1. About “House Of Fun” 1 contributor Released as a standalone single in 1982, this song remains Madness’s only UK #1 single despite enduring popularity over the last thirty years.
  2. 40.1k Followers, 0 Following, 654 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from House Of Fun (@houseoffunsters).

House Of Fun On Facebook

Program information

The passion of their fans would surely have made it challenging to write the group’s Netflix debut, Aunty Donna’s Big Ol’ House of Fun, which premieres on Wednesday.

House Of Fun 1.0 is a program that specially created by the software developer for offering the unique and more convenience services and functions on the computer. Because of the changing requirements for the program or the poor operating situations, people often need to uninstall House Of Fun 1.0 on the PC. But unluckily, according to many people’s experiences, the effective or complete removal of this program is more complex then they thought.

Common problems and reasons of the unsuccessful House Of Fun 1.0 removal

Why people often cannot uninstall House Of Fun 1.0 with success? It is often due to the removing method you take, if you just stop the removal after uninstalling it with its own removing program or the Windows removing programs, I am afraid that there are still many associated files in installed folder and registry entries in system cannot be removed well. The standard removal is limited on cleaning the main process and those files created during the installation, but not including those created after that and its registries on the computer system.

Proper ways to uninstall House Of Fun 1.0 on the PC

Remove it with Windows removing process and additional manual actions

Firstly, start the first stage removal with Windows removing process

1.Click on “This PC” --- “Control Panel” --- “Uninstall a program

Download Automatic Software Uninstaller

Tested Malware & Virus Free by McAfee

2. Complete the removal, and restart the computer.

Secondly, manually check and clean the remnant files

For many third party applications in nowadays, finishing to uninstall them on with the uninstall utility in Windows system does not mean that they have been cleaned complete. As a matter of fact, you may not know that there are still many files associated to the program hiding on the computer and needed to be found and removed well. Otherwise, they will keep occupying the system space, and also affect you to install the program. This situation also often occurs when you try to remove House Of Fun 1.0. How can find out and remove the leftovers on PC? this will be a difficult task that cannot be reached easily.

Clean all of stubborn files on the install folder. It is common practice that the install folder often leaves some files after the uninstallation, which cannot be deleted easily via the deleting feature, in this situation, you should get a cleaning program to remove it forcedly.

Delete the related registry entries with the Registry Editor. Since the system registry is a greatly important database that contains many essential registries which cannot be either modified or removed randomly, so you must be very careful when you try to find out and remove the related registries in this place, or you can apply a professional registry cleaning tool.

To open the Registry Editor, please refer to the following steps:

1. Move the cursor to the lower right corner of the screen

2.Quickly click on the “Search” icon once it appears

3. Type “regedit” on the search box, and press Enter to open the Registry Editor

4. Find out and remove all of registries related to House Of Fun 1.0, especially in the sub-menu of the “Software

'House of Fun'
Single by Madness
from the album Complete Madness
Released14 May 1982
Recorded1982
GenrePop, ska, 2 tone, new wave
Length2:58
LabelStiff
Songwriter(s)Lee Thompson (lyrics)
Mike Barson (music)
Producer(s)Clive Langer, Alan Winstanley
Madness singles chronology
'Cardiac Arrest'
(1982)
'House of Fun'
(1982)
'Driving in My Car'
(1982)

'House of Fun' is a song by English ska/pop group Madness, credited to Mike Barson and Lee Thompson.[1] It was released as a one-off single on 14 May 1982 and reached number one in the UK Singles Chart, spending nine weeks in the charts.[2][3] The song was re-released in 1992, reaching number 40. It is the band's only number one single in the UK and in 2015 the British public voted it as the nation's 8th favourite 1980s number one in a poll for ITV.[4]

Recording[edit]

The song was originally recorded under the title 'Chemist Facade', without the 'Welcome to the House of Fun' chorus. While the song was being recorded, head of Stiff Records Dave Robinson insisted that the song should have a chorus, so band member Mike Barson immediately wrote the 'Welcome to the House of Fun' refrain on his piano.[5]

At this point, the song had already been recorded, and the management decided not to re-record the whole song. Instead, the recording was edited, and the chorus instruments and vocals dubbed onto the recording. This proved to be difficult, mainly due to technical limitations at the time, and it resulted in the first part of the word 'Welcome' being cut off. Due to this, the chorus seemed to begin 'Elcome to the House of Fun', so lead singer Suggs was forced to overdub the word 'Welcome'. Although this proved to be a tough task, it was completed successfully.[5]

Music and lyrical content[edit]

The introduction to the song.

