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Reply #60 posted 10/08/12 3:38pm

SoulAlive

what were the highlights for you?

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Reply #61 posted 10/08/12 3:54pm

purplethunder3
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SoulAlive said:

what were the highlights for you?

I just got back and wanted to post a thoughtful review instead of a few messy comments off the top of my head. I will get back to you and include comments on the points that you made. wink

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #62 posted 10/08/12 4:26pm

SoulAlive

purplethunder3121 said:

SoulAlive said:

what were the highlights for you?

I just got back and wanted to post a thoughtful review instead of a few messy comments off the top of my head. I will get back to you and include comments on the points that you made. wink

wink looking forward to seeing your review

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Reply #63 posted 10/08/12 6:16pm

purplethunder3
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SoulAlive said:

purplethunder3121 said:

I just got back and wanted to post a thoughtful review instead of a few messy comments off the top of my head. I will get back to you and include comments on the points that you made. wink

wink looking forward to seeing your review

Writing a music review ain't easy...particularly when it comes to someone as controversial as Madonna... I attended two nights in San Jose; the first night I focused on the show as a whole; the second night I had such a close-up view of the stage that I found myself concentrating more on watching Madonna herself. The show was professionally executed on both nights...almost like a full-on Broadway production. No expense was spared on multi-media technology, set design, costumes/props, and professional dancers. It flowed organically from beginning to end with very few (if any) awkward transitions or numbers. Even the songs I liked least from the MDNA album fit into the over-all theme of Madonna's unapologetic in-your-face musical journey involving her own personal challenges, social inequities, and the uncertain tightrope we all tread between between "heaven and hell" in all too imperfect human existence. Was it nuanced and subtle? Of course not! This is Madonna we're talking about! lol

Highlights:

***I enjoyed the melodrama of the intro--like a medieval horror movie! The inclusion of Kalakan really added a haunting undertone to the songs they participated in...

***The tongue-in-cheek violence of the "Gang Bang" tribute to Kill Bill was a definite high point for me. (Madonna wanted Tarantino to direct the video for this song.)

***"Give Me All Your Luvin'" was a show-stopper in and of itself. Although it is one of my least favorite songs from MDNA, it totally worked live on stage with great choreography, the marching band, costumes, and enthusiastic response of the crowd. How about those drummers suspended in mid-air?!!

***"Everybody" sung live on Saturday with audience participation was a singular enjoyable experience. smile

***Unlike a lot of people, I liked the slowed-down version of "Like A Virgin." Many consider that it drags the show down, but I found it strangely compelling as a plaintive farewell from a middle-aged woman to the ballsy but somewhat naive illusions of her youth...

***The visual imagery of the "Nobody Knows Me" video interlude was deeply striking, thought-provoking, and moved me.

***Finally, as a whole, I found the trilogy of "I'm Addicted," "I'm a Sinner," and "Like a Prayer" a rousing end to the overarching concept of the concert. And what an almost religious experience it was with "Like a Prayer" when the whole arena responded like an ecstatic congregation at a religious revival! lol

"Celebration" seemed like an encore, to me, even though it was a flawless execution in terms of choreography, costumes, and stage production. I liked the fact that she integrated so many new songs along with old classics. Could more audience favorites have been included? Could a couple of numbers have been replaced by others or produced differently? Of course, but such choices are subjective and would probably be as contentious as Madonna is with fans and critics alike. Any criticisms aside, the MDNA tour was an incredible visual and audio feast that I'm glad I had the chance to participate in.

[Edited 10/8/12 21:41pm]

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #64 posted 10/08/12 7:27pm

purplethunder3
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Additional notes:

The main complaints I heard from concert-goers were that they had to wait for so long for Madonna to come on--at 10:30 p.m. when the tickets said the concert started at 8 p.m. For those who stayed in touch on the internet we knew that the DJ portion would come first, but Ticketmaster not notifying ticket-buyers of this via e-mail or announcement is a valid criticism. But criticism of her show itself I found to be few and far between. I can say that the majority of the crowd responded overwhelmingly to Madonna and she felt it--returning that sentiment both verbally and with a high energy performance, putting her all into the concert.

I found it interesting that Madonna commented on the religious bigots boycotting the concerts with signs and verbal condemnations. I heard them telling people that they were not only going to hell for being gay but for attending a Madonna concert. lol Madonna said that they told her she was a sinner. She said that she told them she knew she was. They then told her she was going to hell. She said she knew that, too; she'd already been through it (or words to that effect). lol Ironically, these same types of proselytisers were waving signs and condemning people for attending the Prince concerts at the LA Forum--an artist who is a self-proclaimed Jehovah's Witness...and follows what are considered Christian moral rules of behavior by most standards... confuse razz lol

Gonna get flack for this observation--but Madonna is STILL doing the kind of performances on stage (the wild religious vs. sexuality themes etc. played out on stage) that people long for with Prince...and I say this as someone who still thinks Prince delivers in a live performance! lol

[Edited 10/8/12 22:13pm]

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #65 posted 10/09/12 12:16am

SoulAlive

Wow,that was quite a review! thumbs up! Excellent analysis of the show.

