Keep Moving | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Madness |
Cover: | Keep Moving - Madness.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Recorded: | 1983 |
Studio: | |
Genre: |
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Label: | |
Producer: | |
Prev Title: | Madness |
Prev Year: | 1983 |
Next Title: | Mad Not Mad |
Next Year: | 1985 |
Keep Moving is the fifth studio album by the English ska/pop band Madness. It was released in February 1984, and was their final album on the Stiff label. It's notably the band's last studio album to feature their keyboardist and founding member Mike Barson, before the band split in 1986.
Keep Moving peaked at No. 6 in the UK Albums Chart, and two singles from the album reached the Top 20 in the UK Singles Chart.[1] It also reached number 109 on the US Billboard 200, their highest position for a studio album in the United States. The album received some good reviews, with Rolling Stone magazine giving the album four out of five stars, applauding the band's changing sound,[2] and NME ranking it number 13 among the "Albums of the Year" for 1984.[3]
The album was re-released in the United Kingdom in June 2010 on the Salvo/Union Square label, featuring bonus material. The reissue is a 2-CD set with the original album digitally remastered; the bonus content consists of associated singles, 12" mixes and B-sides. It also features liner notes written by comedian and Madness fan Phill Jupitus.
On 5 October 1983, the band were rehearsing and discussing a possible television series, which was being written for them by Ben Elton and Richard Curtis. Barson then informed the band that he would not be able to take part, as he was tired of the music business and wanted to spend more time with his wife. They had recently relocated to Amsterdam.[4] Barson agreed to finish recording the album Keep Moving and left after playing for the last time with the band at the Lyceum Ballroom on 21 December 1983. After leaving the band, James Mackie[5] took Barson's place, appearing with Madness on the US hit television show Saturday Night Live on 14 April 1984. After leaving the band, Barson returned to the UK for the filming of two music videos, "Michael Caine" and "One Better Day", as he'd played on the tracks. He officially left the band in June 1984, following the release of the "One Better Day" single.[1] Paul Carrack took Barson's place whilst the band toured America in early 1984.
The album takes its name from a phrase used repeatedly in the 1970 post-apocalyptic film The Bed Sitting Room.[6]
The album cover was based on a suggestion by Stiff's boss Dave Robinson that it should reflect the forthcoming Olympics.[7]
This pressing has a different running order to the UK version and includes the singles "Wings of a Dove" and "The Sun and the Rain" in place of "Waltz Into Mischief" and "Time for Tea" (although the cassette and CD both include all 14 tracks). The version of "The Sun and the Rain" used here, and also issued as a single in North America, has an edited outro, reducing the length by some 12 seconds. A vinyl picture disc version, using the US/Canadian track listing, was also issued in the UK.
Madness
Additional personnel
Technical personnel
2010 reissue personnel
Chart (1984) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
Canadian Albums Chart[8] | 66 | |
German Albums Chart[9] | 47 | |
Swedish Albums Chart[10] | 29 | |
UK Albums Chart[11] | 6 | |
US Billboard Hot 200 | 109 |