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Reply #240 posted 03/05/15 8:24am

stevenpottle

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STUNNING!

"There is no such thing in life as normal..."
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Reply #241 posted 03/05/15 8:32am

SoulAlive

Nice! I really like the artwork/packaging...love the red and black.....

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Reply #242 posted 03/05/15 10:19am

getxxxx

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iTunes version has spung a leak... just downloaded.

[Edited 3/5/15 10:26am]

Nick Ashford was someone I greatly admired, had the honor of knowing, and was the real-life inspiration for Cowboy Curtis' hair. RIP Nick. - Pee Wee Herman
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Reply #243 posted 03/05/15 1:25pm

SchlomoThaHomo

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So dumb that Autotune Baby is on the German deluxe but not the super deluxe. Makes no sense. "Baby" is gonna have to stay in the crib. And the Japanese bonus track is another LFL remix?! Boo!
"That's when stars collide. When there's space for what u want, and ur heart is open wide."
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Reply #244 posted 03/05/15 1:35pm

getxxxx

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after listening to the rest of the official

Nick Ashford was someone I greatly admired, had the honor of knowing, and was the real-life inspiration for Cowboy Curtis' hair. RIP Nick. - Pee Wee Herman
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Reply #245 posted 03/05/15 1:39pm

SoulAlive

SchlomoThaHomo said:

So dumb that Autotune Baby is on the German deluxe but not the super deluxe. Makes no sense. "Baby" is gonna have to stay in the crib. And the Japanese bonus track is another LFL remix?! Boo!

Yeah,that's crazy.I'm glad I downloaded it last month smile

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Reply #246 posted 03/05/15 1:43pm

SoulAlive

Album Review: Madonna's 'Rebel Heart' Blends Inventive Beats and Maximalist Pop

By Joe Levy | March 05, 2015 2:04 PM EST (BILLBOARD)

Album Review: Madonna's 'Rebel Heart' Blends Inventive Beats and Maximalist Pop

MADONNA

Rebel Heart

In December -- as Madonna rushed out six songs from Rebel Heart after some truly ugly cyber-bullying -- she told Billboard she had recorded so much material that she had considered doing a double album. And indeed, there are at least two albums struggling to come into being amid these 19 tracks.

Madonna to Launch 'Rebel Heart' World Tour in August

Oppositions are the animating tension of Rebel Heart: Biting breakup songs like "Heartbreak City" rub up against some of the most absurdly lubricious sex songs of her absurdly lubricious career, like the Kanye West-co-produced "Holy Water," where she compares her bodily fluids to the song's title, then proclaims, "Yeezus loves my pussy best." Declarations of invincibility like "Unapologetic Bitch" are undone by laments over the price of fame and the way that even hearts of steel can break. Her decades-long love affair with house continues alongside her decades-long love affair with singer-songwriter confessions. Religious devotion and earthly love are cross-wired in the Avicii-helmed power ballad "Messiah." And songs with spare, inventive beats battle for dominance against expertly realized maximalist pop.

There's one other tension of note: Her determination to outgrow the past and shed her skin (as she puts it on the title track) tangles with her own back catalog. Three different songs refer to old hits, with "Veni Vidi Vici" stringing together titles like a bad Oscar medley: "I opened up my heart, I learned the power of goodbye/I saw a ray of light, music saved my life." If anyone is entitled to honor herself with her own drag show, it's her. Still, these backward glances are odd, and perhaps tip the hand that Madonna albums are now launching pads for Madonna tours, where the old songs can come out and play (indeed, on March 2, she announced a 35-city global run).

Madonna to Play 'Ellen' for a Full Week

Or maybe not. Madonna has never gotten the credit she deserves as a musician, or as an album artist. Her essential interests are unchanging -- dancefloor ecstasy, European balladry, 1960s pop classicism -- but her expression of them finds new articulations. Rebel Heart has 14 producers working in seven different teams and still it sounds exactly like a Madonna album. That includes oddball standouts like "Body Shop," courtesy of beatmakers DJ Dahi (Drake, Kendrick Lamar) and Blood Diamonds (Grimes), which is propelled by a spare, sitar-like guitar figure.

Madonna's 40 Biggest Billboard Hits

One of the strangest things about Rebel Heart is how subtle it seems by current standards. These songs unfold slowly, building through foreplay-like intros before hooks are displayed over a shifting series of textures, as if the tracks were being remixed while you're listening to them. In a short-attention-span world of hits that relentlessly spotlight mini-hook after mini-hook for club DJs to drop in a few bars at a time, they seem positively luxurious and downright intellectual.

5 Songs You Didn't Know Madonna Sang Backup On

There are times you hope for a little more dumb fun -- enter Diplo, who turns up on five tracks with his air horn and Caribbean beats and would be welcome on more -- and there's at least one moody ballad too many. But then an aqueous bassline bubbles up and a surge of trance-y pulses sweeps you along to Madonnaland, where introspection and abandon engage in erotic acts of self-actualization. After 32 years, it's still a great place to be.

This story will appear in the March 14 issue of Billboard.

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Reply #247 posted 03/05/15 8:10pm

SoulAlive

"outtakes" from the Rolling Stone cover story/interview

http://www.rollingst...20150305?page=4

Madonna was tired but cheerful when she sat down in her Manhattan mansion for her Rolling Stone cover-story interview, just after the Grammys in February. She gave a mini-tour of a small portion of her house, pointing out the Debbie Harry and David Bowie photos in her elevator ("nobody in their 20s knows who that is"), the one-of-a-kind collage the late Keith Haring made for her and many photos by her friend Steven Klein. In the interview itself, she discussed ageism, Lady Gaga, Kanye West and much more — but there was even more that didn't make the print edition. Here's the best of the rest, including a look at the creative process behind her new album, Rebel Heart.

