Night Boat to Cairo

"Night Boat to Cairo"
Single by Madness
from the album One Step Beyond...
Released 1979
Format 7"
12"
CD
Recorded 1979
Genre Ska, pop
Length 3:31
Label Virgin Records
Writer(s) Graham McPherson (lyrics)
Mike Barson (music)
Producer(s) Clive Langer
Alan Winstanley
Madness singles chronology
"The Harder They Come"
(1992)
"Night Boat to Cairo"
(Reissue-1993)
"Lovestruck"
(1999)
One Step Beyond... track listing
Side One
  1. "One Step Beyond"
  2. "My Girl"
  3. "Night Boat to Cairo"
  4. "Believe Me"
  5. "Land of Hope and Glory"
  6. "The Prince"
  7. "Tarzan's Nuts"
Side Two
  1. "In the Middle of the Night"
  2. "Bed and Breakfast Man"
  3. "Razor Blade Alley"
  4. "Swan Lake"
  5. "Rockin' in A-flat"
  6. "Mummy's Boy"
  7. "Madness"
  8. "Chipmunks Are Go!"
Divine Madness track listing
"My Girl"
(3)
"Night Boat to Cairo"
(4)
"Baggy Trousers"
(5)

"Night Boat to Cairo" is a song by British ska/pop band Madness from their debut 1979 album One Step Beyond.... It was written by Mike Barson and Suggs and was also included on the Work Rest and Play EP, which peaked at #6 in the UK music charts.[1] The song was later re-issued as a single in 1993, following the success of the re-issued version of "It Must Be Love," but failed to reach the top 40, peaking at number 56.[2] It was remixed slightly for inclusion on the band's eponymous 1983 album compiled for the USA. The song is featured in the 2011 Wii video game Just Dance 3.

The song is often used by Madness to close live concerts and "Night Boat" has passed into cockney rhyming slang as a term for a giro, or unemployment benefit cheque.[3]

Background and composition

The song was composed as an instrumental by Barson, but was expanded when Suggs added lyrics.[4] The song has an unusual structure, with a single long verse followed by an even longer instrumental section, heavily sax-based. At one point, after a key change from C to F, the instrumental slows right down and momentarily stops, then the opening notes of the song are repeated before the tempo picks up again. Suggs has described it as "miles of introduction, a couple of verses then miles of instrumental, no chorus and the title isn't even mentioned apart from me shouting it at the beginning. It's an atmosphere with great music and words- of course it IS a song, but not a traditional one."[5]

Music video

Lee Thompson plays saxophone.

After the decision to issue the Work Rest and Play EP, a promotional music video was needed. However, there was not enough time to make an effective video before the record was released,[1] so a low-budget karaoke-type video was hastily filmed in a studio instead.

The video featured the band dressed in stereotypical British colonial attire, including short trousers and "Zulu"-style pith helmets, in front of a blatantly chroma keyed backdrop of an Egyptian pyramid; the lyrics appearing on screen in "bouncing ball" style as Suggs sang them.[1] During the long instrumental sections of the song, the band ran and jumped around the set, marching and performing their signature "Nutty Train".

Despite - or perhaps because of - the poor effects and editing, and all-round unprofessional feel, it became very popular with fans, perhaps also due to the carefree nature and fooling around of the band onscreen that can be attributed to the large amount of alcohol they consumed while filming.[1]

However, this music video was not used with the 1993 reissue and remixes.

Appearances

In addition to its EP release and appearance on the album One Step Beyond... "Night Boat to Cairo" also appears on the Madness collections Divine Madness (a.k.a. The Heavy Heavy Hits), Complete Madness, It's... Madness Too, The Business, Our House, Madness and Ultimate Collection. Most compilations contain the album version of the track.

Formats and track listings

These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of "Night Boat to Cairo".

  1. "Night Boat to Cairo" (Barson/McPherson) - 3:31
  2. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Edit)" (Barson/McPherson) - 3:45
  1. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Mix)" (Barson/McPherson) - 7:59
  2. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Edit)" (Barson/McPherson) - 3:45
  3. "Night Boat to Cairo (Well Hung Parliament Dub Edit)" (Barson/McPherson) - 5:35
  4. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Instrumental)" (Barson/McPherson) - 7:54
  1. "Night Boat to Cairo (Barson/McPherson)" - 3:31
  2. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Mix)" (Barson/McPherson) - 7:59
  3. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Edit)" (Barson/McPherson) - 3:45
  4. "Night Boat to Cairo (Well Hung Parliament Dub Edit)" (Barson/McPherson) - 5:35
  5. "Night Boat to Cairo (Paul Gotel Rude Instrumental)" (Barson/McPherson) - 7:54

Influence

The song inspired the Israeli hit "Rakevet Laila Le-Kahir" - Hebrew for "Night Train to Cairo", by the Israeli rock group Mashina. "Night Boat to Cairo" has an interplay between major and minor chords, some arpeggio echoes and some soaring fiddles in the fade-out. These themes are reminiscent of East European Yiddish refrains, and are coupled with an irrepressible syncopated ska rhythm.

Chart performance

Chart (1993) Peak
position
Total
weeks
UK Singles Chart[2] 56 2

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "The Ascent of Madness". Archived from the original on 9 April 2015. Retrieved 2010-02-20. March 28th
  2. 1 2 "Madness at Official Charts Company". Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  3. Tibballs, Geoff (2008). The Ultimate Cockney Geezer's Guide to Rhyming Slang. Ebury. ISBN 978-0091927486.
  4. Rachel, Dnaiel (2014). The Art of Noise: Conversations with Great Songwriters. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 1250051290.
  5. Edwards, Terry. Madness- One Step Beyond. 2009. ISBN 978-0826429063.
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