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Reply #66 posted 10/09/12 12:22am

SoulAlive

I have to admit,it was frustrating to wait until 10:30 for Madonna to begin her show lol That was a looooong wait,especially for those of us who arrived at the arena around 6:00 PM,like I did (lol).I don't see why the opener (Martin Solveig) could not have come on at 8:00,do his hour-long set,and then Madonna come on at 9:30.That would have worked out better,and the show would have ended at 11:30.

purplethunder3121 said:

The main complaints I heard from concert-goers were that they had to wait for so long for Madonna to come on--at 10:30 p.m. when the tickets said the concert started at 8 p.m. For those who stayed in touch on the internet we knew that the DJ portion would come first, but Ticketmaster not notifying ticket-buyers of this via e-mail or announcement is a valid criticism. But criticism of her show itself I found to be few and far between. I can say that the majority of the crowd responded overwhelmingly to Madonna and she felt it--returning that sentiment both verbally and with a high energy performance, putting her all into the concert.

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Reply #67 posted 10/09/12 12:38am

SoulAlive

Los Angeles,it's your turn lol Madonna plays two nights at Staples Center (October 10 and 11).

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Reply #68 posted 10/09/12 12:56am

purplethunder3
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SoulAlive said:

I have to admit,it was frustrating to wait until 10:30 for Madonna to begin her show lol That was a looooong wait,especially for those of us who arrived at the arena around 6:00 PM,like I did (lol).I don't see why the opener (Martin Solveig) could not have come on at 8:00,do his hour-long set,and then Madonna come on at 9:30.That would have worked out better,and the show would have ended at 11:30.

purplethunder3121 said:

The main complaints I heard from concert-goers were that they had to wait for so long for Madonna to come on--at 10:30 p.m. when the tickets said the concert started at 8 p.m. For those who stayed in touch on the internet we knew that the DJ portion would come first, but Ticketmaster not notifying ticket-buyers of this via e-mail or announcement is a valid criticism. But criticism of her show itself I found to be few and far between. I can say that the majority of the crowd responded overwhelmingly to Madonna and she felt it--returning that sentiment both verbally and with a high energy performance, putting her all into the concert.

Yeah, Sunday I didn't go until 8:45 p.m. and that seemed long... LOL But, still a great concert and going by what Felix said, who attended all the Madonna tours, this was one of her best. And this, after being a fan in 80s, was my first Madonna tour. I'm glad that experienced concert-goers consider it so good. wink

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #69 posted 10/09/12 1:00am

SoulAlive

I want you to hold me like you hold my money....hold me in your arms until there's nothing left

Posted ImagePosted Image

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Reply #70 posted 10/09/12 1:01am

purplethunder3
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Go, LA! thumbs up!

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #71 posted 10/09/12 11:31am

TheResistor

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purplethunder3121 said:

Go, LA! thumbs up!

I'm ready!!!!

First. Thanks purplethunder3121 for keeping these stickies alive. I've been reading them since the begining.

Second. Thanks SoulAlive for keeping the interest going. I'm always interested in your opinions on all things Madge. I've been lurking your posts for years now.

I will be at Staples on October 10 and October 11. I can't wait.

I had the opportunity to see the MDNA show at Yankee Stadium in New York on September 6th. My partner and I, frustrated by the lack of resolution to prop 8 in California, decided to say fuck it, let's just get married in New York City. So we did. And as a wedding gift some friends got us some tickets for the Yankee Stadium show. Once in the venue, another wonderful set of friends, got us into the golden triangle, and my partner and I nearly died. We met some of the dancers and we got to meet Rocco. It was surreal. It was wonderful to see Madonna so close up. I kept my eye on her the entire time. Yes, she's older, but she's looks fantastic for her 54 years. She's looking more beautiful than ever. Yes, she does sing live for most of the songs. And yes, she really is playing the guitar. She's no Prince, but it was great to see her focusing on her guitar riffs. No bullshiting there. We were so close I could see all of her facial expressions. At one point, she literally sat down on the stairs, two feet from my face, took off her pump and peeled off what I assumed was the skin from a blister. She put her pump back on and continued with the show. Her energy is really unbelieavable. She's literally dancing all over the place, most times outdoing her dancers who are what? twenty years younger than her.