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The Making of Madonna's 20 Greatest Videos »

I enjoyed the Grammys performance — and watching the rehearsals as well.
It's a process, yeah. I enjoyed the rehearsals more than the performance.

Really?
I enjoy the process of everything more than the pressure of the finished product. It's like everything. When I go on tour, I like the rehearsal. I like the creation of everything. like being able to wear my rehearsal clothes and be sweaty and not having to worry about how I look and just get into what it is I'm trying to say and do. Same with making music.

You know, the process is obviously much more liberating than delivering something for the world to judge. [Laughs] Because then you have to say, "This is the final thing." But actually, it's never the final thing. You wish you could do it again, or tweak it just a little bit more, or change things. Well, that's what art is. So I enjoyed the Grammys. But after I did it, I wanted to do it again, only better. [Laughs] And of course, my experience of it is not what everybody else is experiencing. And then you have the TV aspect of it, which is, who knows what they filmed?

And it's not under your control.
Live TV is one of the most stressful things ever. When you do your live shows, you have two hours, so if you make a mistake, it's OK. You move on, you have 20 other songs to do. And that whole audience is there to see you anyway. But when you do an awards show, it's not your audience. You have five minutes or less, and it's like, do you play to the crowd? Do you play to the cameras? It's kind of a mindfuck.

Does the process of planning these small performance start your thinking about the tour?
I mean, when I make the music, sometimes I get fleeting moments of ideas of what I would do live. But it's not until I start doing my promo shows that I start going, "Oh, I'm going to elaborate on this theme or this persona." I like to create personas and then the persona changes and grows into other things. So, again, process. I'm at the beginning of that process right now, in terms of thinking of my tour and stuff.

How does that process actually work?
Well, it doesn't just start the month before my rehearsals start. I'm gathering ideas all year long, whether that's an art exhibit that I saw or a film that I saw or a show that I saw that inspired me, and I thought, "Oh, that's an interesting way to use lights or to use music, or the shape of the stage, or. . ." I collect ideas from every world — art, fashion, music, all of it. Then these small performances start to get my juices flowing and the idea for the video became the catalyst for what I did at the Grammys, becomes the catalyst for what I do at the BRITs. It just starts spinning from there.

1035x690-463085850.jpgMadonna performing during The 57th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles on February 8th, 2015. Monty Brinton/CBS/Getty

You didn't end up working with Disclosure, but "Living for Love" reminds me of them a little.
They weren't on my mind for that particular song, but obviously I love their stuff, and I wanted to work with them. And I met with them to work with them, and I played them some of my music. When I met them it was at Governor's Ball, and they had such a busy schedule. I was in Europe, they weren't there. When they were in New York, I wasn't here. So we couldn't hook up. And I had so many other moving parts, with Diplo and Kanye and Avicii, people with really busy schedules. So I couldn't add one more problem to the equation. One more person that I was chasing. How many men can you chase? [Laughs] None! We don't chase men. They chase us.

I remember years ago you talking about how disorganized William Orbit was during Ray of Light.
That seems to be my curse. I keep attracting extremely disorganized geniuses. Yeah.

SIDEBAR

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Mike Tyson Talks 'Intense, Crazy' Cameo on Madonna's LP »

People often assume creative people are drawn to chaos, but you're just the opposite. Incredibly disciplined, organized.
Everybody's process is different. Some people need to create an environment where it's all stream of consciousness — they need to be high, they need to be drunk, they need to be surrounded by a posse, they need to have craziness around them — to create. And other people need peace and quiet and not a lot of distraction and the ability to focus. I'm more like that. But I think I'm pretty balanced with the left and right sides of my brain. I would say I'm as organized as I am creative. I don't do really well with crowds and chaos and people coming in and out of the room. Other people seem to be fine with it, but I can't handle it.

How do you physically write your lyrics? Do you sit and type them somewhere?
Yeah. That's why I like peace and quiet, because to write lyrics, you have to sit there. I mean, I used to handwrite everything, but now I put everything in the computer, and I just sit there with my little laptop on my lap and write things. You know this, when you write and you see the words, it it has a different effect on you than if it's in your head. You see it, and then you sing it or you bounce it off other people's brains, and you get into the poetry of it, the rhythm of it, the flow of it.

And you had a lot of new people around you this time.
With this particular record, I put myself in a funny position. Because usually I choose a producer to work with, or two, and then I write and produce everything with those people. The whole thing is just done within this little bubble. Whereas this situation was me working with a lot of writers that I'd never met before in my life — literally walking into rooms and sitting down and saying, "OK, let's write a song." Total strangers.

And some people I connected to immediately like ["Wrecking Ball" co-writer] Mozella, for instance, or ["If I Were a Boy" co-writer] Toby Gad. They're very open-hearted people, extremely musical, not inhibited in any way, shape, or form. So they were fun. And then there were other people that were really shy, and I think maybe slightly intimidated by me. I was constantly putting myself in these, like, very awkward situations, to me it was an exercise in letting go, to sit with people I'd never met with before.

How did that affect the songs?
With songwriting, you have to make yourself open to people and vulnerable to people, especially if you're writing about something personal or a sensitive subject, something close to your heart. And you're doing it with someone you've never met before. It's kind it's like that exercise where you stand with your eyes closed and you let yourself fall back, and you just, like, trust that someone is going to catch you. So I would say that a lot of working on this record was like that.

