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Blue Prince

Unapologetic Bitches
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  1. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Voguerista in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Wang, Alexander
     

  2. Wow
    Blue Prince reacted to Ian in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Dick Tracy -my bottom hurts just thinking about it
  3. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Semtex1 in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    I can't. Icon.
  4. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Leo

  5. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from LikeAMelody in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Leo

  6. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Wanting. Needing. Waiting. 
  7. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Antonio Banderas
  8. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Cravings get dangerous
  9. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Kimono
  10. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Mister_Pop in Favorite M Album?   
    It's getting more and more difficult for me to say which album I ove the most.
    I voted for Erotica (first album release being a fan) but Like A Prayer, American Life and Rebel Heart are among my ultimate fav, and I'm still very much into Madame X.
  11. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Shoful in Favorite M Album?   
    I can’t decide between Erotica and Madame X but chose Madame X cause I know she will need more representation cause no one appreciates her for the immaculate art it is! 
  12. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from MarXus in Game: A to Z Madonna!   
    Zimmer frame (from Ellen)
    Even that wouldn't stop her.
  13. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Mister_Pop in YouTube Madonna Chart   
    Currently (last day) :
    01 La Isla Bonita (Official Music Video)  345,437
    02 Hung Up (Official Music Video) 225,857
    03 Like A Prayer (Official Music Video) 174,908
    04 4 Minutes (Official Music Video) 118,224
    05 Papa Don't Preach (Official Music Video) 98,021
    06 Frozen (Official Music Video) 95,023
    07 Vogue (Official Music Video) 77,313
    08 Material Girl (Official Music Video) 73,102
    09 Eurovision Song Contest 2019 72,195
    10 Sorry (Official Music Video) 63,466
    11 Into The Groove (Official Music Video) 57,724
    12 The Power Of Good-Bye (Official Music Video) 44,914
    13 Like A Virgin (Official Music Video) 40,982
    14 Bitch I'm Madonna ft. Nicki Minaj 39,281
    15 Vogue (Live at the MTV Awards 1990) 33,256
    16 Crazy For You (Official Music Video) 32,032
    16 Live To Tell (Official Music Video) 28,570
    18 Express Yourself (Official Music Video) 25,487
    19 Girl Gone Wild (Official Music Video) 25,405
    20 Music (Official Music Video) 22,155
     
    Madonna has an interesting mix of a 3 decades career in this current top 20, not to mention 2 performances...
     
    All time :
     
    01 Bitch I'm Madonna ft. Nicki Minaj 315,676,858
    02 La Isla Bonita (Official Music Video) 273,270,942
    03 Hung Up (Official Music Video) 230,388,512
    04 La Isla Bonita 117,342,356
    05 Vogue (Official Music Video) 113,244,535
    06 Like A Prayer (Official Music Video) 104,642,394
    07 4 Minutes (Official Music Video) 102,819,249
    08 Papa Don't Preach (Official Music Video) 98,924,654
    09 Give Me All Your Luvin' (Official Music Video) 75,760,505
    10 Give It 2 Me (Official Music Video) 75,253,047
    11 Like A Virgin (Official Music Video) 73,744,300
    12 Frozen (Official Music Video) 56,395,011
    13 Live To Tell (Official Music Video) 56,296,014
    14 Girl Gone Wild (Official Music Video) 52,751,887
    15 Celebration (Official Music Video) 49,300,408
    16 Material Girl (Official Music Video) 46,436,110
    17 Medellín 45,026,807
    18 Ghosttown 38,723,945
    19 4 Minutes 35,309,804
    20 Britney Spears - Me Against The Music ft. Madonna (Official Video) 34,899,388
     