'House of Fun' is composed in the key of D, written in common time.[6] It is a pop song which moves at an upbeat 126 beats per minute. The song is written in simple verse-chorus form, ending with a repeating chorus fade out (the original 7' release version/mix ends with a sudden keyboard 'crash', followed by fairground organ music). The song begins solely with eight drum beats, before the keyboard, bass guitar, electric guitar, trumpet and saxophone are all introduced simultaneously.

House Of Fun Bonus Collector

The song is about coming of age. The lyrics tell the story of a boy on his 16th birthday attempting to buy condoms at a chemist. The UK age of consent is 16, and he makes a point of stating that he is '16 today and up for fun'.[6] However, the boy is misunderstood by the chemist, as he asks for the condoms using slang euphemisms, such as 'box of balloons with a featherlight touch' and 'party hatswith the coloured tips'.[6] The confused chemist behind the counter eventually informs the boy that the establishment is not a joke shop, and directs him towards the 'House of Fun'.

Madness guitarist Chris Foreman commented jokingly about the song:[7]

I'm not sure about this one... I think it's about coming of age, I can't remember much about because when it happened to me it was a long time ago. You could buy a packet of fags, a pint of beer and a three piece suit for half a crown and still have enough left to go and see Rudolf Valentino at the Gaumont! I can't afford to go to the pictures these days but I hear they talk in them now.

House o fun b toys

House Of Fun Vip Plus

Promotional film[edit]

Funfair part of the music video.

A substantial portion of the music video was filmed at the Pleasure Beach in Great Yarmouth, with parts of the video featuring the band on the Roller Coaster. This was filmed on 7 March 1982.[3] The video begins with Suggs dressed as a boy entering the shop with Lee Thompson and Chas Smash behind him, playing the saxophone and trumpet respectively. On entering the shop, Suggs acts out the lyrics of the song, as a 16-year-old boy awkwardly attempting to purchase condoms, without much success. Suddenly, on the first chorus, three of the band members enter the shop, dressed in gowns and wearing sunglasses and silly headgear (much like Monty Python-esque Pepperpots), and perform a simple, rhythmic yet comedic tongue-in-cheek stepping-dance routine, supposedly acting as dancing pepperpots hired with the Pleasure Beach attraction 'Fun House'.

The band are later seen in a barbershop, before the finale of the song is sung on the roller coaster at the aforementioned funfair. The film closes with the band on board an infinite roller coaster loop as the chorus fades.

Despite the fact that 'House of Fun' was not released in the US, the music video was shown on the newly launched MTV. Due to this, the music video, along with others such as 'It Must Be Love' and 'Cardiac Arrest', helped set the stage in the US for Madness' future song 'Our House', which was their biggest stateside hit by far, peaking at number 7 in July 1983.[8][9]

Compilation appearances[edit]

As well as the song's single release, it has featured on various compilation albums released by Madness. It was initially included on Complete Madness which was released on 23 April 1982, prior to the release of the single itself. This album also hit number 1 in the UK at the time of the single's release, meaning Madness were at the top of both the single and album charts. The song was then included on the 1992 compilation Divine Madness, which was later reissued as The Heavy Heavy Hits. The song was further included on The Business and It's... Madness. It featured in the Our House musical, which was based on the band's songs, and as such appears on the accompanying soundtrack, Our House. Furthermore, it was part of the US releases Madness and Ultimate Collection.[10] In addition to these releases, the song also features on several 'Best of the 80s' albums.[10]

The original single contained a 10-second coda featuring music from a fairground. However, subsequent releases of the song removed this ending with the track fading to a conclusion instead. It wasn't until 2010 that the original 7' version was reissued; it was included on the second disc of the re-release of the band's 1982 album The Rise & Fall. This is also the version used on the A Guided Tour of Madness compilation.