How did you grapple with the chaos of it all?
I prefer order, and I prefer to know what I'm getting every day and what I'm showing up to. I like it when the people I'm working with come to work — just them, and not their entire families or 20 of their closest friends. You know what I mean? But there's a lot of that going on, and I find it a little bit distracting. That's hard for me. I'm old school. Kanye wasn't really one of those people that had lots of people come in the room, but he himself is chaotic. So I've been lucky to work with a lot of madmen, and charming [people]. Thank God they're charming, because otherwise they wouldn't get away with the things they do. [Laughs] So yeah. I mean, honestly, I don't know how people finish anything after what I've witnessed. [Laughs] Seriously!

Do you think work habits have devolved?
I think there's a lot of distractions now. I think people are really, supremely distracted, and everyone feels the obligation to be very involved with social networking. So a lot of the time of the day is spent doing that. There's a lot of people leaving to go to red carpet events or to tweet. Like, having to go out and do fast interviews or, like, go on Twitter and do this or that. I was just like, "Wow," you know? My head was spinning. But that's the world we live in, now. The age of distraction.

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Madonna to Kanye: 'Don't Go to Awards Shows for Justice' »

Björk said something interesting recently, which is that she feels that any time that any man is in the studio with her, he ends with all the credit for the music. Can you relate?
Oh. I don't know. Actually, I haven't thought about that. I have too many other axes to grind. [Laughs] But there have been moments where people were like, "And that was produced by Diplo, right?" And I'm like, "And me. Yes, both of us. We did it all together. Yeah."

By the way, Drake just dropped a song with your name in it.
Yes, I know. I read the lyrics but I haven't heard it. In fact, as soon as I hang up I'm going to check it out. Is it good? I hope so.

It's a nice little show of respect, even if he's hitting on a girl by promising he'll make her as big as Madonna.
Yeah, I think it's a good pickup line. Right?

You were working on a screenplay at the same time as the album, weren't you?
I adapted a book into a novel, The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. You should read the book, it's really good. I actually thought I was going to direct a film next, so I started writing the screenplay. And then I started writing music, and then I would kind of go back and forth between writing a script and writing music. And then I thought, "Well, I don't know what I'm going to do next. May the best man win." So it was sort of like, I finished the script, and I was almost finished with my record. And I met with some [movie] producers and I started thinking about the script. And I started thinking about, the casting process, and getting it financed. And then I just felt more drawn to my music, aso that ended up being the winning man, the winning horse. For now. But I'm going to make my film, that's also very important to me. And there are things in my script, in the writing of my script, that actually influenced my music and lyrics and ideas. Stories, things like that.

There's a song called "Joan of Arc" on the new album — she's a historical figure you've long admired.
I've always been drawn to her story. More than anything, drawn to her commitment to what she believed in. In the face of death, she did not back down. And that is a theme that resonates with me. And women need female role models like that. There's not a lot. I mean, she was burned at the stake after leading her country to victory, after defeating the English. I mean, the idea that instead of celebrating her, they called her a heretic because she was dressed like a boy, and how could this person, this one girl, be so victorious and so clever to have the strategy and knowledge to wage, and win, a war? There must be something wrong with her. OK, she's a witch. Now we have to destroy her. And she didn't back down, and I admire that.

But in the lyrics you say you're not her, not yet.
Meaning, I'm not ready to be burned at the stake. Not yet. That does really require an elevated soul, you know? When you are really, really ready to die for what you believe in. I mean, obviously people like Martin Luther King Jr., they're extremely inspiring to somebody like me. Because, obviously, he was told time and time again, "If you keep doing this, you're going to keep getting arrested. There's a lot of people who want to kill you." He understood that this was his journey, this was his destiny. And it's just that there's not a lot of women like that.

What cause would you be willing to. . .
What would I be willing to die for?

Only because you're talking about how you're not there yet.
I would die for my children. For sure. But, you know, the whole thing that happened to Malala [Yousafzai] for instance, that she was shot with the intent to kill because she was going to school, or was promoting education through her blog or whatever. That really makes me want to start a war. I don't know who I'd be fighting, but do you know what I mean? The idea that a girl can't have an education is unspeakable, to me. But all forms of discrimination drive me crazy. If you've seen my film secretprojectrevolution, it'll help you understand. It's really important. But when I was on tour, all these things were happening, with Pussy Riot, Malala being shot at, you know, gays being arrested for being gay in Russia. There were so many crazy things happening in the world at the time, like, the growing fascist movement that I perceived, that I witnessed while I was in Europe. All of these crazy things were happening, and it really freaked me out.

What did you make of it all?
I felt like we were really going backwards, humanity was going backwards. And I felt like I was witnessing the collapse of civilization as we know it. And now, you know, with all of the things that have happened here in America, what happened in Paris, what's happening around the world with Boko Haram, there's a lot of causes that get me going and that make me think, you know, "Let's go. I'm ready to fight for all these people, for all people who are discriminated against for their religion that they choose, their sexual preference." All of these things. I really can't take it. I feel personally wounded by it, and I feel like it's my job as a human being, as an artist, as a mother, as a woman, to fight for all these people.



Read more: http://www.rollingst...5#ixzz3TXNQ5LKv

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Reply #248 posted 03/05/15 9:17pm

SoulAlive

New York Times interview

http://www.nytimes.c...d-more.html?_r=

Madonna Talks about ‘Rebel Heart,’ Her Fall and More
MARCH 5, 2015
06MADONNA-master315.jpg

Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. “I’m late for everything now,” she said.

She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, “Rebel Heart”; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna’s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It’s at once familiar — full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch — and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna’s constant supervision.

“I intended to think about things, choose things more slowly — the whole process,” she said. “Then I got forced into putting everything out, and now I’m trying to catch up with myself.”

She continued: “What started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We’re all digital, we’re all vulnerable and everything’s instant — so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It’s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it’s the death of being an artist in many ways.”

We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand Léger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel “The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.”

Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.