  14. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Mister_Pop in Madonna in 2000: Reinventing Pop 'Music'   
    I too wouldn't consider it one of her best albums but it's a really fun one. It's what she can achieve when she does music for herself, without preaching, without thinking much, without following anybody. 
  15. Like
    Blue Prince got a reaction from confessed in Grade and Rank Madonna's Last Three Albums   
    I don't disagree with the rest you said but I found I Don't Give A a highlight of MDNA as it's very different for her and expresses what really troubled her at the time. When it comes to the Baby Jesus lyric, I think it's a very cute one. The way I understand it, she was leaving the house without saying her prayers because there was no time to and her schedule was too hectic to remember it every day. So she was reciting some prayer addressed to Baby Jesus, as her kids were all very young then, while climbing down the stairs to leave. In my opinion, only a song with that pacing could give us a glimpse of what it is to be a single mom of four and career woman. Just wanted to clarify that song a little the way I understood it, thank you. 
  16. Thanks
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Voguerista in I Wish Madonna would ________________(FILL IN THE BLANK).   
    ...release music more often. So she has at least one new song as a lead artist every year.
  17. Thanks
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Voguerista in Madonna in 2000: Reinventing Pop 'Music'   
    I too wouldn't consider it one of her best albums but it's a really fun one. It's what she can achieve when she does music for herself, without preaching, without thinking much, without following anybody. 
  18. Thanks
    Blue Prince reacted to Enrico in Breakfast club/Emmy   
    The confusion comes because she brought to Emmy some of the songs she wrote for Breakfast Club, mainly Simon Says, Trouble and Hothouse Flower. Have you seen the documentary?? It really helps to understand.
    Maybe @Bermucan help and clarify more... see his thread:
    This list is not complete but is made to give you an idea.
     
    BC SONGS
    Shamrock Reel + Dan Girloy Bedroom tape
    Tell the truth
    I got trouble (Roll over it)
    Over and over (Again and again, Moving along)
    Hothouse flower
    Simon says
    Nobody wants to be alone
    Oh oh the sky is blue
    Cold wind (unreleased with Madonna's vocals)
    Born to be a dancer (unreleased)
    Danny's sing
    Letter to daddy
    Love express
     
    PRE EMMY
    (Could it be "Madonna and the sky" group with Gary Burke)
    Source: Tape 1979 + MIA Shine a Light cd single
    Not running from the city (instrumental only)
    All my love
    Shine a light (Hear me)
    Little boy lost
    Safe neighborhood
    I'm a Prisoner (unreleased)

     
     
    EMMY
    Recording: Emmy First time out of Manhattan + PreMadonna
    Love for tender
    No time for love
    Drowning
    Bells ringing
    Best girl
    Nobody's fool
    Do you?
    Laught to keep from crying
     
