Skip to content

Madness on “parading the hits” with new album and celebratory UK tour: “It’s sort of a cheesy ’60s pop show”

Madness have spoken to NME about their new ‘Hit Parade’ compilation and UK tour, while sharing stories from their “unique” lengthy career and explaining why they’re not going anywhere yet.

The legendary North London group will release the huge 45-track collection on November 21 via West Village Music Management (pre-order here). It’ll capture every era of their story so far, from the early days of 1979 up to 2024. ‘Hit Parade’ boasts 27 top 40 hits from Madness, including ‘It Must Be Love’, ‘Baggy Trousers’, ‘Lovestruck’ and their classic 1982 Number One single ‘House Of Fun’.

“It’s 45 years of the band and 45 singles,” frontman Suggs told NME. “The ‘Hit Parade’ is a joke; it’s what they used to call it in the ’50s. We were just trying to think of something other than ‘Greatest Hits’ [Laughs]. We’ve just been having such a great time the last few years. We had a Number One album [‘Theatre Of The Absurd Presents C’est La Vie’], and we decided we’d have a big celebration of the whole thing.”

Reflecting on Madness’ early days, he added: “There was a parade of serious people going on one side of the pavement, and we were on the other side with a popped balloon and a kazoo. But I can’t complain, because what we do and what we did transcends whatever trends there happen to be.”

Check out the full interview with Suggs below, where he talked about “parading the hits” on their Christmas 2025 UK tour,

NME: Hello, Suggs. What ‘Hit Parade’ track most represents a pivotal or important moment in Madness’ history?

Suggs: “Obviously [1979 debut single] ‘The Prince’. We put that out, barely able to play our instruments. I bumped into Jerry Dammers when he came on with The Specials at the Hope & Anchor. And of course, the story is true that he had nowhere to stay that night. Given his teeth, he wasn’t gonna pull a girl, so he ended up staying at my mum’s flat.

“In the middle of the night, he suddenly announced that he was gonna start his own record label, and it’s gonna be a British Motown. I said, ‘That’s a smidge optimistic, seeing you play to 35 people in a pub basement’. About three months later he got in touch and said, ‘I’ve done it’. He said, ‘Do you wanna make a record?’. Fortunately, we’d been in this eight-track studio in Stoke Newington called ‘Pathway’ where Elvis Costello had recorded ‘Watching The Detectives’. We’d done three songs: ‘Madness’, ‘My Girl’ and ‘The Prince’.

“We sent [Dammers] ‘The Prince’ and he said, ‘Yeah, I wanna put that out as the second single on 2 Tone’. That got in the charts and it got to Number 18 or something, and we were off. So I suppose that is a pivotal single, for sure.”

Were you surprised at any of the songs becoming hits or fan favourites?

“‘Embarrassment’ [1980], I think. It’s a very strange song because it’s got no chorus, and it’s a really odd mixture of Motown – which we were really into – but then the British kind of Elvis Costello, again. The great thing about British music is trying to approximate Black music, and getting it slightly wrong.

“We were being investigated for being racist, because we were the only white band on that Ska tip. That song was about [founder/saxophonist] Lee Thompson’s sister having a baby with a Black guy. It was sort of a kitchen sink drama version – The Specials were political with a capital ‘P’, and we were political with a small ‘p’. But I think we’d been trying to explain to certain members of the audience that we were playing music of Black origin. How the fuck could we be racist? Anyway, that song spelt it out a bit.”

How do you think a new, rising band like Madness would fare in today’s climate?

“I don’t know, it’s hard to say. There are so many factors. We were unique – I think we are unique. All those singles, whatever they were – calypso, jazz, ska, British pop – they all sound like Madness. I remember seeing the Buena Vista Social Club, and thinking they could’ve only come from Cuba. We could’ve only come from where we came from. There’s a unique quality to that.

“It’s so hard for bands now. When we started – ‘the good-old-fucking-days’ and all that… I wish they were! – there were probably 15 pubs in Camden Town, where you could get a gig. Now there’s probably one or two. So for a band of our size – six or seven people – I think it’d be very difficult. We certainly wouldn’t have got very far on X Factor or Britain’s Got Talent. We wouldn’t have got past the first round. I can’t think of any other band like us.”

What did it mean to be honoured with a stone on the Camden’s Music Walk Of Fame in 2020?

“It was very nice. To get recognised for what you’ve done in a sort of charming fashion. It’s right outside the tube station. So if you don’t like us, you can spit on it as soon as you come out of the tube. We took it very gratefully, and a lot of people came to see us. A couple of The Specials came, some of UB40, and people we’ve respected over the years. And a few modern kids – Tinie Tempah and what have you. A great day.”

You contributed to Dua Lipa’s Camden documentary, and we’ve seen local band Wolf Alice blow up as an arena-level act. What do you know about the current scene?

“I go there regularly; I’ve still got friends there. Henry [Conlon] who runs the Dublin Castle, whose dad [Alo] gave us our first gig. That’s still sort of the epicentre of what was my time in Camden. The tourist thing exploded out of all imagination. People are doing good and making a living, but it’s pretty unrecognisable from the dreary, grey old place it was when I was a kid. It was the perfect place to be a skint teenager, because you had Guinness at very reasonable prices and lock-ins. It was a great place to start a band.”

How was it returning to KOKO for an intimate gig in 2023? 

“Yeah, great. With arenas, you don’t get the same feeling as you do in small venues. It’s a different thing. Smaller venues are always a sentimental, romantic remembrance of how great it is to see people up close. We did five nights at the Dublin Castle a little while before that. We decided we were gonna do a night there. We enjoyed it so much, we paid the other four bands who were supposed to be playing that week not to turn up. We just kept doing a surprise gig. There was sweat pouring off the ceiling. I remember saying to Henry, ‘Can we turn up the air conditioning?’ He said, ‘I’ve turned up the heating, to sell more beer’. But playing smaller venues, it’s a reminder of why you did it in the first place.”

You took aim at Boris Johnson on ‘Bullingdon Boys’. What do you make of Keir Starmer’s Labour, and his promise to “protect” grassroots venues?

“Hopefully, it will turn into something. We’ve been very involved in the smaller venues thing, and Henry, I think, is a chairman of music pubs in north London. The whole pub thing in general seems so lopsided. You can see with your own eyes how many music venues are left, and how difficult it is to keep them going. I see a lot of co-operatives now starting up, and young bands getting together and trying to do co-operatives themselves – which I think is great. Any help [Starmer] could give would be marvellous.

“Henry once went to see the Minister Of Culture – it might have been Theresa May or somebody. He went in her office and she had posters of U2, Coldplay and all that, [saying] what great revenue it brings in. He said, ‘Where the fuck do you think these bands started?’ They started in pubs. You can have the chicken without the egg. It’s that whole notion that the creative arts are deemed to be a privilege. There’s no encouragement. Ballet, opera and all that get subsidised, but the most popular art forms don’t. Going to art college and stuff – it’s turning into a situation where only the well-to-do can afford to be involved. It’s really tragic.”

The post Madness on “parading the hits” with new album and celebratory UK tour: “It’s sort of a cheesy ’60s pop show” appeared first on NME.