For the interview, she had raced home from a wardrobe fitting for coming performances. “I’m wearing half a costume,” she said. She was dressed in black, with stylishly chunky shoes, diamond-patterned tights, black shorts, a button-fronted T-shirt and a half-length jacket with black feathers sprouting from the shoulders. Her fingernails were black and glittery, and she had little silvery crucifix earrings; a skull-shaped ring was on one finger.

Madonna has been performing the single “Living for Love” on awards shows, wearing a matador outfit and surrounded by bare-chested men outfitted with bulls’ horns. On Feb. 25, she took a dangerous tumble in London at the Brit awards, the British equivalent of the Grammys. A dancer was supposed to pull off her cape, but it was tied too tightly and she was yanked backward onto stairs, suffering whiplash. Seconds later, she got up and kept dancing. “I didn’t feel anything when it happened,” she said. “I just remember falling backward, and I hit the back of my head. But I had so much adrenaline pumping, and I was so taken by surprise that I just was, O.K., I have to keep going. So I just got back onstage, and I just kept going.”

She continued: “If I wasn’t in good shape, I wouldn’t have survived that fall. But I’m strong. I know how to fall — I ride horses. And I have core strength, and I know that saved me. That and my guardian angels. I believe that there’s the physical world and the metaphysical world, and I do believe that they are intertwined — as above, so below. So I think both were at work in the protection of me.”

“Rebel Heart,” like most of Madonna’s albums, spells out its concept directly. Originally she had planned to make an album with two distinct halves, a duality of rebel and heart. “One aspect was going to be a representation of the more rebellious, provocateur side of me,” she said. “And the other side was going to be the more romantic, vulnerable side.” The finished album isn’t divided that way; it hops among moods. In a rarity for Madonna, it also takes a few glances backward. “Veni, Vidi, Vici” builds a triumphant autobiography out of her song titles.

“I don’t like to dwell in the past, but it seemed like the right time to do so,” she said. “After three decades one has to look back. Because there’s a lot of times I just stop and think, ‘Wow.’ I’m thinking about all the people that I’ve known, that I’ve worked with, that I’ve been friends with, that I’ve collaborated with, from Basquiat to Michael Jackson to Tupac Shakur. I survived and they didn’t. And it’s bittersweet for me to think about that. It just seemed like a time where I wanted to stop and look back. It’s kind of like survivor guilt. How did I make it and they didn’t?”

Another song, the ballad “Joan of Arc,” confesses that Madonna isn’t impervious to the countless put-downs she has sustained through the years. “I’ve always admired the story of Joan of Arc and what she symbolizes, her conviction,” she said. “I’m not quite there yet. Everyone does think of me as impenetrable and/or superhuman, and maybe that’s the way it goes if you’ve lasted for more than three decades. But of course that’s not the truth, and I guess I was trying to express that.”

The album had been in the making for a year and a half. When she started it, Madonna had simply wanted to take some time to write. “In this business I’m in, you can start to feel like a gerbil on a wheel,” she said. “People expect things from you. And I expect things from me. Since I was a teenager, I’ve never not been in some creative state, like in the act of making up dances, or writing songs, or whatever. I felt really drained.”

She decided to split her time between the “Impossible Lives” screenplay and songwriting. Her manager, Guy Oseary, suggested that she work with Avicii, the 25-year-old Swedish producer who has had worldwide hits with songs like “Wake Me Up,” and his songwriting team.

Madonna has made her best albums collaborating primarily with one producer at a time — William Orbit on “Ray of Light,” Nile Rodgers on “Like a Virgin,” Patrick Leonard on “Like a Prayer.” But the Avicii connection led into the increasingly prevalent 21st-century pop methodology of multiple collaborators working and reworking songs for maximum sizzle: Kanye West; Diplo, who has worked with M.I.A. and Skrillex; Ariel Rechtshaid, who has worked with Usher, Haim and Vampire Weekend; DJ Dahi, who has worked with Drake and Kendrick Lamar, and more.

“I didn’t know exactly what I signed on for, so a simple process became a very complex process,” Madonna said. “Everyone I worked with is tremendously talented, there’s no question about it. It’s just that everybody I worked with has also agreed to work with 5,000 other people. I just had to get in where I could fit in.”

But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her “old-fashioned” way — not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. “I never leave the room,” she said. “Sometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, ‘Don’t you have to go to the bathroom? Don’t you have somewhere to go? Don’t you want to go make some calls?’ ”

Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyoncé, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including “Joan of Arc” and “Living for Love,” reached the album. “The first week she was quite intimidating,” he said. “It was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can’t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.”

“Rebel Heart” may well be Madonna’s most diverse album, encompassing the gospel-charged “Living for Love,” the taunting “Bitch I’m Madonna,” ballads like “Ghosttown” and “Heartbreak City,” the sultry come-on of “Best Night,” the reggae of “Unapologetic Bitch” and the playful “Body Shop,” with its automotive double-entendres backed by the plink of a sitar. Songs also mutate as they go, style-hopping between verse and chorus. Mr. West’s productions mingle his sparse, abrasive rhythm tracks with catchy choruses. “That’s me,” Madonna said, smiling. “That’s where I come in. It’s an interesting marriage of both of our aesthetics.” She and Mr. West have also written a song for his next album, she said.

At 56, Madonna is undaunted by a pop market obsessed with youth. “I don’t think artists think about their age when they are creating, do they?” she said. “I only think about it when other people bring it up or try to limit me by saying, ‘You are this age and so dot dot dot.’ ”

Her response, as always, is perseverance. “Because I’ve been marginalized as a female in a male-dominated world, and we’re in a sexist industry or a sexist world, I’ve always had to push against something or resist against something,” she said. “I don’t think I’ve ever been relaxed, if you know what I’m saying. So because I’ve never been relaxed, I’m not going, oh, it used to be so easy. For me, it’s always been hard from Day 1.”

