Song of the Week 3/31/13 : TURN UP THE RADIO

When I first heard this song, it made me feel very nostalgic for some reason. It was something about the melody, her voice, and the carefree lyrics that brought me back to the eighties Madonna. It instantly became one of my favorites from MDNA and 1 year later, it still makes me feel good when it comes on. Although, it is a typical Solveig production and sounds a bit like some of his other work, there’s is something still so “Madonna” about it and I don’t think it would have worked the same if someone else sang it. When she sings, “It’s here I begin my story,” I do feel like she is almost reflecting on her own career and making her peace with it all and realizing it’s all a part of what made her what she is. I don’t think it’s as strong as any of her big eighties hits and I don’t think it will go down as a classic by any means but I do think it is a great escape song and a throwback to that feeling of just having fun with no strings or baggage attached.

What do you think of this song? Turn it up or turn it off?

AbsoluteRetro | Frozen (In-Studio Japanese TV Promo)

Song of the Week 3/17/13: FROZEN

It’s been 15 years and I still continue to be blown away when listening to this song. I remember my first time hearing this song so vividly – it was mysterious, beautiful, eerie, and absolutely hypnotizing. As soon as I heard those dramatic opening strings which were then soon followed by the electronic drum flourishes, I knew this was something special. Her voice is absolute perfection – there’s a detached quality to it that works with the theme so well in the verse but there’s also an incredible warmth and fullness in the chorus that envelops the listener and doesn’t let go even as the song fades out. The multi-layered vocals at the end of the song are also partcularly stunning and my favorite part of the song. The lyrics are also very well written and a perfect compliment to the music and made many a fan wonder why it took her so long to get back to writing with Pat Leonard. Their musical chemistry is undeniable and in my opinion he is the best songwriting partner she has ever worked with. This song always stops me in my tracks and takes me back to the magical time that was the ROL era. I remember a college friend remarking that they liked the song but didn’t think it was very” Madonna” and I remember saying, “but that’s Madonna – she’s never what you expect” and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

What do you think of this song? Does it melt your heart or leave you feeling cold?

Anderson & Madonna Backstage at GLAAD Media Awards

Madonna’s Speech at GLAAD Media Awards

Express Yourself cover by Ninique Royer

Talented Toronto-based singer-songwriter Ninique Royer covers Express Yourself.

AbsoluteRetro | Body Of Evidence ET Interview & Press Conference

AbsoluteRemix | Ray Of Light (Official Calderone Remix Video)

Ray Of Light Turns 15

When Madonna arrived at a Los Angeles studio in summer 1997, ready to record what would become Ray Of Light, her seventh album of original material, she’d already spent months writing demos with her longtime collaborator Patrick “Live To Tell” Leonard and songwriter Rick Nowels. Fueled by a love of then-current electronic music coming out of the UK and Europe — think Daft Punk and DJ Dimitri — she chose Brit whiz William Orbit as her collaborator for what she termed his “certain brand of madman-type genius.”

Orbit had previously remixed a few of M’s singles. In 1997, he encountered a freshly energized (and spiritualized) Madonna. Now a student of Kabbalah and a new parent, she told MTV’s Kurt Loder at the time, “I have much more of a joy of living than I can ever remember having before… I realized how blessed I was. I started to focus on living in the moment and enjoying each moment.” The mood was reflected in her appearance too, with long strawberry blond hair and an earth mother vibe.

Madonna had a history of launching albums with killer singles. Ray Of Light arrived on March 3, 1998, and, prior to that, most hardcore fans of the singer can remember where they were when they first heard the oceanic strings and burping synths that lead “Frozen.”

“You only see what your eyes want to see,” Madonna sings in a vulnerable, almost whispering voice before the song’s Eastern influences come in. Not since “Live To Tell” had a Madonna ballad carried such emotional weight — and this time it was done with a new level of sonic grandeur.

“Drowned World /Substitute For Love,” the album’s first track, started as a simple demo about her search for something deeper than material wealth and fame. In the studio with Orbit, he and M layered the record with blips, stardust effects and a sample from the obscure “Why I Follow the Tigers” by The San Sebastian Strings. The first voice you hear on the album is male, saying “You see,” before Madonna’s own vocals appear, sounding deeper and wiser.

Like the first chapter of a great novel, “Drowned World” sets the tone for an album light years ahead of its predecessors in scope and musicality.