Seriously, it was exhausting just watching her. She deserves mad props for working so hard. Even if you're not a fan I think she deserves respect for her tours and for not burning out and turning into some cliche hot mess of a star.

She's kept her eye on the ball, her entire career. Yes, she's taken some risks and failed miserably. (I'm thinking of her movies here. I liked her in "A League of Their Own, but to me, a hardcore fan, "Evita," was unwatchable. But I do adore "W.E." It has its flaws and was heavy-handed at times but it was really enjoyable. I'd forgotten Madonna had directed and was immersed in the story. I think she's got a future as a film director. Like Harvey Weinstein said (paraphrasing here) , "had anybody besides Madonna directed "W.E." the film would've gotten the respect it deserves."

Like you purplethunder3121 I plan on focusing on the entire spectacle this time around. I'm taking some musician friends and "Silver Lake Hipters," who are strangely curious to see her. When they told me they had gotten tickets, I was shocked.

This will be my ninth and tenth time seeing one of her shows. I saw The Blond Ambition Tour in Houston Texas when I was a teenager. And since moving to L.A. I've seen her in The Drowned World Tour, The Reinvention Tour, Confessions Tour (twice), Sticky & Sweet, and the MDNA is by far my favorite, and maybe that's cause I do love about 75% of the MDNA album.

Anywho... cool

p.s. before I get crucified for my musical tastes, I've seen the Purple One over twenty times. What can I say. I love all kinds of live music shows.

rainbow

"...literal people are scary, man
literal people scare me
out there trying to rid the world of its poetry
while getting it wrong fundamentally
down at the church of "look, it says right here, see!" - ani difranco
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Reply #72 posted 10/09/12 5:49pm

purplethunder3
121

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TheResistor said:

purplethunder3121 said:

Go, LA! thumbs up!

I'm ready!!!!

First. Thanks purplethunder3121 for keeping these stickies alive. I've been reading them since the begining.

Second. Thanks SoulAlive for keeping the interest going. I'm always interested in your opinions on all things Madge. I've been lurking your posts for years now.

I will be at Staples on October 10 and October 11. I can't wait.

I had the opportunity to see the MDNA show at Yankee Stadium in New York on September 6th. My partner and I, frustrated by the lack of resolution to prop 8 in California, decided to say fuck it, let's just get married in New York City. So we did. And as a wedding gift some friends got us some tickets for the Yankee Stadium show. Once in the venue, another wonderful set of friends, got us into the golden triangle, and my partner and I nearly died. We met some of the dancers and we got to meet Rocco. It was surreal. It was wonderful to see Madonna so close up. I kept my eye on her the entire time. Yes, she's older, but she's looks fantastic for her 54 years. She's looking more beautiful than ever. Yes, she does sing live for most of the songs. And yes, she really is playing the guitar. She's no Prince, but it was great to see her focusing on her guitar riffs. No bullshiting there. We were so close I could see all of her facial expressions. At one point, she literally sat down on the stairs, two feet from my face, took off her pump and peeled off what I assumed was the skin from a blister. She put her pump back on and continued with the show. Her energy is really unbelieavable. She's literally dancing all over the place, most times outdoing her dancers who are what? twenty years younger than her.

Seriously, it was exhausting just watching her. She deserves mad props for working so hard. Even if you're not a fan I think she deserves respect for her tours and for not burning out and turning into some cliche hot mess of a star.

She's kept her eye on the ball, her entire career. Yes, she's taken some risks and failed miserably. (I'm thinking of her movies here. I liked her in "A League of Their Own, but to me, a hardcore fan, "Evita," was unwatchable. But I do adore "W.E." It has its flaws and was heavy-handed at times but it was really enjoyable. I'd forgotten Madonna had directed and was immersed in the story. I think she's got a future as a film director. Like Harvey Weinstein said (paraphrasing here) , "had anybody besides Madonna directed "W.E." the film would've gotten the respect it deserves."

Like you purplethunder3121 I plan on focusing on the entire spectacle this time around. I'm taking some musician friends and "Silver Lake Hipters," who are strangely curious to see her. When they told me they had gotten tickets, I was shocked.

This will be my ninth and tenth time seeing one of her shows. I saw The Blond Ambition Tour in Houston Texas when I was a teenager. And since moving to L.A. I've seen her in The Drowned World Tour, The Reinvention Tour, Confessions Tour (twice), Sticky & Sweet, and the MDNA is by far my favorite, and maybe that's cause I do love about 75% of the MDNA album.

Anywho... cool

p.s. before I get crucified for my musical tastes, I've seen the Purple One over twenty times. What can I say. I love all kinds of live music shows.

