Madonna Music
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Music is the eighth studio album by American singer Madonna, released on September 18, 2000, by Maverick and Warner Bros. Records. Following the success of her previous album Ray of Light (1998), she intended to embark on a tour. However, her record company encouraged her to return to the studio and record new music before going on the road. Her collaboration with French producer Mirwais Ahmadzaï resulted in a more experimental direction for the album, with additional production from William Orbit. Music incorporates many different genres into its overall dance-pop and electronica vibe, with influences from funk, house, rock, country and folk. The album was mostly recorded at Sarm West and East Studios in London, England. Elaborating a country theme for the album, Madonna reinvented her image as a cowgirl.
By 2000, she became pregnant with her son Rocco, from her relationship with director Guy Ritchie.[7] Wanting to distract herself from the media frenzy surrounding this news, Madonna concentrated on the development of her eighth studio album, entitled Music. Buoyed by the commercial success of her previous album, she was keen on getting back to the studio to record new music. Madonna was well disposed towards William Orbit, producer of Ray of Light, but by 2000, his production and sound had become ubiquitous. Also, the music scene was being dominated by a younger generation of singers like Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, prompting Madonna to look for a distinctive sound within this market.[8] She was then introduced to French DJ and producer Mirwais Ahmadzaï. Madonna instantly liked his pitch-shifting, pulverizing rhythms and his utilization of acid bass in his songs. Ahmadzaï always preferred taking musical risks and hence he wanted the collaborations with Madonna to get out the best from the singer.[9] Before the album was released, Madonna recorded a statement to her fans, stating about the album and Ahmadzaï:
\"Hey Mr. DJ, put a record on... Hi, it's Madonna. You've probably been hearing about my new record, Music, for a while. Well, I just wanted to make sure you knew that the single is gonna drop very soon. I worked on it with a French guy named Mirwais, and he is the shit. The album will be released worldwide on September 19, and I hope you like my music.\"[10]
Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani described the album as having a \"more experimental direction\".[21] With The Face magazine, Madonna explained her inspirations behind the songs and the music of Music. She said, \"This record, more than any other records, covers all the areas of my life. I left off partying on Ray of Light. But I'd just had a baby, so my mood was complete, like wonderment of life, and I was incredibly thoughtful and retrospective and intrigued by the mystical aspects of life.\"[20] Madonna also summed it up as \"Funky, electronic music blended with futuristic folk. Lots of jangly guitars and moody melancholic lines.\"[22] \"Music\", the title track is the first featured on the record. Starting with Madonna's androgynous voice saying \"Hey Mr. DJ, put a record on, I wanna dance with my baby\". Above this lyric, Madonna's voice electronically manipulated asks \"Do you like to boogie woogie\". According to Santiago Fouz-Hernández in his book Madonna's Drowned Worlds: New Approaches to Her Cultural Transformations, \"Music\" is a \"disco anthem, and the beat commands [the people] to get up and dance\". He also said that the song is an expression to her public and it is one of Madonna's catchiest singles of her career.[23] The second track \"Impressive Instant\" is a club-savvy stomper marked by futuristic keyboard lines and vocals that darken from distorted, and robotic passages. Madonna claimed that the song was the hardest to write.[16][19] Madonna sings, \"I like to singy, singy, singy, like a bird on a wingy, wingy, wingy\", with childlike abandon amid a vibrant, celebratory swirl of electronic keyboard riffs and thumpy dance beats.[16]
The third track, \"Runaway Lover\", is a trance/house rave track. It is one of Madonna's collaborations with William Orbit for the album. The following track, \"I Deserve It\", is an acoustic-framed track that is anchored by a hip-hop inflected groove. Madonna said the track \"has the strangest juxtaposition of this folky, simple song and this high-tech, ominous synth line.\" The song lends weight to rich, introspective lyrics, such as the chorus lines: \"Many miles, many roads I have traveled, fallen down of the way/Many hearts, many years have unraveled, leading up to today.\" \"Amazing\", the fifth track, is a vibrant tempo-shifter that opens with a soft, music-box-like keyboard/string flourish. The song has been compared by Madonna to \"Beautiful Stranger\" (1999), saying the reason she fought with her record company to cancel the release as a single was because of the similarity. The sixth track, \"Nobody's Perfect\", includes ethereal vocals and a dreamy keyboard. The following track and second single, \"Don't Tell Me\", was written by Joe Henry, Madonna's brother-in-law. He performed and released the track, originally named \"Stop\", on his 2001 album Scar. His wife Melanie sent a demo of the track to her sister, who liked it and recorded her version. It is framed by soft acoustic guitars and subtle keyboard lines.[16] The eighth track and third single, \"What It Feels Like for a Girl\", comments on female role-playing in society. The following track, \"Paradise (Not for Me)\", has lyrics sung in French, and the lyric \"I can't remember, when I was young, I can't explain if it was wrong\" reflected an artistic palette, \"encompassing diverse musical, textual and visual styles in its lyrics.\"[24] Musically, it draws influence from Édith Piaf.[16] The song was also included on Mirwais Ahmadzaï's album Production (2000).[20] The tenth and final track on the album, \"Gone\", contrasts acoustic guitars with electronic elements. Soulful vocals give depth to such striking, cautionary lyrics as \"Turn to stone, lose my faith, and I'll be gone.\"[16]
