1. Through the Kingdom of Madness
In these difficult and chaotic times the band had been offered a very strange deal. Jake Commander, a former E.L.O-roadie and ex-lead guitarist in THE
ANDICAPS (in which Kex Gorin had played, too), wanted to build a studio and asked them to help him. The band accepted as they were offered free time in the finished studio in return, instead of
money. In spite of Dave's statements to Jake, who had actually claimed that Tony was a carpenter, none of them had any idea how to build a studio! But by some miracle the studio was finished
alright. Tony had composed a few songs and the new line-up set to work for a first demo recording.
After many hours of recording, re-recording and re-re-recording Tony sent the finished demos off to several record companies, more hoping for a deal
than expecting one. But the deal came. Funnily it was JET records whose most successful band were the aforementioned E.L.O. Meanwhile their albums held platinum status and this new wealth enabled
JET to sign more bands. Jeff Lynne of E.L.O., who had also been in THE ANDICAPS with Kex, suggested MAGNUM to Don and David Arden (his son) of JET, who gave the new band a five-record-deal. The
band could hardly believe their luck because their first ever demo got them a record deal right away.
Tony had written all the songs, and the band even produced their first album themselves. They re-recorded the songs from the demo properly in the De
Lane Lea Studios in London but for some unknown reason JET refused to release the album at once.
It didn't come out until 1978. In the meantime Tony had written more songs, so four old tracks “Master Of Disguise“, “Without Your Love“, “Find The
Time“ and “Everybody Needs“, which had been on the original demo, were dropped and replaced by new ones. These were recorded in a record time of 36 hours because MAGNUM didn't want the release
date to be postponed again. The final version of “Kingdom Of Madness“ contained nine tracks: “In The Beginning“, “Baby Rock Me“,
“Universe“, “Kingdom Of Madness“, “All That Is Real“, “The Bringer“, “Invasion“, “Lords Of Chaos“ and “All Come Together“.
The original cover by Stuart Daniels, who was contracted to JET Records at that time, was a
strange picture of a king sitting at a huge table in a big hall. The table is just toppling and the food is flying away. Later editions had a different cover, black
on the outside and an iris of a cat eye in the middle, reflecting an expressionist picture of a medieval city. It was done by David Pilton Advertising Ltd. Rumour has it that the reason for the
new cover was the original artist’s request for more royalties because the album was much more successful than expected!
However, there was a new handicap the band had to face. The new trend in rock music was Punk and MAGNUM were far from following it. In spite of that
the album was classified as yet another outcome of the NWOBHM (New Wave Of British Heavy Metal). “Kingdom Of Madness“ reached a respectable 58th position in the British album charts and enabled
MAGNUM to go on their first proper tour.
Of course, they had played some gigs before, but this was a real tour and the chance to play for a larger audience to make MAGNUM's music more popular.
The band managed to get the support slot for David Coverdale's new band WHITESNAKE. The snakes had the benefit of having inherited most of DEEP PURPLE's fans after their split, which meant
sold-out concerts everywhere. MAGNUM did a great job although they had only small stage equipment.
They did not only support WHITESNAKE and their own new album, but also the two singles lifted from it. The first one was the title track “Kingdom Of
Madness“, a song about nightmares. It was a brilliant rocker with a remarkable flute intro and a very strong rhythm. Since it was first published, this song has always been a highlight of every
MAGNUM show. It was backed by the track “In The Beginning“. The second single was “Invasion“, a song describing an alien invasion on earth. It was a bass-dominated up-tempo piece with “Universe“
on the B-side.
Both singles failed to chart, but nevertheless the band was asked to perform a concert for the BBC in the same year. The band rendered: “Kingdom Of
Madness“/ “Reborn“/ “Changes“(which was to be the next single)/“Invasion“/ “Lords Of Chaos“ and “All Come Together“.
Unfortunately, this is all we know about the running order of the first tour, but they must have mostly played the same songs as on the Railway Inn
gig. They had, of course, many more songs than those from the first album in store, as there were the old demos and some songs for the next album, too. MAGNUM also visited Germany for the first
time when they played “Baby Rock Me“ on the TV-show “Musikladen“.
Interestingly, Bob was then offered to join Richie Blackmore’s RAINBOW. He first thought that he was to play only one gig with them but then it turned
out that Richie wanted Bob to replace Ronnie James Dio permanently! Bob phoned Tony who left it to his choice, but Bob finally declined. Whereas Dio had been involved in songwriting and lyrics in
RAINBOW, Bob doesn’t consider himself much of a songwriter. Moreover, MAGNUM were successful and a coming band, so he went for a future in MAGNUM – and right he was!
Danny Herbert (Mittwoch, 17 April 2024 17:23)
Danke Sehr for all your hard work on this. Fascinating and I will definitely return to spend more time.
Johan (Montag, 18 Januar 2021 13:57)
Thanks for a great read through Magnum history.
Howeve, it looks like something has happened with the link to chapter 17 Bob Catley's Towering Solo Efforts. It points towards the prologue instead of chapter 17.
Glenn Gibson (Freitag, 20 November 2020 19:35)
THANK YOU for this site, you need to turn this into a book. I'd buy it!
Colin (Montag, 06 Januar 2020 23:41)
Good reading and very interesting. Just one small point, Magnum played at the Birmingham Odeon on the March 87 tour. They didn’t play the NEC until the Wings of Heaven tour...
William (Freitag, 30 März 2018 18:19)
One small error - KTNLB does count as a studio album, and LOTRTE is album #20 counting KTNLB (if skipping it, it's album #19). Otherwise great article!
Dave Millward (Montag, 05 März 2018 10:00)
I saw the band on the last date in Wolverhampton on their darewell tour in 1995. Was there a concert programme for the gig?
AustrianMagnumFan (Montag, 05 Februar 2018 10:47)
Hi there,thank you for this wonderful Page.. is it possible to put this informations together to One .Pdf maybe to read it offline ? Regards
Kevol (Dienstag, 08 März 2016 00:54)
Just want to say thank you for this site. It's amazing. Spent there more than hour already :)
Birgit (Montag, 23 März 2015 15:54)
This is a great site. Thanks so much for putting all those facts together. Just a wee amendment on the double headliner shows: At least in Munich they played all three songs which you marked as dropped for double headline purposes... :-)
Chris Beddall (Sonntag, 29 Juni 2014 17:10)
Excellent info, really well done mate!
Jordi Joan (Sonntag, 14 Oktober 2012 21:01)
my tribut to magnum, from catalonia
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWtBkqx7bhM&list=UUPHUosYb-b3D6LsGuMsuscQ&index=6&feature=plcp
Lin O'Connor (Montag, 01 Oktober 2012 16:23)
Was the Archive album available on vinyl? If not is the cd quite rare cant find it anywhere!
Fred (Mittwoch, 01 Februar 2012 21:22)
Amazing site!