WHY THE WORLD NEEDS A NEW BRILLIANT MADONNA
ALBUM
Written by Darren Hayes for Attitude
Magazine
Lifelong Madonna fan Darren Hayes explains
why the world needs an amazing new album from the Queen of Pop…
The woman who has always been above social
media has been having a torrid affair with it of late. 2014 shall forever be
known by this fan as the year the Material Girl embraced Instagram and treated
us to everything from gratuitous boob selfies to her homage to hairy underarms.
And I’ve loved it. Through her iPhone Madonna let us behind the platinum
curtain – even inside her very posh Upper East Side Manhattan master bathroom
to witness everything form her post work-out beads of sweat to her son David
Banda on guitar.
Yet of most fascination has been the cheeky
way she has beckoned us inside the recording studio. The Queen of Pop has been
teasing the world with progress of her as-yet-untitled (unless it’s called
Unapologetic Bitch – and Lord don’t I hope so!) 13th studio album.
The list of potential collaborators is so
far impressive: Sky Ferreira/Haim producer Ariel Rechtshaid, Wrecking Ball
co-writer MoZella, MIA collaborator Diplo, DJ/producer Avicii, former Lady Gaga
collaborator Martin Kierszenbaum, pop singer Natalia Kills, US hit-maker Toby
Gad.
The imagery teased out recently is also
exciting: Homage to Betty Page, mysterious veils and religious imagery? Check.
But there’s also some cause for concern. Why? Because Madonna seems so close to
getting it right. And we all know what happens when Madonna gets it slightly
wrong. Two words: Hard Candy.
Some mght argue her last studio album MDNA
was a disappointment. I actually loved many moments on the album but there was
a sense, right before the album dropped, that something was out of alignment.
It’s hard to pinpoint what was missing. The
world was hungry for Madonna’s ‘A’ game. The reality is, we got glimpses of it.
William Orbit suggested in retrospect that M was pulled in too many directions
to really focus on making the record the brilliant return to form that songs
like Gang Bang and Addicted promised it could be.
She had a clothing line, a world tour, a
film and a perfume to promote. Music – the source of all her power – had been
relegated to a mere portion of her time, a part-time job and unfortunately
something had to give.
I assume it was the laser focus on the
dance floor that lost out in the end, and the project suffered.
Thankfully the accompanying tour did not.
We witnessed Madonna in her full prime, mercilessly slaying audiences with her
bold confidence and celebrating dance at the centre of her circus. Yet when the
confetti cleared there was the sense that the Madonna train had passed through
town without a trace. The era, like Hard Candy, didn’t seem to permeate the
zeitgeist the way Confessions on a Dancefloor had a few years before.
The problem is, Madonna is consistently
brilliant. When she hits her sweet spot, it is the music equivalent of orgasm.
Moments like Holiday, Into the Groove andHung Up are prime examples. Reckless
abandon on the dance floor yet not throw-away gibberish. Yes, solid dance-pop
tunes that you want to make out to, get drunk with or indeed form the
soundtrack of a one-night stand to. But they are also songs of freedom, of
escape and empowerment. Some might call them the soundtrack to coming out. At
the heart of these floor-fillers are universal truths embedded in the human
experience: “Only when I’m dancing can I feel this free.” “Soul is in the
musical, that’s where I feel so beautiful, magical. Life’s a ball. So get up on
the dance floor.”
What is this love affair between gay men
and Madonna? It’s distinct from our admiration for all other popstars – a very
particular tryst entirely separate from the love of Cher, Kylie, Mariah etc.
While I can appreciate the qualities all these strong divas have in common,
there’s something different about Madonna. If you grew up gay during her reign
there is something of her rebelliousness invariably in your DNA. As a teen I identified
with her refusal to be categorised. Neither butch nor feminine, tough nor soft.
Especially in the 80’s she challenged what the definition of “beautiful” was
and her resilience and determination were infectious.