     
  19. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Andymad in I'm Going To Tell You A Secret....   
    Exactly. And I can bet you her ENTIRE FORTUNE that absolutely nothing like that has crossed her mind. Ever.
  20. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Voguerista in Madonna in 2000: Reinventing Pop 'Music'   
    I think Billboard is so correct for what they say on "Music" and how it "reinvented" pop music at the time and since. What do you think?
    Madonna in 2000: Reinventing Pop 'Music'
    Following our Billboard staff-picked list of the 100 greatest songs of 2000, we're writing this week about some of the stories and trends that defined the year for us. Here, we look back at the way Madonna, arguably the most iconic pop star of the '80s and '90s, entered her third decade: with an album that pushed both music and her own songwriting into new and unexpected places. 
    The year 2000 was a good time to be Madonna. Through the ups and downs of the ’90s, she’d followed the musical standard she’d set on 1989’s Like a Prayer, extending her range as a singles artist into a more personal, album-driven format. The birth of Lourdes Leon, her first child, sparked the creation of 1998’s Ray of Light -- still her most critically acclaimed album, which led to her three of her first four Grammy Awards all at once the next year. 
    But most importantly, Madonna’s influence on the next generation of musicians had begun to manifest. Maverick Records, her imprint under Time Warner, was in full swing, releasing albums by acts as big as Alanis Morissette, Marilyn Manson, and The Prodigy. In the mid-’90s, the Spice Girls had kicked off a new wave of teen pop, branding pop-feminism as Girl Power, and the likes of Britney, Christina, and Destiny’s Child were now taking up the reins in America. These were self-possessed, ambitious young women who knew their potential, singing over dance beats and R&B grooves, not guitars -- all of whom looked up to Madonna, whether she liked it or not. In 2000, she said to Rolling Stone (with an apparent eye roll), “I’ve been told that I have inspired Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears. So maybe it’s not so strange that I could be in the mix of them. I’m not sure.”
    Seventeen years after her self-titled debut album, Madonna had come full circle. Enough time had passed that even her biggest skeptics had to concede to her body of work, but she remained a driving force within popular culture. Into the new millennium emerged her eighth studio album Music -- a concise title that would come to speak volumes. Though the album cover (along with the subsequent “Don’t Tell Me” video) suggested a cowgirl reinvention, Music was in fact a globalist, Warholian pop-art take on Americana -- largely recorded in London, with exclusively British and French collaborators.
    But half a year before Music, in March 2000, came a red herring -- a cover of Don McLean’s “American Pie.” At the behest of her co-star Rupert Everett, Madonna recorded her version for the soundtrack to their film The Next Best Thing, a romantic dramedy from Midnight Cowboy director John Schlesinger. The film was critically panned and soon faded from memory, but “American Pie” -- released as a single the same day -- became a polarizing global hit. 
    As an unapologetically pop interpretation of one of the defining symbols of baby boomer nostalgia, many considered it sacrilege. Ironically, the most positive review came from Don McLean himself, who called Madonna’s version “sensual and mystical… a gift from a goddess.” Produced by William Orbit, her lead collaborator on Ray of Light and “Beautiful Stranger” (her psychedelic 1999 single from the second Austin Powers soundtrack), the “American Pie” track is colorful, almost gaudy -- the theremin-like synths and marching snares threaten to tip over into kitsch. 
    Madonna’s voice sounds richer than usual, yet the song’s allegorical lyrics, so tied to Don McLean’s memories of the late ’50s and ’60s, simply don’t carry the same weight coming from her. Ultimately, Madonna’s “American Pie” was a similar sentiment dressed up in pop clothes -- and arguably, a less radical reinterpretation than “Weird Al” Yankovic’s “The Saga Begins,” his Phantom Menace parody released the year prior.
    In the music video, Madonna seemingly becomes an avatar for America itself. Between shots of her dancing in front of the flag, she showcases a diverse cast of working-class, queer, ordinary Americans. “American Pie” was unusually patriotic and nostalgic, two words rarely associated with Madonna. At the behest of a record executive, it was a bonus track on international editions of Music -- a decision she’d later regret. Don McLean’s recording, and many listeners’ relationship with it, was simply bigger than Madonna herself.
    Like it or hate it, the inescapability of “American Pie” only increased the anticipation for Madonna’s next reinvention. When the Music campaign began in earnest, the domino effect was immediate. On August 11, 2000, Madonna gave birth to Rocco -- her second child, and first with director Guy Ritchie. Five days later, she turned 42; a week after that, an unfinished version of the album leaked on Napster -- and she released the single and video for “Music,” debuting her new sound with producer Mirwais Ahmadzaï. 
    A journeyman musician in his native France since 1978, Mirwais’ influences were unlike anything in mainstream American pop at the time. “Music” was a blunt, escapist dance track, but its hyper-intelligent production was just as obvious -- looking back towards Kraftwerk, and to the future of what would become electroclash. Mirwais’ sonic palette is all extremes: razor-sharp treble hi-hats, sawtooth synths, and enormous sub bass, not so much complementing each other as fighting for prominence. 
    Madonna had long been considered the postmodern pop star, following in the footsteps of David Bowie. “Music” defined her ethos anew: to unify the cutting-edge underground with the world of pop. “Music makes the people come together/ Music makes the bourgeoisie and the rebel!” She wasn’t just telling the listener to get up and dance, but offering a winking cultural commentary too. Singing through a vocoder, she asks, “Do you like to boogie-woogie?/ Do you like my acid rock?” -- as if daring you to disagree.