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Reply #249 posted 03/06/15 7:03am

TheGoldStandar
d

Ooh another track coming on Kanye's new album. I wonder if thats North on Autotune Baby.

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Reply #250 posted 03/06/15 1:47pm

SoulAlive

Madonna confirms a future collaboration with Drake,and will appear on Kanye's new album

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Reply #251 posted 03/06/15 2:27pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

hmmm

"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 #252 posted 03/06/15 10:32pm

SoulAlive

Behind the curtain of the New World Order

It's not platinum-encrypted commerce

It's not Isis or the Phoenix;the pyramids of Egypt

don't make it into something sordid

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Reply #253 posted 03/07/15 1:23am

SoulAlive

Hold me closer, full disclosure
Let it out, let me in
On your knees, confess to me
Every doubt, every sin
That’s how love’s supposed to be
I wanna know what you’re all about
You’re beautiful when you’re broken down
Let your walls crumble to the ground
Let me love you from the inside out
Every scar that you try to hide
All the dark corners of your mind
Show me yours, and I’ll show you mine
Let me love you from the inside out
Let’s discover one another
Kiss me here, touch me there, yeah
Purest form of ecstasy
Truth or dare, don’t be scared, yeah
Let me solve your mystery
I wanna know what you’re all about
You’re beautiful when you’re broken down
Let your walls crumble to the ground
Let me love you from the inside out
Every scar that you try to hide
All the dark corners of your mind
Show me yours, and I’ll show you mine
Let me love you from the inside out
Let’s cross the line
So far we won’t come back
Can’t read your mind
I shouldn’t have to ask
Cynical smile
Time to take off your mask
I’m on your side
So let me love you
Let me love you
(Let me love you from the inside out)
I wanna know what you’re all about
You’re beautiful when you’re broken down
Let your walls crumble to the ground
Let me love you from the inside out
Every scar that you try to hide
All the dark corners of your mind
Show me yours, and I’ll show you mine
Let me love you from the inside out
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Reply #254 posted 03/07/15 8:49am

purplethunder3
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Madonna: Rebel Heart review – braggadocio v self-examination on an album of two halves


Half of Madonna’s 13th album seems concerned with proving she can keep up with the kids. The other half is mature, reflective – and far more affecting

The best moments on Rebel Heart add to the slim canon of Madonna songs on which the singer genuinely seems to be revealing her personal feelings, writes Alexis Petridis. Photograph: Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott

Its release has been plagued by controversy over piracy, the term “artistic rape”,claims of cultural appropriation and the vexing question of whether or not it’s all right to laugh at a 56-year-old woman falling on her arse midway through a dance routine. But the most immediately striking thing about Madonna’s 13th studio album is rather more prosaic: it’s extremely long. The deluxe version features 19 tracks and lasts for the best part of an hour and a half. The super-deluxe version adds a second disc, featuring another raft of songs and remixes – anyone planning to listen in full is advised to first ensure their will is up to date in case they die of old age before they get to the end.

Rebel Heart is that long because it is essentially two separate albums. One is wistful and thick with reflections on failed love affairs and intimations of self-doubt. Most shockingly, it occasionally touches on the hitherto-unmentionable notion that Madonna’s career might draw to a conclusion at some point: “In a world that’s changing, I’m a stranger in a strange land,” she sings over wafty electronics and a battery of percussion on the gorgeous Wash All Over Me, “if this is the end then let it come.” The other offers dirty talk and defiant I’m-still-here snarls set to EDM-inspired productions, frequently the handiwork of Diplo.

There’s obviously no reason why an album can’t contain both. But on Rebel Heart, the two don’t quite gel, perhaps because you get the sneaking feeling that the former might represent the music Madonna wants to make, while the latter is the music she feels obliged to make, in order to compete with whoever the big new female pop star is: listening to a track called S.E.X., you’re struck by the sense of a woman dutifully going through the motions.

Certainly, the first category contains almost all of Rebel Heart’s indispensable moments, and not just because they belong to the slim canon of Madonna songs on which the singer genuinely seems to be revealing her personal feelings and frailties: Ghosttown and Joan of Arc are cut from the same emotional cloth as Like a Prayer’s Promise to Try or Ray of Light’s Drowned World/Substitute for Love. As well as the most intriguing words, they’ve got the album’s best melodies. For all the expressions of insecurity, they boast an effortlessness and a confidence that contrasts sharply with the sweat and strain that’s audibly gone into what Miley Cyrus would call the bangerz. There’s an ease and unaffectedness about the title track – a stark depiction of the cost of fame, clear-eyed and devoid of self pity – that’s noticeably absent when Madonna starts carrying on like a rapper on Best Night, informing us that “it gon’ be like this – we gon’ be gangstas tonight” etc.

That said, the bangerz aren’t all bad, by any means. Kanye West’s co-productions carry the same thrillingly authentic twang of bug-eyed lunacy that graced Yeezus, not least Illuminati, a fizzing cacophony of fragmented vocal samples and synthesisers that don’t so much throb as pound. Body Shop is great, a sweet Cherish-like melody over what sounds like a kutam. And, if nothing else, you have to admire the sheer brass cojones of a woman who tells interviewers she never deliberately tries to be provocative – “I wasn’t sitting there in my laboratory of shit-stirring going, ‘This is gonna fuck with people’” – while promoting an album that contains a song on which Madonna compares her vaginal mucus to holy water, and suggests that Jesus might have enjoyed giving her cunnilingus: “On your knees and genuflect, Jesus loves my pussy best.”