I was 12 years old when ‘The Virgin Tour’
was released on videocassette. When other boys in my school were sneaking off
to watch boobs in Porky’s or glimpses or nip slips in Conan the Barbarian, I
was sat glued in front of the telly trying to learn the choreography from Dress
You Up. I saw the sheer audacity in this woman who was teasing, nay, demanding
the crowd beg for more. “I said DO you want to hear some more!?’ she screamed
during an impossibly long pause in the middle of Holiday. And boy did I.
I’m a lifelong defender of American Life, a
controversial choice for favourite album when it comes to Madonna fans but let
me present my solitary piece of evidence: The song Nothing Fails. It’s the 2004
Like A Prayer only this time, a bit more battered, a bit weary from love and
possessed of exactly the kind of depth I hope all Madonna records reach at some
point in the album sequence.
As a project, yes I know it is devoid of
“hit singles” – but to me it’s a songwriting master class. As an album it’s
such a cohesive work of art because clearly it had her 100% undivided
attention. It is this attention to detail a great Madonna album needs. It
simply cannot succeed without it.
Projects that have missed the mark for me
did so because they were missing a crucial element: Madonna. I don’t care how
many superstar producers, songwriters or hot DJ’s she surrounds herself with –
the horse I’m always betting on is the woman herself. When Madonna decides to
show up in the studio you get unwavering brilliance. Like a Prayer and Ray of
Light are prime examples. Here we have a woman who is in love with her craft
and the passion is evident. The truth is, Madonna is always the most
interesting element of a Madonna collaboration. Things only go awry when that
delicate balance is thrown out of whack. Her collaboration with Pharrell and
even BabyFace to a certain extent have always left me feeling like those
producers overshadowed the Madonna quotient. Their sound permeated the records
and the result was pedestrian. I know, shocking right? Madonna is never EVER
supposed to be normal.
Madonna’s work with fresh and exciting
up-and-coming talent is, for me, always most rewarding. Her work with William
Orbit, a relatively obscure choice at the time, was revolutionary. Similarly
her Music album with Mirwais completely reinvented her for the 21st century. By
the time Madonna got into the studio with Stuart Price she seemed to be on a
winning streak. Three incredibly original and yet massively successful pop
records – with the edgy excellence of American Life in between.
I got into a bit of a “thing” on Twitter
when I announced I was writing this article. I encountered a few snarky
comments – from “tell her to start acting her age” to suggestions that Madonna
didn’t write her biggest hits (completely fiction – she’s one of the most
prolific and gifted pop writers around and strangely rarely gets this credit).
I found myself defending Madonna’s right to get her kit off – even if it
doesn’t do much for me, her refusal to “age gracefully” is so in keeping with
her core values I can’t help but encourage it. With respect, Madonna fans are
fiercely protective and the one common factor I noticed was a passion for
Madonna to “get it right” whatever that means. My argument has always been that
the focus has to be on songs and the discipline must come not just in the gym,
but on ideas. On music.
All songwriters or artists get lazy – it’s
HARD to be good. U2’s Bono has a great phrase about striving for excellence:
“Good is the enemy of great.” And it’s true. Madonna is easily and effortlessly
good. No one can deny that. But when she’s great, there is no one and I mean NO
ONE alive who can touch her in pop music.
In this period of quiet before the storm I
want to send out some cosmic rays of light to the queen. All the signs are
there: the determination, the focus and the joy of being an artist. We can all
debate which era, which look or which persona was strongest but there’s only
one person who can deliver the goods. Help us Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone.
You’re our only hope.
2 comments:
A brilliant article!
"Madonna is never EVER supposed to be normal."
Too right!
Jx
PS I haven't ignored your recent "Tracks" post. It's just finding the time to listen to that cornucopia of gorgeousness which is eluding me, as you might imagine with the new flat...
It is a very good article indeed - he is such a huge fan and some of his Madonna covers are quite good.
As for the tracks, I know - I always have to set aside some time to get through your posts. I suspect not everything in this batch will be much to your liking, but there might be a track or two.
Hope you guys are settling in nicely :)
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