Thanks for sharing your experiences, The Resister. biggrin Hope you post a review of the LA concerts. Have a great time! Wish I could be there with you. wink

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #73 posted 10/10/12 12:33am

SoulAlive

TheResistor said:

purplethunder3121 said:

Go, LA! thumbs up!

I'm ready!!!!

First. Thanks purplethunder3121 for keeping these stickies alive. I've been reading them since the begining.

Second. Thanks SoulAlive for keeping the interest going. I'm always interested in your opinions on all things Madge. I've been lurking your posts for years now.

I will be at Staples on October 10 and October 11. I can't wait.

I had the opportunity to see the MDNA show at Yankee Stadium in New York on September 6th. My partner and I, frustrated by the lack of resolution to prop 8 in California, decided to say fuck it, let's just get married in New York City. So we did. And as a wedding gift some friends got us some tickets for the Yankee Stadium show. Once in the venue, another wonderful set of friends, got us into the golden triangle, and my partner and I nearly died. We met some of the dancers and we got to meet Rocco. It was surreal. It was wonderful to see Madonna so close up. I kept my eye on her the entire time. Yes, she's older, but she's looks fantastic for her 54 years. She's looking more beautiful than ever. Yes, she does sing live for most of the songs. And yes, she really is playing the guitar. She's no Prince, but it was great to see her focusing on her guitar riffs. No bullshiting there. We were so close I could see all of her facial expressions. At one point, she literally sat down on the stairs, two feet from my face, took off her pump and peeled off what I assumed was the skin from a blister. She put her pump back on and continued with the show. Her energy is really unbelieavable. She's literally dancing all over the place, most times outdoing her dancers who are what? twenty years younger than her.

Seriously, it was exhausting just watching her. She deserves mad props for working so hard. Even if you're not a fan I think she deserves respect for her tours and for not burning out and turning into some cliche hot mess of a star.

She's kept her eye on the ball, her entire career. Yes, she's taken some risks and failed miserably. (I'm thinking of her movies here. I liked her in "A League of Their Own, but to me, a hardcore fan, "Evita," was unwatchable. But I do adore "W.E." It has its flaws and was heavy-handed at times but it was really enjoyable. I'd forgotten Madonna had directed and was immersed in the story. I think she's got a future as a film director. Like Harvey Weinstein said (paraphrasing here) , "had anybody besides Madonna directed "W.E." the film would've gotten the respect it deserves."

Like you purplethunder3121 I plan on focusing on the entire spectacle this time around. I'm taking some musician friends and "Silver Lake Hipters," who are strangely curious to see her. When they told me they had gotten tickets, I was shocked.

This will be my ninth and tenth time seeing one of her shows. I saw The Blond Ambition Tour in Houston Texas when I was a teenager. And since moving to L.A. I've seen her in The Drowned World Tour, The Reinvention Tour, Confessions Tour (twice), Sticky & Sweet, and the MDNA is by far my favorite, and maybe that's cause I do love about 75% of the MDNA album.

Anywho... cool

p.s. before I get crucified for my musical tastes, I've seen the Purple One over twenty times. What can I say. I love all kinds of live music shows.

Hey bro,have a great time at the L.A. shows thumbs up! it's so cool that you got to see her at Yankee Stadium......in the golden triangle!! WOW! Be sure to come back to this thread and let us know how things go at the L.A. shows wink

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Reply #74 posted 10/10/12 2:57am

SoulAlive

Guy O just confirmed it on Twitter:

Madonna taped a full episode of The Ellen Show set to air on Oct 29.

She wore the MDNA Vogue outfit and the Jewish kid that danced Vogue was there.

It was a nice interview! You'll love it! M rules as usual! No performance from her but a sort of dance showoff for the dancers with Candyshop/Erotica. This interview is very Iconic! M with the Vogue Bustier sitting down ...she looked amazing and she seemed very happy! Rocco was also there! ....

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Reply #75 posted 10/10/12 8:53am

go2theMax

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I just found out that the opening act 4 the show in Sao Paulo, the one I'm going 2, is going 2 be will.i.am...what a fan have 2 endure.... confused

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Reply #76 posted 10/10/12 12:39pm

SoulAlive

go2theMax said:

I just found out that the opening act 4 the show in Sao Paulo, the one I'm going 2, is going 2 be will.i.am...what a fan have 2 endure.... confused

I'm not really into his solo work,but I like the last two Black Eyed Peas albums boxed lol

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Reply #77 posted 10/10/12 6:31pm

purplethunder3
121

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Live In Los Angeles: Madonna's MDNA Tour By The Numbers

Madonna's MDNA tour has gotten plenty of ink for what the pop performer has done onstage.
But while bared breasts, firearms, religion, Nazi imagery and odd presidential endorsements have dominated conversations about the tour, Pop & Hiss is more interested in what keeps the show together.


