The Three Pyramids Club

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox album

| name = The Three Pyramids Club

| type = Album

| artist = Suggs

| cover = The Three Pyramids Club.jpeg

| alt =

| released = September 7, 1998

| recorded = 1998

| venue =

| studio = {{flatlist|

  • The Church Studios
  • Swanyard Studios
  • Innovation Studios
  • IQ Studios
    (London)

}}

| genre = Ska/pop

| length = 38:19

| label = Warner Music

| producer = Steve Lironi

| prev_title = The Lone Ranger

| prev_year = 1995

| next_title = The Platinum Collection

| next_year = 2007

}}

{{Album ratings

| rev1 = AllMusic

| rev1Score = {{Rating|4|5}}{{cite web|last=Cater|first=Evan|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-three-pyramids-club-mw0001034314 |title=The Three Pyramids Club Review|work=AllMusic|access-date=30 September 2021}}

| rev2 = NME

| rev2Score = {{Rating|3|5}}{{cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews-nme-94-353167 |title=Rock The Dock |work=NME|date=12 September 2005|access-date=30 September 2021}}

| noprose = yes

}}

The Three Pyramids Club is the second solo studio album by the British singer Suggs known from second wave ska band Madness. It was released in 1998 and reached no. 82 on the UK album chart in its lone week on the chart.{{Cite web|url=http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/31860/SUGGS/|title = Suggs | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company|website = OfficialCharts.com}}

Reception

NME were unimpressed by the album, rating it 5/10 and commenting that "the music swings drunkenly from the vaudeville cheesiness of "Straight Banana" to the rinky-dink cod-ragtime of "Our Man", with Suggs out front like some Cockney karaoke king."

Evan Cater of AllMusic said the album was "far more ambitious" than Suggs' debut solo album, featuring "buoyantly energetic ska-pop". Cater was critical of "Suggs' regrettable predilection for cheesy female background singers and the eye-rolling stupidity of lyrics like "oh, girl, you got me in a whirl," but despite this noted that the album was "more consistent than the debut, and is not without variety." The review concluded by stating: "A must-have for Madness collectors, The Three Pyramids Club should also appeal to the new generation of ska fans."

Track listing

{{Track listing

| total_length =

| all_writing = Graham McPherson and Steve Lironi, except where noted

| title1 = I Am

| length1 = 4:06

| writer1 = McPherson, Nick Feldman

| title2 = So Tired

| length2 = 4:34

| title3 = Straight Banana

| length3 = 4:07

| title4 = Invisible Man

| writer4 = McPherson, Mike Connaris, Boo Hewerdine

| length4 = 3:18

| title5 = Sing

| length5 = 3:54

| title6 = Girl

| length6 = 3:40

| title7 = The Greatest Show on Earth

| length7 = 3:59

| title8 = Our Man

| length8 = 3:36

| title9 = On Drifting Sand

| length9 = 3:37

| title10 = The Three Pyramids Club

| length10 = 3:25

}}

  • The opening introduction of "On Drifting Sand" has a distinct similarity to Madness' 1979 single "One Step Beyond".

Chart performance

class="wikitable sortable"

!Chart (1998)

!Peak
position

align="left"|UK Albums Chart

|align="center"|82

Personnel

;Technical

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Three Pyramids Club}}

Category:Suggs (singer) albums

Category:1998 albums

Category:Warner Records albums