Madonna chatted with fans through her first live chat on AOL on the day of Music's release.[47] In order to celebrate the album's release, Madonna had a release party at dance emporium Catch One in Los Angeles, California, on September 20, 2000. The 1.4 million party paid by the singer's record company Warner Bros. and Us magazine was attended by 600 select guests who received special invitations. The party invites were sent out in white leather boxes, lined with black fur. A gold necklace was inside with letters spelling out the album's title, and only those wearing the necklaces would be allowed into the club. More than a dozen strippers were in attendance to keep the party in the same theme as from the music video for \"Music\".[48] She sported a five-carat diamond ring Ritchie gave her for her birthday, and a black T-shirt that read \"Snatch Coming Soon\" promoting Ritchie's film, while Ritchie promoted Madonna's album wearing a T-shirt with the word Music emblazoned on it.[49] Among those who attended the party were Sheryl Crow, Gwen Stefani, Maverick Records' head Guy Oseary, and George Clinton, who arrived with Macy Gray in a horse-drawn carriage. Madonna's then-boyfriend Guy Ritchie was initially denied access into the VIP lounge by a security guard. He apparently got into a shoving match with a bodyguard who did not know who he was.[50]
Following the album's release and motherhood, Madonna appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman on November 3, 2000, being the first time since her controversial appearance in 1994, and performed \"Don't Tell Me\".[51] Madonna made a concert on November 5, 2000, at Roseland Ballroom in New York City. Accompanying musicians performing with Madonna were Mirwais Ahmadzaï on guitar and longtime backing singers Niki Haris and Donna De Lory.[52] The costumes for the show and the set was designed by Dolce & Gabbana. Songs performed included \"Impressive Instant\", \"Runaway Lover\", \"Don't Tell Me\", \"What It Feels Like for a Girl\", and \"Music\". In the performance of New York, she wore a T-shirt with \"Britney Spears\" written on it.[52] She then traveled to Europe to further promote the album. The singer performed \"Don't Tell Me\" on German game-show Wetten, dass.. on November 11, 2000.[53] At the MTV Europe Music Awards 2000, Madonna performed \"Music\" on November 16, 2000, in Stockholm, Sweden. After being introduced by Ali G as \"Maradona\", she performed the song wearing a T-shirt with the name of Australian recording artist Kylie Minogue printed on it.[54] She later performed \"Don't Tell Me\" and \"Music\" on British television program Top of The Pops, in an appearance aired on November 17.[55]
\"Don't Tell Me\" was released on November 21, 2000, as the second single from the album. It reached at number four and spent eight weeks in the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100.[81] The song topped the music charts in the Canada, Italy and New Zealand and attained top-ten positions on the charts of many other European nations.[82] In 2005, the song was placed at number 285 on Blender magazine's The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born.[83]
\"What It Feels Like for a Girl\" was released as the third and final single from the album, on April 17, 2001. It received positive appreciation from contemporary critics. The song lost the top-twenty on the official chart of the United States, but it was a success on the US dance charts.[84] The music video, directed by Guy Ritchie, portrays Madonna as an angry woman on a crime spree. Reviewers criticized the video for being overly violent and graphic.[85] The video was banned from most North American and European video stations, receiving only early hours play.[86]
\"Impressive Instant\" was released as a club promo only single with remixes by Peter Rauhofer on September 18, 2001.[87] It went to number one on the Hot Dance Club Play chart where it stayed for two weeks.[88][89] The song was intended by Madonna to be released as the fourth single off Music but Madonna's recording company wanted \"Amazing\" to be the next single, which was also released as a promotional single in late 2001, in a few select countries before being withdrawn. Madonna felt that \"Amazing\" was too similar to her previous single \"Beautiful Stranger\" (1999), so they were deadlocked.[90] Warner Bros. planned to move forward with the release of \"Amazing\" without Madonna's help since she was too busy preparing for her next tour, and planned to promote the single with a music video cut from the live version of \"Amazing\" from Madonna's Drowned World Tour, but she scrapped the song from the set list to be sure that Warner Bros. could not promote it, and the fourth single idea was over.[90] 59ce067264
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