Michael Caine (song) explained

Michael Caine
Cover:Michael Caine Cover.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Madness
Album:Keep Moving
B-Side:If You Think There's Something
Recorded:1983
Studio:AIR (London)
Genre:Sophisti-pop
Length:3:39
Label:Stiff
Composer:Daniel Woodgate
Lyricist:Carl Smyth
Producer:
Prev Title:The Sun and the Rain
Prev Year:1983
Next Title:One Better Day
Next Year:1984

"Michael Caine" is a song by English ska band Madness, released on 30 January 1984 as the lead single from their fifth studio album Keep Moving (1984).[1] The song was written by Carl Smyth and Daniel Woodgate,[2] and features Smyth on lead vocals in place of usual Madness vocalist Suggs. "Michael Caine" spent eight weeks on the British chart, peaking at number 11.

Lyrical content

The song is about an informant during the Troubles, and the lyrics suggest a state of paranoia and mental disintegration.[3] It is named after English actor Michael Caine and includes his vocal samples, recorded specifically for this song. The song's hook, a repetition of Caine introducing himself by name, recalls his role in the spy film The Ipcress File (1965), in which his character, Harry Palmer, repeats his name while trying to stay sane under torture.[4]

When he was approached to appear on the record, Caine initially turned it down, but his youngest daughter on hearing his decision made him change his mind, telling him how popular they were.[5]

Speaking of the song's lyrics and the idea behind the use of Caine's name, Carl Smyth told Record Mirror in 1984, "The record's about informers. If you think of informers who are current news then that's a clue. At the same time, I wouldn't do a song just about Michael Caine – it's not a tribute or anything like that. I was trying to think of who could be used to illustrate it, and his name seemed right – his film The Ipcress File had the sort of atmosphere I wanted to create – we even used some of the phrases."[6]

Music video

The music video was also based on The Ipcress File, and featured a lightbulb being shot, as seen in the title sequence from the television spy series Callan.[7] A photograph of Michael Caine from the 60s is also seen being shredded in the video.[4] The video took longer to complete than usual, due to being shot on 35 mm film as opposed to 16 mm.[7] As a result, Mike Barson is absent for much of the video; he had a plane to catch, and could not stay for the whole filming session.[7]

Critical reception

Upon its release, Neil Tennant of Smash Hits stated, "This new Madness single is world-weary and melancholy, although it's brightened up by the man himself declaring 'I am Michael Caine' every now and then. I like it, actually."[8] Tony Parsons of NME praised the "beautiful, understated melody" and "hesitant, almost shy lyric that is not without flashes of humour" and concluded, "They never sounded less like Madness and they never sounded so good."[9]

Thompson Twins' member Joe Leeway, as guest reviewer for Record Mirror, described it as "more melodic than usual" and "a mysterious 'out in the cold' song" with a "great sax vamp towards the end".[10] Frank Hopkinson of Number One noted Smyth's "Bowie-ish vocal" and commented, "Suggs has stepped down for a single that still includes Mike Barson but is stripped of the usual Madness trademarks (including the hum-along tune). I know it's unthinkable, but this one might not even make the top ten!"[11] (It didn't, peaking at UK #11 and breaking a string of six consecutive UK top 10 chart singles for the group.)

Formats and track listings

  1. "Michael Caine" (Smyth, Woodgate) – 3:39
  2. "If You Think There's Something" (Barson) – 3:08
  1. "Michael Caine (extended version)" (Smyth, Woodgate) – 4:08
  2. "Michael Caine" (Smyth, Woodgate) – 3:39
  3. "If You Think There's Something" (Barson) – 3:08

Notes and References

  1. Record News . . London, England . 37 . 28 January 1984.
  2. Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r12190|pure_url=yes}} Allmusic.com Keep Moving Overview]. Retrieved on June 27, 2007.
  3. Book: John Reed . House of Fun: The Story of Madness. 30 August 2014 . Omnibus Press . 978-1-78323-334-2 . 253–6.
  4. Web site: Why did Madness release a song about Michael Caine? (Plus four other Hollywood name dropping hits). 8 April 2021.
  5. 14 October 2007. Michael Caine meets William Orbit. The Guardian.
  6. Hills . Simon . 11 February 1984 . Working on a Caine gang . . 36 . 0144-5804.
  7. Web site: The Madness Timeline: 1984 . June 27, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081114153203/http://www.madness.co.uk/time/1984/text.htm . 2008-11-14.
  8. Tennant . Neil . Singles . . 2 February 1984 . 135 . 29.
  9. Parsons . Tony . Singles . . 4 February 1984 . 19.
  10. Leeway . Joe . Singles . . 11 February 1984 . 17 . 0144-5804.
  11. Hopkinson . Frank . Singles . . 4 February 1984 . 40 . 31.