Elsewhere, however, things go awry. Bitch I’m Madonna is a fantastic title in search of a song. In lieu of one, producer Diplo comes up with a kind of hybrid of EDM and happy hardcore and throws Nicki Minaj at her most hyperactive into the mix; the result genuinely sets your teeth on edge. There are moments when Madonna appears to be frantically chasing after other artists or trends. The hook of Inside Out is perilously close to that of Rihanna’s Diamonds, while Devil Pray – a bit of anti-drug sermonising that offers the deeply improbable image of Madonna indulging in solvent abuse – is a pretty transparent attempt by Avicii to come up with something along the lines of his hit Wake Me Up. Veni Vidi Vici, meanwhile, starts out a fascinating memoir of Madonna’s early days in New York, before disappointingly devolving into a plonking list of her hits: “I justified my love, I made you say a little prayer/ They had me crucified you know I had to take it there.” Mercifully, this grinds to a halt before it can start exploring the less celebrated areas of her oeuvre: “I did Evita too and also Hanky Panky/ And in Sex there was a photograph of me having a wanky.”

There’s something bracing about Madonna’s insistence that she belongs in exactly the same place she’s been for more than 30 years – at the forefront of mainstream pop, asserting her supremacy over anyone who dares challenge her – and something impressive about her steadfast refusal to do the kind of things every other artist four decades into their career does: no unplugged shows with the singer sitting demurely on a stool and emoting to an acoustic guitar; no deviation into the Great American Songbook; no album that cravenly attempts to recreate the sound of her best-loved early work. You can understand why she sees that kind of thing as a one-way ticket to the knacker’s yard, why she’d rather prove she can still talk dirtier or come up with more outrageous braggadocio than any young pretender. But at least half of Rebel Heart proves it’s not as stark a choice as that. She can come up with songs that are both mature and reflective and that function as fantastic pop music, and they’re all the more potent because they sound like they’re being made entirely on her own terms.

"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 #255 posted 03/07/15 10:31am

TheGoldStandar
d

I think ^^^ is right that one is the music she wants to make and the other is obligation except that its the silly, fun, erotic almost comically sexual stuff.

.

S.E.X. is a helluva grower. Also noticed the bassline of Devil Pray is very reminiscent of Erotica.

.

Anywaaay with all this material I made my ultimate Rebel Heart playlist, runs about 2 hours and each song's theme sort of weaves together. If she had taken this route, she could've started disc 2 with Bitch I'm Madonna. Anyone else make one? All in all there are over 5 hours worth of demo, its crazy.

.

1. Living For Love

2. Wash All Over Me (Avicii Final Mix)

3. Alone With You

4. Two Steps Behind Me

5. Addicted (The One That Got Away) Demo

6. Devil Pray

7. Messiah

8. God Is Love

9. Revolution

10. Graffiti Heart Demo

11. Freedom

12. Take A Day

13. Bitch I'm Madonna (Diplo Mix with Nicki Minaj)

14. Unapologetic Bitch

15. Illuminati

16. S.E.X.

17. Holy Water

18. La Isla Bonita (Major Lazer Dubplate)

19. Iconic Pt. 2 (feat. Mike Tyson and Chance The Rapper)

20. Veni Vidi Vici (feat. Nas)

21. Ghosttown

22. Wash All Over Me (Orchestra Version)

23. Rebel Heart - the drums on the album version are so nice

24. Inside Out

25. Never Let You Go

26. Joan Of Arc (Demo 2) - this is the mature drum beat not the silly one on the album

27. Beautiful Scars

28. Hold Tight (Demo 5)

29. Borrowed Time (Version 2)

30. Best Night

31. Body Shop

32. Autotune Baby Demo

33. Queen

34. Heaven

.

I'm tempted to add Haddaway "What Is Love" vs. "Living For Love" mashup as track 35. Its pretty epic.

[Edited 3/7/15 10:36am]

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Reply #256 posted 03/07/15 10:53am

SoulAlive

kiss it better...make it wetter....don't it taste like holy water? razz razz razz

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Reply #257 posted 03/08/15 4:50pm

SoulAlive

Madonna Q&A: 'Ideas flowed simply out of me'

Gardner_Elysa.png Elysa Gardner, USA TODAY 12:35 p.m. EDT March 8, 2015

A lesser mortal, or star, might have needed some down time after falling off the stage at the BRIT Awards. But Madonna, 56, simply untwisted her Armani cape and got on with the show. After all, the pop icon had a new album to promote: Rebel Heart, out Tuesday, featuring contributions from Kanye West, Avicii, Diplo, Nicki Minaj and Nas, to drop a few names. Madonna chatted with USA TODAY about the recording, as well as her children and art and Instagram.

Q: You took quite a tumble the other day. How are you feeling?

A: I'm fine. I had a tiny bit of whiplash. My head hit the floor and snapped my neck a little bit. But I didn't hurt any other part of my body, strangely enough -- I sustained no bruises or cuts.

Q: You've been keeping busy, certainly. You worked with an eclectic group of collaborators for Rebel Heart.

A: Lots of people I'd never met before, though certainly people whose work I knew. Usually, with an album, I choose a producer and it takes us a few weeks to get to know each other, and then the chemistry starts to percolate. In this circumstance I kind of got thrown into lots of groups of songwriters. Some people I had direct synergy with...I felt so rejuvenated just in the simple act of writing music. I felt like I was back in New York, in Queens, where I picked up a guitar and wrote my first song. Ideas flowed simply out of me.

Q: There's been talk about how sexually graphic some of the songs are, but they're also pretty emotionally raw. We're reminded that love and sex can work in tandem.

A: Or work against each other. I think love resides in all of the songs, even when they are overtly sexual. Songs like Holy Waterand Sex have humor. They're layered. We're dealing with different ideas that I'm constantly exploring – spirituality, sexuality, different aspects of love, whether it's romantic love or the love you have for your children. And love can be as devastating and destructive as it can be rejuvenating and life-giving. I guess I try to capture all of that.

