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Carey

Elitists
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  1. With ‘Rebel Heart,’ Madonna has made an album that follows the tradition of albums like‘The Velvet Rope’ by Janet Jackson and ‘Butterfly’ by Mariah Carey. It is, in every sense, a self-proclamation album.

    :huh:

    Madonna has done albums in this tradition many times. Like A Prayer and ROL spring to mind as the most obvious choices but Bedtime Stories and American Life are also very self relevant and personal in their own way.

    Madonna has been wearing her heart on her sleeve musically since she began.

  2. http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/be-still-the-unseemly-beating-of-madonnas-rebel-heart/2015/03/08/645dc50c-c5a2-11e4-b2a1-bed1aaea2816_story.html

    A new Madonna album, a fresh reminder that we’re all going to die.

    That probably isn’t the take-away the pop matriarch was aiming for with her 13th — and 13th-best — studio album, “Rebel Heart.” But as time continues to march us all off toward our respective expiration dates, we’ll continue to crave art that distracts us from our terminal destiny by making us feel young. And while the line between the bliss of escapism and the unseemliness of denial can be a blurry one, which side this album falls on is not.

    And it hurts! Back in 1989, this conquering pop queen was rallying for confidence, freedom and excellence with such ease: “Don’t go for second best, baby!” Now, her music sounds so tentative, so trapped, so shabby.

    Ageism is a cruel and formidable force in popland, but Madonna’s desire to live forever young isn’t exactly the problem, here. It’s the fact that she takes pains to sound so juvenile. The lyrics on “Rebel Heart” feel almost violently resistant to wisdom, as if espousing even the slightest air of sophistication might remind the planet that Madonna is now 56 years old.

    So instead, we get the lumpy neo-reggae of “Unapologetic Bitch,” in which she sasses a boy-toy: “See you trying to call me, but I blocked you on my phone.” Over the bratty dubstep of “Bitch, I’m Madonna,” she brags of partying so hard that “the neighbor’s pissed and says he’s gonna call the five-o.” And on “Devil Pray” — a song that doesn’t have the word “bitch” in the title — she rattles off a menu of intoxicants: “We can do drugs, and we can smoke weed, and we can drink whiskey/Yeah, we can get high, and we can get stoned/And we can sniff glue, and we can do E, and we can drop acid. . . .”

    Which one will best help us forget that this is happening?

    As she did on her last album, 2012’s almost-as-bad “MDNA,” Madonna has called on a hodgepodge of hitmakers to help produce these tunes. And this time the list includes Diplo, Avicii, Kanye West and Ariel ­Rechtshaid, all names skimmed off the top of today’s pop marquee. Accordingly, “Rebel Heart” sounds dispassionate and incurious about the world it’s trying so hard to participate in.

    But when things go especially awry, they do so in perversely interesting ways. Like when boxing legend Mike Tyson shows up to play the hype-man on “Iconic.” Or when rap great Nas materializes for “Veni, Vidi, Vici,” a duet in which Madonna raps the autobiographical highlights from her Wikipedia page. For an album so lacking in personality, these quirks go a long way.

    Overall, the spackle holding “Rebel Heart” together is the fact that Madonna is still intent on making dance music — perhaps for a dance floor that now exists only in her imagination.

    Or maybe it’s stadium filler. When she hits the road later this year, we’ll be reminded that Madonna has only two living peers: Bruce Springsteen and Prince. The trio rose to ubiquity in the ’80s, exploiting the black magic of MTV to cement the enduring ideal of pop-star-as-character.

    Today, all three of those characters enjoy very different relationships with their flocks. Prince delights in defying expectations while Springsteen fulfills them with plenty of gusto and little imagination. As for Madonna, it’s trickier.

    From the launch of her career through her last great album, 2005’s excellent “Confessions on a Dance Floor,” Madonna has been throwing her parties in spaces the masses might not otherwise visit. And maybe that’s what’s happening on “Rebel Heart”: Instead of actually forging a meaningful dialogue with contemporary pop music, she’s simply trying to make her longtime fans feel as if they’re connecting with 2015 kiddo-culture.

    But that’s a charitable hypothesis, and for those of us who don’t need Madonna to hold our hand on a tour through today’s teeming pop scene, “Rebel Heart” will sound like a string of poor decisions made by an icon with evaporating confidence and deteriorating taste.

    And that’s a far cry from even second best.

    Not even one positive thing. Why are obviously biased people allowed to write reviews? :huh:

  3. Interesting, reading that review I would have assumed a lower score.

    It irks me when they say things like "It wont join the ranks of "insert acclaimed album" etc"

    It isn't a competition between her records.

    Madonna isn't Michael Jackson, she isn't trying to recreate her "Thriller" or have another 2.0 moment and that is arguably why she has stayed relevant for so long. She's plugged in and lives in the moment. How can you try and recreate an album that was 20+ years ago when she's so grown and far past all the feelings of that time? They don't understand her artistry or dare I say, the concept of that word in general.

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