Personnel[edit]

  • Lead vocals: Graham McPherson AKA Suggs
  • Lead guitar: Chris Foreman
  • Bass guitar: Mark Bedford
  • Keyboards: Mike Barson
  • Saxophone: Lee Thompson
  • Trumpet: Chas Smash
  • Drums: Daniel Woodgate
  • Producers: Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley

Formats and track listings[edit]

These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of 'House of Fun'.

1982 release[edit]

  • 7' Single
  1. 'House of Fun' (Barson/Thompson) - 2:58.
  2. 'Don't Look Back' (Foreman) - 3:31

1992 release[edit]

  • 7' Single
  1. 'House of Fun' (Barson/Thompson) - 2:49
  2. 'Un Paso Adelante!' (Campbell) - 2:36
  • 12' Single
  1. 'House of Fun' (Barson/Thompson) - 2:49
  2. 'Un Paso Adelante!' (Campbell) - 2:36
  3. 'Yesterday's Men' (McPherson/Foreman) - 4:10
  4. 'Gabriel's Horn (demo)' (Smyth) - 3:45
  • CD Single
House of fun games
  1. 'House of Fun' (Barson/Thompson) - 2:49
  2. 'Un Paso Adelante!' (Campbell) - 2:36
  3. 'Yesterday's Men' (McPherson/Foreman) - 4:10
  4. 'Gabriel's Horn (demo)' (Smyth) - 3:45

'Un Paso Adelante!' is a Spanish version of the group's 1979 hit 'One Step Beyond'. 'Gabriel's Horn' was re-recorded in 1986 when the group were working on the never-completed Lost in the Museum album. A version appeared on The Madness' self-titled LP.

Charts[edit]

Weekly charts[edit]

Chart (1982)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[11]5
Ireland (IRMA)[12]1
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[13]34
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[14]23
UK Singles (OCC)[15]1
Chart (1992)Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[16]73
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[17]40

Year-end charts[edit]

Chart (1982)Rank
Australia (Kent Music Report)[18]68

See also[edit]

References[edit]

House Of Fun Slots Facebook

  1. ^'Allmusic.com Madness album overview'. Retrieved on 28 June 2007.
  2. ^Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 409. ISBN1-904994-10-5.
  3. ^ ab'The Madness Timeline: 1982'. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved on 27 June 2007.
  4. ^Westbrook, Caroline (25 July 2015). 'The Nation's Favourite 80s Number One: 12 more classic 80s chart-toppers which didn't make the cut'. Metro. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  5. ^ ab'CLASSIC TRACKS: 'Our House' by Madness'. Retrieved on 22 August 2007.
  6. ^ abcCommercial sheet music for 'House of Fun'.
  7. ^Comments regarding the song on the back of the Complete MadnessLP. V2 Records
  8. ^'MTV Madness biography'. Retrieved on 24 August 2007.
  9. ^'The Madness Story: Chapter 5'. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved on 19 June 2007
  10. ^ ab'Allmusic.com 'House of Fun' appearances'. Retrieved on 22 August 2007.
  11. ^Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 187. ISBN0-646-11917-6.
  12. ^'The Irish Charts - All there is to know > Search results for 'Madness' (from irishcharts.ie)'. Fireball Media, via Imgur.com. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  13. ^'Dutchcharts.nl – Madness – House of Fun' (in Dutch). Single Top 100. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  14. ^'Charts.nz – Madness – House of Fun'. Top 40 Singles. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  15. ^'Official Singles Chart Top 100'. Official Charts Company. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  16. ^Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010 (pdf ed.). Mt. Martha, VIC, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 174.
  17. ^'Official Charts > Madness'. Official Charts Company. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  18. ^'Kent Music Report No 445 – 3 January 1983 > National Top 100 Singles for 1982'. Kent Music Report, via Imgur.com. Retrieved 1 January 2020.

House Of Fun Slots

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=House_of_Fun&oldid=1003476727'