Before her latest world tour stops at Staples Center on Wednesday and Thursday nights, we checked in with Team Madonna to gather some facts about what has gone into the show, which reportedly could become one of the top 10 biggest tours of all time.

Here’s an (updates) breakdown of Madonna’s MDNA show by the numbers:

2.1 million fans are expected to have seen the show by the time it wraps in South America.

72,000 fans saw Madonna’s sold-out show in Quebec, the largest attendance of the entire tour.

16,630 miles of road were traveled during the U.S. leg alone.

700 wardrobe pieces are required for all the performers onstage.

410 bottles of aspirin have been used, so far, by the 130-person crew.

374 is the weight, in tons, of Madonna’s massive stage.

116 minutes of approximate stage time for the Material Girl, unless she adds "Holiday" to the night's setlist.

90 speakers are hung onstage.

89 shows in total in 28 different countries -- 18 of those stops were in cities where Madonna had never performed.

29 trucks carry the tour’s production (36 will be required for the South American leg).

24 guitars are used by Madonna and her band each night.

16 different salad dressings at required by the crew for nightly craft services.

15 buses to take the show from city to city.

9 drummers soar in the air during “Express Yourself,” with another 9 on the floor.

7 songs from Madonna's latest album, "MDNA," are on the setlist.

4 customized microphones in gold, silver, chrome and black are used by Madonna during the show.

3 physical therapists are on hand for the 22 dancers.

1 son of Madonna, 12-year-old Rocco, also performs in the show.

From the LA Times.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #78 posted 10/11/12 12:18am

SoulAlive

15 buses to take the show from city from city

While looking for a parking space near the arena,I saw these buses in back of the arena,and I was like "Wow...there's so many of them!" lol this is a HUGE production!

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Reply #79 posted 10/11/12 3:52am

SoulAlive

from one of the video interludes....

Posted ImagePosted Image

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Reply #80 posted 10/11/12 10:30pm

purplethunder3
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Madonna Tour stop in Los Angeles with these pictures snapped just a few hours ago during the first MDNA show at the Staples Center.







"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #81 posted 10/11/12 10:34pm

purplethunder3
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Madonna Dedicates L.A. Performance to Child Activist Shot in Pakistan

Jessica Alba, Heidi Klum, Neil Patrick Harris and Darren Criss were all in attendance at Wednesday's Staples Center show.

Madonna Staples - H2012

Madonna brought her eye-popping MDNA Tour to L.A.'s Staples Center on Wednesday night, where she dedicated a song to Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani child activist shot in the head and neck on Tuesday by a masked member of the Taliban.

Dressed in a leather skirt and black beret, the music icon took a break from the evening's theatrics to tell the sold-out crowd of 18,000 that it was time "to have our serious chat."

"This made me cry," Madonna said. "The 14-year-old schoolgirl who wrote a blog about going to school. The Taliban stopped her bus and shot her. Do you realize how sick that is?"

"Support education! Support women!" she shouted, to the crowd's cheers of approval.

Yousafzai, one of the most outspoken and influential advocates for girls' rights to education in the Middle East, remains unconscious in a hospital since the shooting. Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan said of the assassination attempt, "Let this be a lesson," and pledged that the Taliban would try again to kill her should she survive her injuries.

Later in the show, Madonna performed a striptease, during which she turned her back to the audience to reveal the name "Malala" stenciled across it.

"This song is for you, Malala," she said, then launched into "Human Nature."

At past tour stops, Madonna's back has read things like "Obama" -- which was accompanied by her controversial proclamation that the country had "a black Muslim in the White House" -- and "Pussy Riot," a reference to the punk rock group sentenced to two years in a Russian prison camp for a guerrilla performance in a Moscow cathedral.

One of the three convicted Pussy Riot members has since had her sentence suspended, but Madonna's thoughts were with the two who still sat behind bars.

"One thing I’ve realized during my travels is how lucky we Americans are," she told the L.A. audience. "We are for sure an imperfect country with an imperfect government. But I tell you -- the s--- I have seen in the Ukraine and in Russia... May I remind you that two members of Pussy Riot are still in jail. In St. Petersburg, 75 men were arrested for being gay."

But the serious talk was just a few minutes of a staggering, two-plus-hour multimedia spectacle, the likes of which the pop music world rarely sees.