    The video, directed by Jonas Åkerlund, casted Madonna as a kind of hip-hop mack-daddy, with Ali G her feckless limo driver. It was simultaneously low and high-concept, fusing ’70s disco aesthetics with psychedelic animation -- vibrant enough to appeal to kids, jaded gen X-ers and longtime fans alike. “Music” became Madonna’s final song to date to top the Billboard Hot 100, though it was far from her last pop hit. At both the MTV Europe Music Awards and the Grammys, she performed the song in front of a montage of her past music videos, yet without a hint of nostalgia, singing “Don’t think of yesterday, and I don’t look at the clock…”
    Madonna was never one to repeat herself, but especially not after Ray of Light’s most direct musical successor arrived through another source: All Saints’ “Pure Shores,” a dreamy William Orbit production that, earlier in 2000, was a megahit seemingly everywhere but the U.S. Though Madonna was reportedly displeased that she hadn’t recorded the song herself, she continued to work with Orbit, but largely forged ahead with Mirwais as her lead collaborator.
    Music’s stakes feel much lower than Ray of Light. The mood is more relaxed, playful, yet Madonna had plenty to prove. Track two, “Impressive Instant,” followed “Music” with her weirdest sonic excursion ever -- a psych-rock take on electro house with lyrics like “I like to singy, singy, singy/ Like a bird on a wingy, wingy, wingy.” Absurd, yet strangely moving, “Impressive Instant” was the first song Madonna and Mirwais worked on -- it alone was enough to justify their partnership.
    Music is alternately restless and contemplative. “Nobody’s Perfect” is an apology largely sung through auto-tune, predating Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak. “Paradise (Not for Me),” inspired by Édith Piaf, is a haunting lament for lost loves and memories. But the album’s true emotional core is “I Deserve It.” Over Neil Young-like acoustic guitars and sparkling synths, Madonna confesses that she might finally have found unconditional love. “I Deserve It” couldn’t be further from the likes of “True Blue” or “Cherish,” but more than any other song, it shows how she’s matured -- not as a star, but a human. Those moments of vulnerability put not just the rest of the album, but her whole career into perspective.
    Curiously, the album’s William Orbit co-writes are the weakest of the bunch. “Amazing” and “Runaway Lover” flow too smoothly, like water, next to Mirwais’ jagged, alien soundscapes. There’s a sense that she’s not pushing herself as hard, still in her Ray of Light comfort zone.
    Perhaps no producer has challenged Madonna more than Mirwais on “Don’t Tell Me,” which was released as the second single on November 21, the day before Madonna’s wedding to Guy Ritchie. “Don’t Tell Me” takes one kitschy genre -- country-pop guitar twang, as depicted in its video -- and filters it through Mirwais’ glitchy IDM programming. It’s the rare pop hit that’s danceable, yet constantly throwing rhythmic curveballs, spinning off-balance. Dig deeper, and the lyrics read more like a Zen koan than anything in pop: “Tell the bed not to lay/ Like the open mouth of a grave, yeah/ Not to stare up at me/ Like a calf down on its knees.”
    Those words came from a demo of the song “Stop” by Joe Henry -- Madonna’s brother-in-law, and a cult Americana singer-songwriter in his own right. Most importantly, Madonna’s overlapping lead vocals are naked, free of any reverb -- a choice Mirwais called “the most important thing that we did to her voice on the album.” “Don’t Tell Me” is as catchy as it is inscrutable, a three-way collaboration that seemingly transcends time and space itself.
    “What It Feels Like for a Girl” was an immediate highlight, yet it took a strange path to becoming the album’s third single. On the album, it was beautifully melodic, yet unsettled -- the album’s lone co-write with Guy Sigsworth, frequent Björk and Imogen Heap collaborator. “Girl” was as openly feminist as “Express Yourself,” but introspective, articulating the complexities of modern womanhood on an intuitive, spiritual level (“Good little girls, they never show it/ When you open up your mouth to speak/ Could you be a little weak?”).
    In early 2001, it was released as the album’s final single and music video; Madonna’s first collaboration with Guy Ritchie. Instead of the album version, Above & Beyond’s upbeat trance remix -- which reduced the song to no more than its opening Charlotte Gainsbourg sample and chorus - was used instead. In the video, infamously banned by MTV and VH1, Madonna and an elderly female companion commit grand theft auto and robbery on male bystanders, before ramming their stolen car into a street pole. 
    Ritchie’s signature style is thrilling and frenetic, but too blunt for its own good -- the ironic, female-empowerment-through-violence concept doesn’t fully translate. Still, taken together, Music’s three singles formed a perfect triptych of Madonna’s career. “Music” -- postmodern, escapist dance-pop; “Don’t Tell Me” -- high/lowbrow pop kitsch; “What It Feels Like for a Girl” -- defiant, vulnerable feminism. 
    Like Ray of Light, Music found broad critical acclaim upon its release, and was even voted number 452 on Rolling Stone’s original Greatest Albums of All Time list. It seemed to be Madonna’s definitive artistic statement for the new millennium -- but in the years since, it’s become equally fascinating for all the ways in which it didn’t point the way forward for her.
    In 2000, the winds seemed to be blowing in Madonna’s favor. By 2003, they were not. As both American and worldwide politics took a darker turn, she recorded American Life -- a direct continuation of Music’s palette with Mirwais, but a complete 180 in its combative stance towards pop culture and music. She hit reset with 2005’s blockbuster Confessions on a Dance Floor, but never recaptured Music’s experimental spirit… until last year’s Madame X, which reunited her with both Mirwais and her curious, globalist muse.
    The early new millennium was a time of flux. The dominant sounds of ’90s pop culture -- teen pop, R&B, hip-hop, country-pop, electronica, alternative rock -- had all come of age, and were colliding in new and unfamiliar configurations. Music, inspired by both the underground and the mainstream, existed between the two, impossible to pin down to any one movement.
    In 2020, Music now marks the halfway point of Madonna’s career. It’s arguably one of her best albums, yet rarely the first one fans or casual listeners reach for. But it’s to her, and Mirwais’ credit, that Music still feels like recent history. It’ll be remembered not just for the cowgirl outfits and choreography, but its restless, adventurous spirit, looking backwards and ahead to find a sense of belonging in the present.
     
