Suggs has admitted he s been singing to strangers at the bus stop after a horrendous year in lockdown meant he was unable to perform.
The Madness frontman, 60, said passers-by would make a hasty exit if they saw him coming after he developed the hilarious habit to satisfy his performance itch.
Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live s Headliners podcast, Suggs added that he s thrilled to finally be back rehearsing so he and Madness can return to the stage when lockdown restrictions ease later this month.
Difficult: Suggs has admitted he s been singing to strangers at the bus stop after a horrendous year in lockdown meant he was unable to perform (pictured in October 2019)
British pop royalty Madness are coming to
AMC for a new three-part documentary series, Before We Was We: Madness by Madness.
Adapted from the band’s critically acclaimed biography, the 60-minute episodes will look back at the band’s musical legacy through interviews with band members past and present.
Their 40-year career began at a time of cultural and political upheaval in the 1970s and the docuseries offers a captivating insight into a post-war Britain and how it has changed beyond recognition alongside the band’s inevitable rise to the top of the charts.
The series is AMC UK’s second original production, following the success of
Suggs, the front-man of pop group Madness,has revealed how he and his bandmates were on a dangerous criminal path before being saved by music.
The 60-year-old singer - real name Graham McPherson - headed up the group as they found fame in the early 1980s, releasing songs such as House Of Fun and Baggy Trousers.
Suggs - who used the moniker for a graffiti tag before keeping it on as his stage name - was arrested for fighting in public, while his bandmates dabbled in burglary and shoplifting and even ended up in prison.
Rocky road: Suggs, the front-man of pop group Madness,has revealed how he and his bandmates were on a dangerous criminal path before being saved by music
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They were also joined by Ben Timlett, the co-director of the docuseries, titled Before We Was We: Madness By Madness.
The show is a three-part original which chronicles the rise of one of the biggest and most loved bands in British culture.
Co-stars: The 60-year-old singer (real name Graham McPherson), who headed up the group as they found fame in the early 1980s, took to the red carpet alongside band-mate Chris Foreman
House Of Fun! Suggs rocked an eccentric yellow checked three-piece suit with an over-sized bow-tie, a burgundy smoking jacket and a cane
The event on Thursday was what is believed to be the world s smallest premiere event.
Madness reveal their wild pasts and how the band saved them from a life of crime
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Updated: 15 Apr 2021, 10:02
THEY are one of Britain’s best-loved groups – and now it has emerged the name Madness sums up the band members’ chaotic lives before they found fame in the early Eighties.
Thanks to a string of hits, including Baggy Trousers and One Step Beyond, the Nutty Boys were saved from a life of crime.
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A new documentary reveals the stark contrast between Madness s former lives and the fame they found
Frontman Suggs had been arrested for affray in his teens and admitted they could have been jailbirds if they had not become chart-toppers.