaining members of the band did manage to record two tracks, " The Ghost Train" and its B-Side "Maybe In Another Life". These tracks became the group's farewell single. The Unreleased Madness Album was quickly substituted with a rush-released second compilation album titled Utter Madness.
The band officially split in November following the release of their last single, which reached a high of number 18 in the UK.
Producers
The recorded tracks were produced by Madness stalwarts Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley who, for the first time in the band's history, were drastically dropped. In the meanwhile, Madness subsequently continued to produce themselves. The released track "Maybe In Another Life" was produced with assistance of Liquidator engineers Ian Horne and Mark Saunders. The Nutty Boys fanzine mentioned that Stuart Levine might produce the album as "the band were getting stale and needed a new direction and some fresh ideas".Musical style
After the heavily polished studio production incorporating drum machines on Madness's previous album, Mad Not Mad, the 1986 demos seemed to indicate a more organic back to basics approach towards song writing as with their earlier works. Nonetheless, the songs remained only demos at this stage and perhaps therefore lack a sufficiently comprehensive indication as to how they may or may have not developed in terms of finished studio production.Album cover design
The band ran a competition in Issue XIV of Nutty Boys for MIS members to design gatefold album cover. The issue stated: "The theme will be ghosts, hocus pocus, hubble bubble, forests and streams, witching hour, creatures of the night, etc." Entries were expected to be received by 13 October 1986. Some results were posted in Nutty Boys Issue 15 ; although due to the band subsequently splitting up before Issue XIV was released no winner was chosen.In John Reed's book House of Fun: The Story of Madness, Madness sleeve designer Paul Clewley mentioned that the band had wished to "photographed sitting in front of a blazing fire in a large, dark and gloomy room. The only illumination was to be the flames with the shot being taken from the actual fireplace, looking through the flames out at the bands faces". He goes on to reveal "I think the idea was they were telling ghost stories to each other".
Singles
Issue XIV of Nutty Boys stated that "11th Hour", "Waiting For The Ghost Train", "Be Good Boy" and "Natural Act" were "being tipped at this very moment as potential singles for the summer release". As already mentioned, only "Waiting For The Ghost Train" was actually released.The Madness
In 1988, four members of the band – Suggs, Chas Smash, Lee Thompson and Chris Foreman – continued under the name The Madness. They utilised several of the unreleased album's recorded demo tracks towards their own album and subsequent single releases. The other tracks remain unreleased to this day in studio form, although some demos and live recordings have appeared on bootlegs as well as official single releases during the 1990s. After one self-titled album and two singles that failed to make the top 40, this band also split.Legacy
According to John Reed's book House of Fun: The Story of Madness, the tracks "continue to be the subject of conjecture among their fans, fuelled by subsequent investigation".Track listing
Notes- "Precious One" was released on the 1992 CD single version of "My Girl".
- "Perfect Place" was released as excerpts by the official Madness Site in 2004. The site stated that this song was recorded in early 1985 with other tracks such as Yesterday's Men. This brings into question whether some other tracks were also recorded before July 1986.
Details of tracks subsequently re-recorded or re-worked by The Madness">The Madness (The Madness album)">The Madness
- "11th Hour".
- "4BF". A similar uptempo version was performed live on the 'Mad Not Mad' tour in late 1985. A re-recorded version was made available on the B-Side of "I Pronounce You" single. Only minimal changes were made to the structure and words of the song.
- "Be Good Boy". A re-recorded version was released on the B-Side of "What's That" single.
- "Remember The Day". As no recorded version of this song has surfaced, comparisons cannot be made. However, guitarist Chris Foreman stated that the song was "changed because it was an African type thing, sort of bubbly. I really didn't like it so I worked the chords out like a reggae song. Suggs wrote some different lyrics "
- "Patience". Released on B-Side of "I Pronounce You" single.
- "Winter In Wonderland".
- "Gabriel's Horn".
Personnel
Madness
- Suggs – lead vocals
- Chris Foreman – guitars
- Mark Bedford – bass guitars
- Lee Thompson – saxophones
- Daniel Woodgate – drums
- Chas Smash – backing vocals; lead vocals
- Seamus Beaghen – keyboards