Theatre Of The Absurd

Album: Theatre of the Absurd Presents C'est la Vie (2023)
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Songfacts®:

  • The Theatre of the Absurd was born from the ashes of World War II. A time, let's not mince words, that made a mockery of meaning itself. So, what did these theatrical chaps do? Did they churn out stirring war epics, tales of heroism and stiff upper lips? No siree. They opted for the altogether more, well, absurd. We're talking plays that resembled a particularly deranged game of Twister, dialogue that would make a mime cry for subtitles, and situations about as logical as a unicycle built for two. Why? To shove existential dread down the audience's throat with a side of farce, of course!

    And who was the ringmaster of this chaotic circus? A fellow by the name of Samuel Beckett. Beckett's plays were the distilled essence of absurdity. Plots that went round in circles faster than a hamster on a wheel, characters trapped in routines more soul-crushing than a tax audit, and dialogue that would leave you wondering if they'd accidentally hired pigeons to write the script. Bleak? You bet. Hilarious? In a deeply uncomfortable way, absolutely.

    Fast forward to our own little slice of the absurd – a global pandemic that would make even Camus question the point of a good cuppa. On November 17, 2023 Madness released a song "Theatre of the Absurd," where singer Suggs details haunting images of London's West End during the pandemic with a promise to host "the last and only performance of the cruelest cabaret."
  • "Theatre Of The Absurd" reflects on the absurdity of life during the COVID lockdown. "I was reading about Samuel Beckett then I read about the French Theater group who wrote in gobbledegook because nobody talks to anyone anymore," Suggs told The Sun. "I imagined us lot in this old theater and it made a lot of sense for what we were all going through."
  • Theatre of the Absurd Presents C'est la Vie is Madness' 13th album. "I came up with this song 'Theatre of the Absurd' and thought that might be a good title," said Suggs.
  • The band self-produced Theatre of the Absurd Presents C'est la Vie in a Cricklewood, London industrial unit. Designed as a three-act Music Hall show, it incorporates a prologue, an epilogue, and narrative intermissions by actor and avid Madness fan Martin Freeman. Madness' manager facilitated an accelerated introduction during a meet and greet, which formed his bond with the band.

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