Q: Are you satisfied with the result?

A: I'm a perfectionist. I would say I could have used another month to go nit-picking through things, put on finishing touches and connect the dots. But everybody knows the boring story about the hacker, why I had to put my record out much sooner than I had intended to. But I'm OK with it. I'm proud of it. Maybe the universe was telling me that it was ready -- to get it out there.

Q: When early recordings of the songs were leaked online, it got me to thinking about how much media and how we use it have changed since you first became famous. Do you feel like you're under even more scrutiny now?

A: I've always been under scrutiny. But I used to just not really pay attention to what people said. Now I read people's comments on Instagram. I never had that kind of access – and people didn't have that kind of access to me. It's interesting, reading arguments people are having on my account that I'm no longer even a part of -- whether it's people arguing about Islam versus Israel, or the shooting in Paris, or homophobia or sexism. The one thing I don't understand is when people make comments who are clearly not fans of mine. I think, why are you here? Why are you wasting your time? It's fascinating.

Q: Your eldest child, Lourdes, is studying performing arts at college (the University of Michigan's School of Music, Theatre and Dance). Do you talk with her about being a performer?

A: We talk about it non-stop -- about being an artist, being creative, where to put energy. She's home for spring break now, in fact. She's very talented in many areas. She doesn't know if she wants to be an actress, or produce music -- and she's an incredible singer and dancer.

Q: Are your other children musically inclined?

A: Absolutely. My son Rocco is a fantastic dancer. He's also into producing music. David plays guitar and sings and dances, and my daughter Mercy plays piano beautifully. So they're all musical in one way or another. Some are more uninhibited than others, but this is a very musical house.

Q: You apparently have a pretty fabulous art collection too.

A: I think all the arts feed off each other. My kids know who Picasso is, and they also know who Andy Warhol is and who Keith Haring is. I think that's important.

Q: For years, people have analyzed your influence on female artists, but you've had a more general impact on music as well -- the incorporation of dance-music textures into pop, for instance.

A: For sure -- bringing dance music into the arena of pop culture, bringing different kids of dance styles out into the public.Also, being outspoken, envelope-pushing, provocative – I think you could say someone like Kanye is walking on that razor's edge as well, and he's a man, not a woman. And I would say Truth Or Dare was the first reality show.

Q: You've also been a champion of gay rights. Have we made progress in that arena in recent years?

I think we've made huge progress, definitely. Is there still a lot of discriminatory behavior out there, against the gay community? Yeah. Against the African-American community? Yeah. We've made a lot of advances, but we're still very narrow-minded and judgmental. It's a contradiction.

Q: So now that the album is out, you must be focusing on the tour. What can we expect -- besides a lot of energy and spectacle?

A: I want it to be spectacular, definitely. But I also want to have more intimacy in my show. So you can expect more of that.

http://www.usatoday....and-a/24511351/

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Reply #258 posted 03/08/15 5:03pm

purplethunder3
121

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Ready for the general public sale tomorrow? It's gonna be mayhem! nuts Hoping to find better tix...

"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 #259 posted 03/08/15 5:15pm

SoulAlive

purplethunder3121 said:

Ready for the general public sale tomorrow? It's gonna be mayhem! nuts Hoping to find better tix...

I'm ready lol I just wonder if I should try my luck for the first show,or wait awhile to see if the second show will be announced tomorrow.

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Reply #260 posted 03/08/15 5:23pm

SoulAlive

Attitude Review

20150308-reviews-madonna-rebel-heart-att

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Reply #261 posted 03/08/15 5:23pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

SoulAlive said:

purplethunder3121 said:

Ready for the general public sale tomorrow? It's gonna be mayhem! nuts Hoping to find better tix...

I'm ready lol I just wonder if I should try my luck for the first show,or wait awhile to see if the second show will be announced tomorrow.

When did they announce the second show last time--my memory ain't as good as it used to be lol--I know I got a fantastic seat in 101 for the second show--much better than the first show. But, I also didn't buy the tix for show two right away either.

"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 #262 posted 03/08/15 5:26pm

SoulAlive

purplethunder3121 said:

SoulAlive said:

I'm ready lol I just wonder if I should try my luck for the first show,or wait awhile to see if the second show will be announced tomorrow.

When did they announce the second show last time--my memory ain't as good as it used to be lol--I know I got a fantastic seat in 101 for the second show--much better than the first show. But, I also didn't buy the tix for show two right away either.

For MDNA,the second show was announced immediately...shortly after tickets for the first show went on sale.

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Reply #263 posted 03/08/15 5:35pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

SoulAlive said:

purplethunder3121 said:

When did they announce the second show last time--my memory ain't as good as it used to be lol--I know I got a fantastic seat in 101 for the second show--much better than the first show. But, I also didn't buy the tix for show two right away either.

For MDNA,the second show was announced immediately...shortly after tickets for the first show went on sale.

I hope they do it the same way this time--I'll hold out for the second show, if so, considering my good luck on seats for the second show.

BTW--it was very interesting mixing and mingling with Madonna fans before the shows for MDNA--such a wide variety (plus more time before a usual concert because of her late beginning time and having DJs play lol). I met some real pretentious jerks, some great folks who were new and old fans, and then those who were hawking their services--like trying to read my fortune right outside the venue... razz lol "You have one of the most striking and strange auras I've ever seen. Can I give you a reading?: LMAO

"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 #264 posted 03/08/15 10:34pm

SoulAlive

purplethunder3121 said:

SoulAlive said:

For MDNA,the second show was announced immediately...shortly after tickets for the first show went on sale.

