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REBEL HEART - THE SPOILER ZONE (links will be reported to Guy Oseary)


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So....I still love Best Night, S.E.X., DP, LFL, Illuminati.

I used to HATE VVV, Iconic, BIM, UB, HW, Body Shop. But now they all make a very uniform group. AND THEY ARE AMAZING!

WAOM and Rebel Heart still makes me shiver!

Heartbreak City...... still in love. In more now!

Album of the decade! JUST AMAZING!

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Here's a really good well written review from a blog.

http://discopopheaven.tumblr.com/post/109984635850/album-review-rebel-heart-madonna

It’s been years since Madonna had released some new material which would be good enough to please both critics and fans. We all remember the sweet, yet underwhelming disco-throwback “Hard Candy” offered us, and well as the carefree euro-dance of “MDNA”. Both of these albums, while containing some good songs, weren’t strong enough as a body of work. On “Hard Candy”, Madonna was often out-shadowed by Pharrell, Justin Timberlake, and Timbaland’s productions. On “MDNA”, she tried too hard to please young fans with basic dance music and generic singles that the rich lyrical layer (mostly treating of her divorce with Guy Ritchie) was put aside in favor of cliché songwriting (remember “Turn Up the Radio”?). These periods were hard to swallow for fans who knew and loved “Ray of Light” or even “American Life” for its lyrical depths and experimental music, or even “Confessions”, for its re-invention of Madonna’s persona.

The “Rebel Heart” era will be remembered mostly for its many leaks (all of the songs from the album somewhat leaked in over a month), but it’s a shame. “Rebel Heart” is actually a wonderful addition to Madonna’s discography, and her greatest album of the last decade. While we experienced the first six songs early, as Madonna released them on iTunes back in late December, waiting was required for the other ones. And here they are, after the whole album and its 25 (!) songs leaked. And guess what? They’re actually really good.

Those who heard the demos know that Avicii heavily contributed on some of the songs, including the title track. Well, here, his productions are more subtle. Goodbye, good old dance breakdowns, welcome actual melodies. “Rebel Heart” becomes a country song, which would perfectly fit on “Music”, while “Wash All Over Me” is now a symphonic album closer, where Madonna reflects on her loneliness. Of all the demo songs, “Body Shop” is actually the one who transitioned the most successfully. It is now a sweet, guitar-driven song, where Madonna shines as a playful, loving partner for her lover.

The album raises the question of Madonna’s identity: is she a revolutionist, a loner, a deluded woman, a fierce diva, …? She’s actually all of that, and she says it herself. Yes, she may have flaws and she may come off as a heartless diva, but really, she’s as much a sucker for love as we all are. “Take me with all my stupid flaws”, she sings, and we happily oblige. This album could easily be compared to “American Life” and its sumptuous, personal ballads, as Madonna delivers here some of her best material in years. “Ghosttown”, an apocalyptic ballad, “Joan of Arc”, a confession of lack of confidence facing the hardest times, and “Messiah” a masterpiece of unrequited love: they are delicate, honest songs, and the proof that Madonna can actually deliver real down-tempo songs with talent and confidence (remember “Take a Bow”?).

But let’s not forget the more up-tempo songs: “Living for Love” and its mix between dubstep and “Like a Prayer” gospel-throwback is a winning mix, while “Hold Tight” is a soaring anthem to be. “Iconic” is the most basic song on the standard version and yet its dark, yet empowering nature makes it all work alright. Plus, how good is self-reference when it’s about playing “Vogue” halfway through your songs? The Natalia Kills-penned “Holy Water” feels straight out of “Hard Candy”, and its futurist production and cheeky lyrics remind us of what the 2008 could have been. Madonna also self-references herself on “Veni Vedi Vici”, an autobiographical piece where she remembers her success throughout past successes.

Madonna offers us her best dance material thanks to eclectic genres mixes and autobiographical exploration, yet she shines the most through her ballads, where the woman behind the persona reveals herself for the first time since 2003. In a world that changes, Madonna stays the same, and we are so much thankful for that “Rebel Heart” in our lives.

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Guest Pud Whacker

the Vogue sample in Holy Water is so random lol it doesn't even make sense lol

i love it, its perfect.

vogue is everywhere, even in holy water.

CATCH IT!!

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I think Hold Tight should be the second single. It is in the second batch of songs being released. Iconic is great but some stations might not want to play something with Mike Tyson on it because of the controversy around him.

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Here's a really good well written review from a blog.

http://discopopheaven.tumblr.com/post/109984635850/album-review-rebel-heart-madonna

It’s been years since Madonna had released some new material which would be good enough to please both critics and fans. We all remember the sweet, yet underwhelming disco-throwback “Hard Candy” offered us, and well as the carefree euro-dance of “MDNA”. Both of these albums, while containing some good songs, weren’t strong enough as a body of work. On “Hard Candy”, Madonna was often out-shadowed by Pharrell, Justin Timberlake, and Timbaland’s productions. On “MDNA”, she tried too hard to please young fans with basic dance music and generic singles that the rich lyrical layer (mostly treating of her divorce with Guy Ritchie) was put aside in favor of cliché songwriting (remember “Turn Up the Radio”?). These periods were hard to swallow for fans who knew and loved “Ray of Light” or even “American Life” for its lyrical depths and experimental music, or even “Confessions”, for its re-invention of Madonna’s persona.

