Madstock! | |
Type: | Live |
Artist: | Madness |
Cover: | Madstock!.jpg |
Recorded: | 8 and 9 August 1992 |
Venue: | Finsbury Park, London |
Length: | 62:22 |
Label: | Go! Discs |
Producer: | Clive Langer Alan Winstanley |
Prev Title: | Divine Madness |
Prev Year: | 1992 |
Next Title: | The Business |
Next Year: | 1993 |
Madstock! is the first live album by ska/pop band Madness, released on 2 November 1992 (see 1992 in music) by Go! Discs. The album includes highlights from Madness' first concerts since their disbanding in 1986, on 8 and 9 August 1992 at Finsbury Park in London. The bill included Flowered Up, Gallon Drunk, Ian Dury and The Blockheads, Morrissey and Madness.
The full concert was released on a corresponding video. Both the album and video are now out of print. However, a DVD of the concert is available in the box set A Guided Tour of Madness. The concert briefly spawned a series of biennial Madstock events (the name sometimes rendered with no exclamation mark) in 1994, 1996, and 1998 (this last Madstock is available on DVD). In December 2008 the band announced that they would be staging a 5th Madstock concert in 2009 to celebrate their 30th anniversary held on 17 July in Victoria Park, East London.
The album reached #22 in the UK album charts.[1] "The Harder They Come", a cover of the Jimmy Cliff song, was released as the only single off this album and reached #44 in the UK charts.
On 9 October 2015, Salvo reissued the album and video as a 1-CD/1-DVD set with four CD bonus tracks.[2]
Simon Tucker of the Louder Than War website called the album "musically tight with not a duff note," saying, "This album is a joy, an example of a band not understanding how influential they are or how loved until one magic moment brings it home for them." Trouser Press wrote, "the band sounds tight and in top form; the sing-along enthusiasm of the crowd makes the disc particularly infectious."[5] AllMusic's Evan Cater was less positive, saying, "Suggs' decision to sacrifice vocal quality for exuberance is more excusable than the unimaginative arrangements of the songs, which vary little from the original studio recordings. Moreover, the singles-heavy song selection ... is a little boring for serious fans."
Commenting on the 2015 reissue, Charles Hutchinson of The Press was disappointed that Salvo's CD and DVD package did not match the occasion: "The running order is jettisoned on the CD, with four numbers consigned to bin ends, while the DVD needed to be more of a documentary." Russell Deeks of Songwriting magazine wrote, "They may have been a little bit rough around the edges in places on the day ... but their knockabout humour and unrivaled sense of showmanship were definitely " Deeks noted that the video quality of the DVD isn't the best, as it has apparently been transferred over from the original VHS release.
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[7]