Madonna, now 54, kept up impressively with her chorus of physically gifted (several literally double-jointed) dancers, ably commandeering a set heavy on new material that featured gothic monks, space samurai, a Tarantino-esque murder scene, Bollywood train surfing, an Art Deco voguing ball, a flying marching band and ... whew ... much more.

The star took some delight in taunting the L.A. crowd -- which included the likes of Jessica Alba, Heidi Klum, Neil Patrick Harris and Darren Criss of Glee -- by throwing around the dreaded "J" word.

"They say the people in L.A. are so jaded. That they’re not excited about anything because they’ve seen it all and have done it all. True?" Madonna asked.

She then took the liberty of answering on behalf of the rowdy crowd. "F--- no!"

And the effort was a family affair, with son Rocco Ritchie grooving with mom to "Open Your Heart" -- a sweet nod to the song's classic music video -- and her other son, David Banda Ciccone Ritchie, joining her re-mixer Martin Solveig onstage for his pre-show DJ set.

Madonna plays a second show at the Staples Center on Thursday, then brings the tour to Las Vegas on Saturday for the first of two dates at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #82 posted 10/14/12 9:52am

SoulAlive

it's a supersonic,bionic,uranium hit

Posted Image

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Reply #83 posted 10/14/12 11:02am

purplethunder3
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^^^ eek Damn! Great photo!

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #84 posted 10/15/12 12:41pm

purplethunder3
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Live in Los Angeles: Madonna amazes L.A. crowd with spectacular show


Madonna is coming to Las Vegas this weekend. If you haven't bought tickets yet, you will be missing one of the most spectacular theatrical concerts ever produced. Her performance at last evening's MDNA Tour at the Staples Center in Los Angeles not only cements Madonna's position as the ultimate gay icon, but it shows that Madonna is not an oldies act; she is more relevant than ever.


The controversy surrounding the show since this summer has been greatly exaggerated. Viewing pictures from the show means that they have been taken out of context. The guns were appropriate for a metaphor on Madonna's life. The stripping was not sexual in one bit; it was Madonna's way to assert power and to give a middle finger to a sexist and ageist society.

The controversy over the setlist is somewhat legit, as the show plays too heavily on Madonna's latest album MDNA, which is average at best and doesn't deserve to take up almost half of the show.

The beginning of the show was very dark. Madonna opened up with a religious themed "Girl Gone Wild" and soon sung "Revolver," which featured incredible acrobatics and gun slinging. She then went into "Gang Bang," which featured splattered blood, foul language, etc. It was more comical than anything else and the audience didn't seemed to mind.

The highlight of the first section was "Hung Up," in which Madonna was dragged to a slack line by people representing demons. She walked the rope, symbolizing that there is a fine line between Heaven and Hell.

The second part of the show began with "Express Yourself" and featured Madonna in the much dreaded majorette uniform. It looks horrible in pictures, but works in concert. She sang part of Lady Gaga's "Born This Way" and then part of "She's Not Me" from the Hard Candy album. Thankfully, this wasn't really a desperate slam against Mother Monster; it felt more like a tribute with Madonna saying that they are not the same stars and people should stop comparing them.

Political


Before launching into her first hit "Holiday,"Madonna took time to talk to the crowd about gay rights. This brought tears to the eyes of many gay men in the audience who have been abandoned by friends, family, etc. just because of their sexuality. Gay rights may have improved over the past ten years, but there is still a long way to go.

Madonna also talked about teenager Malala Yousafzai, who was shot by Taliban members for wanting to be educated and blogging about it. Tears ran down Madonna's face as the audience was touched by seeing that Madonna actually has human qualities.

Unlike a Virgin


The only slight downward part of the show was when Madonna sang "Like a Virgin" as a simple cabaret number. Several in the audience went to take bathroom or drink breaks, but she did receive a huge roar of applause when she finished the number. Things turned around when she performed "Love Spent" from MDNA right afterwards.

Like a Prayer


The second to last number in the show was "Like a Prayer." This has to be the most outstanding performance ever in a Madonna show. It was very joyful, spiritual, and dance inducing. The complete audience was dancing in excitement. This was the point in the show where Madonna most connected with the audience.

The final performance of the evening was "Celebration," which featured amazing lighting and crazy dancing. Usually, many in the crowd leave during the last song. That wasn't the case with this song, although it's possible that some expected some type of encore.

Lady Gaga, Kesha, Rihanna, and Katy Perry may be cooler to the younger generation than Madonna these days, but last evening's show demonstrated how far ahead of the pack Madonna still is. The Queen of Pop's reign has just been extended.

[Edited 10/15/12 13:09pm]

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

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Reply #85 posted 10/15/12 12:48pm

purplethunder3
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Thank you!