  21. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to DiegoLCL in Madonna in 2000: Reinventing Pop 'Music'   
    Music era is never really brought up by the fans most of times, people really go nuts for ROL and Confessions but Music is Madonna at the coolest  since the 80s  when it comes to general public perception. It was a very rare time where it was cool to like Madonna, no controversies, just solid Pop music. I just wish we had two more singles 
  22. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to Rebel Hugo in What M song made you a FAN?   
    4 Minutes ⏰❤️
  23. Thanks
    Blue Prince got a reaction from Voguerista in Grade and Rank Madonna's Last Three Albums   
    I don't disagree with the rest you said but I found I Don't Give A a highlight of MDNA as it's very different for her and expresses what really troubled her at the time. When it comes to the Baby Jesus lyric, I think it's a very cute one. The way I understand it, she was leaving the house without saying her prayers because there was no time to and her schedule was too hectic to remember it every day. So she was reciting some prayer addressed to Baby Jesus, as her kids were all very young then, while climbing down the stairs to leave. In my opinion, only a song with that pacing could give us a glimpse of what it is to be a single mom of four and career woman. Just wanted to clarify that song a little the way I understood it, thank you. 
  24. Like
    Blue Prince reacted to baymad4her in What Madonna Remix Are You Playing Right Now?   
    I'm actually playing Madonna's performance at Eurovision
  25. Haha
    Blue Prince reacted to madgefan in The Ultimate B-Side Poll!   
    I remember when someone asked M to sing How High acapella at one of the S&S shows and she said something like 'What? Wasn't that like a C-side?" 
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