The “Rebel Heart” era will be remembered mostly for its many leaks (all of the songs from the album somewhat leaked in over a month), but it’s a shame. “Rebel Heart” is actually a wonderful addition to Madonna’s discography, and her greatest album of the last decade. While we experienced the first six songs early, as Madonna released them on iTunes back in late December, waiting was required for the other ones. And here they are, after the whole album and its 25 (!) songs leaked. And guess what? They’re actually really good.

Those who heard the demos know that Avicii heavily contributed on some of the songs, including the title track. Well, here, his productions are more subtle. Goodbye, good old dance breakdowns, welcome actual melodies. “Rebel Heart” becomes a country song, which would perfectly fit on “Music”, while “Wash All Over Me” is now a symphonic album closer, where Madonna reflects on her loneliness. Of all the demo songs, “Body Shop” is actually the one who transitioned the most successfully. It is now a sweet, guitar-driven song, where Madonna shines as a playful, loving partner for her lover.

The album raises the question of Madonna’s identity: is she a revolutionist, a loner, a deluded woman, a fierce diva, …? She’s actually all of that, and she says it herself. Yes, she may have flaws and she may come off as a heartless diva, but really, she’s as much a sucker for love as we all are. “Take me with all my stupid flaws”, she sings, and we happily oblige. This album could easily be compared to “American Life” and its sumptuous, personal ballads, as Madonna delivers here some of her best material in years. “Ghosttown”, an apocalyptic ballad, “Joan of Arc”, a confession of lack of confidence facing the hardest times, and “Messiah” a masterpiece of unrequited love: they are delicate, honest songs, and the proof that Madonna can actually deliver real down-tempo songs with talent and confidence (remember “Take a Bow”?).

But let’s not forget the more up-tempo songs: “Living for Love” and its mix between dubstep and “Like a Prayer” gospel-throwback is a winning mix, while “Hold Tight” is a soaring anthem to be. “Iconic” is the most basic song on the standard version and yet its dark, yet empowering nature makes it all work alright. Plus, how good is self-reference when it’s about playing “Vogue” halfway through your songs? The Natalia Kills-penned “Holy Water” feels straight out of “Hard Candy”, and its futurist production and cheeky lyrics remind us of what the 2008 could have been. Madonna also self-references herself on “Veni Vedi Vici”, an autobiographical piece where she remembers her success throughout past successes.

Madonna offers us her best dance material thanks to eclectic genres mixes and autobiographical exploration, yet she shines the most through her ballads, where the woman behind the persona reveals herself for the first time since 2003. In a world that changes, Madonna stays the same, and we are so much thankful for that “Rebel Heart” in our lives.

Loved it! Can't wait to finally listen to it :laugh:

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Guest bluejean

So what should be the 2nd single?

I'm almost inclined to say S.E.X.

Let's get those ageist bitches up against the wall! She can wear a strap on in the video!

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The intro of Hold Tight reminds me of The power of goodbye.

Yeah, when the demo started playing I was all "your hort is not opeeeen..." :D

Also, the music during the "Vogue" part of "Holy Water" sounds a lot like Calderone & Quayle's Dark Side Mix of "What It Feels Like For A Girl" (used as the backing of "Lo Que Siente La Mujer" on the Drowned World Tour.)

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Jesus Fucking Christ

I just stormed through these last 40+ pages. this album... AHHH

even when she stripped out demo bits I loved, it makes so much sense! I could die listening to the Inside Out demo, but this version is better in so many ways! Rebel Heart! the little changes on Body Shop bring it up so much. I could do without what they did to Joan of Arc but that is my only complaint

And at it's best this is undoubtably Madonna's best work ever.

I nearly fucking fainted on the tube this morning at Veni Vedi Vici which was one of my least favourite demos. the HORNS!

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After a whole day of listening:

Iconic, Body Shop, SEX, Holy Water, VVV: No.

Inside Out and Hold Tight: ruined by the poor production :-(

The rest is gold :-)

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This is hands down her best Madonna album since True Blue in a "every song could be a single" sense. I can listen to all 25 tracks without the feeling of "this is dragging too much, how many tracks are left?".

This will be seen in the years to come as one of her albums, if not the best.

THIS IS THE ULTIMATE MADONNA ALBUM.

I don't know how she will top this on the next one. :lmao:

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This is hands down her best Madonna album since True Blue in a "every song could be a single" sense. I can listen to all 25 tracks without the feeling of "this is dragging too much, how many tracks are left?".

This will be seen in the years to come as one of her albums, if not the best.

THIS IS THE ULTIMATE MADONNA ALBUM.

I don't know how she will top this on the next one. :lmao:

I agree with every word.

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After a whole day of listening:

Iconic, Body Shop, SEX, Holy Water, VVV: No.

Inside Out and Hold Tight: ruined by the poor production :-(

The rest is gold :-)

Not feeling half of the album?Sucks to be you :/

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I think it's the best of her last three albums, but there's no point in comparing.

It's incredible that --more than 32 years after her debut single-- Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone is STILL releasing excellent, interesting music that STILL garners very real attention from music listeners the world over.

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Guest Pud Whacker

I think it's the best of her last three albums, but there's no point in comparing.

It's incredible that --more than 32 years after her debut single-- Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone is STILL releasing excellent, interesting music that STILL garners very real attention from music listeners the world over.

:clap: :clap: :clap:

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