"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #86 posted 10/15/12 12:51pm

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From the interesting review by James son Jacelin, Las Vegas Review Journal.

Madonna embraces wide range of emotions in Las Vegas concert


On her knees, she sought penitence with an assault rifle.

But as Madonna begged forgiveness for her misdeeds, she divined plenty more to come like a soothsayer of the naughty.

"My inhibition's gone away. I feel like sinning," she purred while wielding a faux AK-47 during a show opening "Girl Gone Wild" Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden, moments after striking a suppliant pose on a stage designed to look like an ornate church, complete with singers dressed as priests engaging in Gregorian chants.

Throughout her career, Madonna has acted as a pendulum between virtue and vice, favoring neither, embracing both.

Now, fresh off a bitter divorce, with a new album "MDNA" that's among her most unguarded, she has seldom seemed so human or humane.

She's wounded, angry, petulant and sad, but also emboldened, galvanized and empathetic.

Madonna spelled out these emotions in all caps during her seething and sultry two-hour, 20-song performance, which was divided into multiple segments separated by video interludes, the theme of which was emotional and visual excess hurtling down the pothole-heavy road to redemption.

First up was her wrath.

It was Madonna as a Charlie's Angel, clad in a curve-hugging black bodysuit, doing cartwheels across the stage and firing a pistol at invisible foes during "Revolver."

Next, on electro slow burn "Gang Bang," she was shooting masked assailants in the head inside a set designed to look like a seedy hotel room as blood spattered across a massive video screen in crimson bursts.

Her defiance reached its apex on "I Don't Give A," a song that doubled as both an assertion of self-confidence and an angry kiss off to her ex, which Madonna performed while gripping a guitar, sucking her cheeks in and glowering at the crowd before her with eyes that doubled as daggers.

"I tried to be a good girl / I tried to be your wife," she sang. "Diminished myself /And I swallowed my light."

This hurt later turned inward on broken-hearted ballad "Love Spent."

"Would you have married me if I were poor?" she sang with hand pressed hard against her stomach, eyes closed, looking pained. "If I was your treasury / You'd have found the time to treasure me."

And it wasn't just her former husband in her cross hairs.

"Express Yourself," which Madonna performed dressed as a majorette backed by a marching band drumline suspended from the rafters, came buffered with a sample of Lady Gaga's "Born This Way" (a song some have criticized for being a facsimile of the hit in question) followed by a portion of "She's Not Me," which could be read as a shot at the younger pop star.

Even some audience members received a little ribbing after Madonna learned the political persuasion of a self-identified gay Republican sitting upfront upon asking the crowd who was going to vote for Barack Obama in the upcoming presidential election.

"A gay Republican?" she scoffed incredulously. "It's OK. I love you so much that I forgive you."

A few songs later, after "Human Nature," she'd drop trou and expose her backside to the crowd.

"Why does anybody show their ass onstage?" she asked of herself afterward. "So that people pay attention."

Aside from a palpable, often playful measure of impudence, the other main constant in the show was the way in which Madonna continually reconfigured past hits into something new, with some songs being barely recognizable from their original recorded form.

Basque folk trio Kalakan contributed pounding drums and three-part vocal harmonies to "Open Your Heart," helping turn it into an old world incantation.

The blood was drained from "Like A Virgin," rendering it a spectral, spare torch song that Madonna sang backed only by piano.

Former dance floor fire starter "Hung Up" was leavened by dreamy synth lines and Auto-Tuned vocals, while "Candy Shop" was similarly reshaped and slowed down with a vamping bass line.

There was so much going on, both in song and onstage, that the show felt a little muddled in places, like someone trying to force together pieces of a puzzle that don't fit with one another.

But at the same time, the do-your-own-thing ethos at the heart of Madonna's catalog wouldn't be served with a played-straight greatest hits performance.

And so Madonna serves her audience by only being concerned with serving herself.

"If it makes you feel good, I say do it," she sang during a show-closing "Celebration," and so that's exactly what she did.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #87 posted 10/15/12 12:58pm

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Madonna muscles her way through a spectacle at MGM Grand

SAM MORRIS / LAS VEGAS SUN

Madonna performs at MGM Grand Garden Arena on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2012.

Monday, Oct. 15, 2012 | 12:25 a.m.

When you look past the immense staging and lighting of a Madonna show, beyond the lavish costuming and the army of backing dancers and musicians populating the stage, you notice something not so fancy all the way down to the artist’s feet.

Pulled over Madonna’s feet are ankle braces that creep up from whatever shoes she wears at the moment. These are elastic, like ACE bandages, flesh-colored and not decorated in any way. These wraps are not to be celebrated, or even detected, but serve the vital purpose of keeping the whirling, stomping diva steady on her spindles. These braces are commonly worn by athletes, especially tennis and basketball players, to ward against injury while leaping and making quick cuts.