I hope they do it the same way this time--I'll hold out for the second show, if so, considering my good luck on seats for the second show.

BTW--it was very interesting mixing and mingling with Madonna fans before the shows for MDNA--such a wide variety (plus more time before a usual concert because of her late beginning time and having DJs play lol). I met some real pretentious jerks, some great folks who were new and old fans, and then those who were hawking their services--like trying to read my fortune right outside the venue... razz lol "You have one of the most striking and strange auras I've ever seen. Can I give you a reading?: LMAO

I remember hanging out in front of the venue (SAP Center) in 2006 before the Confessions show.I was chatting with friends when I saw a few of Madonna's dancers.They were just casually walking around.I recognized them from the "Hung Up" video lol They were really cool guys.Talked to us for a long time.I wanted to ask a million questions (lol) but I held back,lol.Cool experience.

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Reply #265 posted 03/08/15 10:54pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

SoulAlive said:

purplethunder3121 said:

I hope they do it the same way this time--I'll hold out for the second show, if so, considering my good luck on seats for the second show.

BTW--it was very interesting mixing and mingling with Madonna fans before the shows for MDNA--such a wide variety (plus more time before a usual concert because of her late beginning time and having DJs play lol). I met some real pretentious jerks, some great folks who were new and old fans, and then those who were hawking their services--like trying to read my fortune right outside the venue... razz lol "You have one of the most striking and strange auras I've ever seen. Can I give you a reading?: LMAO

I remember hanging out in front of the venue (SAP Center) in 2006 before the Confessions show.I was chatting with friends when I saw a few of Madonna's dancers.They were just casually walking around.I recognized them from the "Hung Up" video lol They were really cool guys.Talked to us for a long time.I wanted to ask a million questions (lol) but I held back,lol.Cool experience.

I wish I had been around for Confessions, but I have to confess that I was out of the music loop then...just like with Prince in the 90s, I dropped out of keeping up with music and so, after Ray of Light, I wasn't up on Madonna. Nice to come back and see her still kicking up a rebellion after all these years... lol

Man, now I have two more friends who say that they're in and depending on me to find good seats at a good price... Whew! whew The pressure is on...

[Edited 3/8/15 23:07pm]

"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 #266 posted 03/08/15 11:14pm

SoulAlive

You getting your copy of Rebel Heart on Tuesday? Amazon is getting ready to ship me the super deluxe edition lol should arrive on Tuesday

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Reply #267 posted 03/08/15 11:17pm

SoulAlive

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Reply #268 posted 03/08/15 11:30pm

SoulAlive

Madonna's new album includes a kickass collaboration with NAS called "Veni Vidi Vici"

[Nas]
Madonna, life is so crazy
You've been through a lot
I'll tell you a story sometime, you know?
[Madonna]
Seemed like yesterday
I was a baby on the street, I took a holiday
I was steppin' to the beat, I had to pay my rent
On the Lower East Side, I threw my tag around
Let beatboys take me for a ride, I started writin' songs
I kinda got into the groove, they tried to criticize
My every single move, but then I realized
I had nothing left to lose, it took me by surprise
When I became the news
I was fearless like a renegade
I had a feeling that I can't explain
I didn't listen to what people said
I came, I saw, I conquered
I was constant as a northern star
I had a fire burnin' in my heart
I never gave up, fightin' in the dark
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I expressed myself, came like a virgin down the aisle
Exposed my naked ass, and I did it with a smile
And when it came to sex, I know I walked the borderline
And when I struck a pose, all the gay boys lost their mind
I justified my love, I made you say a little prayer
They had me crucified, you know I had to take it there
I opened up my heart, I learned the power of goodbye
I saw a ray of light, music saved my life
I was fearless like a renegade
I had a feeling that I can't explain
I didn't listen to what people said
I came, I saw, I conquered
I was constant as a northern star
I had a fire burnin' in my heart
I never gave up, fightin' in the dark
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
[Nas]
In 1994, I came through the door with that door beats verses
Scratches, verbally murdered rappers
My ma's from the Carolinas, pa's from Natchez and QB's
Where I started flowin', but I was scared the cops were gonna kick my apartment door in
Had a baby girl, by a crazy girl
Then I got married, happily of course
Then that ended, in a bad divorce
I know how to pick 'em, don't I
Never gave a fuck about public pressure or the ridicule or too big to lose
Now who's a fool?
And I never been happier, no lie
I'm just a humble servant, I'm Nas
If y'all burn down Ferguson, I'mma riot
My life cannot be compared to anybody
Any trappers, any rapper
Any politician, beautician, or musician
Anybody, saw many bodies, many coffins, heads or tails
Penny tosses, either that or jail
Not many options on the block I came from
And I turned to a rap messiah, spit rapid fire
And it [wore?] right back to the block I came from
[Madonna]
I was fearless like a renegade
[Nas: Tried to tell 'em]
I had a feeling, that I can't explain
I didn't listen to what people said, I came, I saw, I conquered
I was constant as a northern star, I had a fire burnin' in my heart
I never gave up, fightin' in the dark
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
I came, I saw, I conquered
[Nas]
Madonna on the track, Nas in the back
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Reply #269 posted 03/09/15 10:46am

TheGoldStandar
d

Clickbait tidbit from Facebook today:

Once D’Angelo’s star started to rise, he began to attract attention from all sorts of famous musicians, including Madonna. After singing to her at her request during her 39th birthday party, D’Angelo “rebuffed her advances at another gathering not long after,” the article says. “At that event, the sources say, Madonna walked over and told a woman sitting next to D, ‘I think you’re in my seat.’ The woman got up. Madonna sat down and told him, ‘I’d like to know what you’re thinking.’ To which D replied, ‘I’m thinking you’re rude.’ ”

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