Madonna’s vocals throughout Ray Of Light were a game-changer. In the 15 years since her debut, no one had heard this voice before. On the astonishing title track, she shatters her previous range as she scales up and down the peaks of the exhilarating chorus. Working on Evita a few years before “really strengthened my voice,” she said at the time. “I learned how to sing in a way that I never did before.”

Indeed, no choir is needed to lift “Ray Of Light” into disco heaven. Madonna supplies the highs herself in some perfect moments: the extended, spiraling way she wails “yea-ea-ears” at 3:27 or how her vocal spins out of control at 4:14, matched by Orbit’s frenzied guitar work.

Much of Ray Of Light’s energy comes from the pulsating dance music she paired with lyrics that reflected her new outlook. Nicknaming the album Veronica Electronica as she recorded it, Madonna told MTV she was making “drug music without drugs… it’s possible [to create] if you have really free people.”

In particular, “Sky Fits Heaven” and “Skin” sound earth-shaking on a large sound system. Enlightened by the influence of both Kabbalah and world music, Madonna even included the beat heavy “Shanti/Ashtangi,” sung entirely in Sanskrit.

Lourdes, Madonna’s baby, also heavily influenced Ray Of Light’s softer spirit. “Having her has set me on a new way of thinking,” she told MTV. The gossamer “Little Star” is literally a sweet lullaby, made contemporary by Orbit’s’ shimmering production. “A lot of bubbly bits” is how Madonna described his contribution. The track is in stark contrast to the darker, “Mer Girl,” an eerie, almost free-form mediation on the death of her own mother.

By the time the album’s fifth single, “Nothing Really Matters,” was released in 1999, Madonna had shaken off the earthy styling for a more severe, Asian-influenced look, with blunt-cut, jet black hair and pale makeup. For the Johan Renck-directed video, Madonna set what was perhaps Ray Of Light‘s most classically Madonna-esque pop song against ultra-modern geisha visuals. Check her wicked “finger dancing” and jerking dance moves while creepy extras bob up and down in the background like they’d floated in from a Japanese horror flick.

“The Power Of Good-Bye” acts as a sort of sonic sister to “Frozen,” both in the theme of a heart closed to love and Scottish film scorer Craig Armstrong’s distinctive string arrangements (listen for his sweeping orchestral bridge at 2:49).

The song’s co-writer, Rick Nowels, spoke to Idolator last week, recalling, “Madonna and I wrote nine songs together over a two week period in late April 1997. Madonna would show up at 3 p.m. and we would start from scratch. She would leave at 7:00 and we would have a finished song and demo with all her lead and background vocals recorded.

“She is a brilliant pop melodist and lyricist,” Nowels continued. “I was knocked out by the quality of the writing. The lyrics to ‘The Power Of Good-Bye’ are stunning. I love Madonna as an artist and a songwriter… I know she grew up on Joni Mitchell and Motown, and to my ears she embodies the best of both worlds. She is a wonderful confessional songwriter, as well as being a superb hit chorus pop writer… She doesn’t get the credit she deserves as a writer.”

Though Ray Of Light peaked at #2 on the Billboard 200 chart — it was blocked from #1 by the unstoppable Titanic soundtrack — the LP won four Grammys, including Best Pop Vocal Album. The album remains an artistic watershed for Madonna; not only was it well-received by critics, its sales exceeded those of her previous two studio albums.

In 1998, 15 years into her career, “Veronica Electronica” was more plugged in to her art than ever before. As Madonna said in the studio that prior summer, “It’s about wonderment.”

source: http://idolator.com/7444244/madonna-ray-of-light-anniversary-15-backtracking

Song of the Week 3/3/13 : HUNG UP

This song was pretty much a 180 from the American Life album – Madonna was ready to dance again. This song is pure fun and practically dares you not to want to tap your feet and sing along. The Abba sample is just perfect – enough to pay homage, but not too much that the song loses its originality. The seventies disco scene is certainly an inspiration in this song and the Confessions album as a whole and convincingly so. Madonna sounds nostalgic but also manages to also sound young and fresh at the same time – no easy feat. The lyrics here are pretty basic and she even recycles some from LAP’s Love Song of all places but they suit the playfulness and attitude of the song just fine. I love the chant of “Time goes by so slowly” and the slow building musical break before the final choruses is just genius. Judging from the recent interpretations on tour, I think it works best in its original form – why mess with perfection, right?

What do you think of this song? Hung up or Hang it up?

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