Madonna is as athletic a performer as you will see on any stage. At age 54, she is in supreme condition, and that physical fitness is the core of her stage show, which she rolled into MGM Grand Garden Arena on Saturday for the first of two Las Vegas performances. The second was Sunday night.

At various points during her latest stage spectacular, the 2012 MDNA Tour, Madonna performed as a gangster, a majorette and a dominatrix. She spun, leaped, strutted and happily swiveled her pelvis in a two-hour performance that would have been astonishing even without music accompaniment, given its exhausting pace.

Deep into the show, she spun around with her backside facing the audience. She unsnapped her black slacks, lowered them several inches and showed the sellout crowd what a 54-year-old tushy might look like if you married into a workout plan of toning, conditioning, speed, agility, strengthening, flexibility and endurance (the specifics of this regimen are outlined, in sweaty fashion, in her DVD series “Addicted to Sweat.”) There was a message behind the nakedly memorable moment, as she said many people find her to be obscene, but what she finds obscene is “our lack of humanity.”

Agreed. Madonna also said revealing her backside was to secure our attention, and she was right about that. Regardless, absent her impressive conditioning, Madonna’s performances on her MDNA Tour might look a lot different. She might even consider going the Garth Brooks route, where the most challenging physical act is turning a tuning knob on an acoustic guitar.

As it is, the productions on this tour rise to the lofty standard Madonna has established throughout her career. She was late to the dance, but she’s always late, arriving onstage about 10:35 p.m., just as crowds in pockets of the Grand Garden began booing (or maybe they were chanting, “Ma-DOOOO-na!”).

The opening was overpowering, as she took the stage surrounded by muscular monks chanting in a haven that looked like a Madonna Vatican. A huge, gold cross loomed high above with the letters “MDNA” facing the audience. The spotlight hit Madonna at the back of this spirited scene, and she was wielding a semiautomatic rifle (a prop, we expect) and exploded into a performance of “Gang Bang” that could have been directed by Quentin Tarantino and endorsed by the NRA.

With blood splashing across the LED screens at the back of the stage, Madonna shifted to a scene in the seedy Paradise Motel, where she swapped her assault rifle for a 9MM sidearm and continued to fire away at an assailant who managed to crawl through the room’s only window as nobody in the audience thought to shout, “Madonna! Look out!”

Later, Madonna would talk of love conquering fear, and how we should all accept one another, a sentiment that would have been more palatable had she not turned the arena into a bloody mess at the start.

But that is a mere quibble. The opening scene was just that. She was delightfully playful in her red-and-white cheerleader costume for “Express Yourself” and repeatedly ventured around the walkway encircling much of the audience at the front of the stage. Seeming to shed vocal tracks -- and please don’t claim she was singing purely in her own voice while dancing at nearly a full sprint for much of the night -- she turned “Like a Virgin” into a ballad performed as a backing dancer pulled her corset so tight, it seemed her eyes might pop out. The same, slow-tempo treatment was given to “Papa Don’t Preach” and “Hung Up.”

The show was precision, but moments were set aside for the superstar to banter with the crowd. She did ask, “Is Las Vegas a place where you are actually from?” Many shouted “Yes!” as she moved on to say hello to folks up front who were visiting from Puerto Rico, Detroit and Venezuela.

Given that this show unfolded in Las Vegas, it was impossible not to feel the influence of Cirque du Soleil-type acrobats and set pieces. Madonna walked, briefly, across a tightrope and was frequently surrounded by dancers who also happened to be contortionists. In Cirque shows in Vegas, it is impressive to observe even a single contortionist, those who fold their bodies into pretzel-like figures. But Madonna, she surrounds herself with a half-dozen of these guys -- and they contort choreographed numbers, in time with the music.

Somewhere, there is a camp of such artists. There has to be. Where do they all come from?

In stark contrast to its bang-bang beginnings, the show closed with an angelic take on “Like a Prayer,” as a fully robed choir showed up in vocal support.

Madonna once more boogied out to the front of the rounded stage, stomping in rhinestone-studded Chuck Taylors. She was gleaming with sweat and her hair was wildly frayed, appearing ready for some well-earned time off.

But you got the feeling as she closed this two-hour spectacle, that was the furthest thought from her mind.

More Madonna

Click to enlarge photo

Madonna performs at MGM Grand Garden Arena on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2012.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #88 posted 10/15/12 1:01pm

purplethunder3
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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #89 posted 10/15/12 1:02pm

purplethunder3
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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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