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shane54

Unapologetic Bitches
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  1. Like
    shane54 reacted to Je Suis Lart in Like a Prayer | Movie Version (Extended) from Deadpool & Wolverine 7.25min   
    Sorry for Deadpool spam! But I found this extended version (some people think the other version I shared was too short). 
    It's NOT made by me but a fanmade mix by Captain Roxas. I really love this version. Sooo dramatic! lol
    Hope y'all like it.
     

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    shane54 got a reaction from VogueMusic in DL: The Celebration Tour AO VIVO COPACABANA [unaltered feed without translator]   
    I extracted the audio of the 13 GB file (untouched wav format)
    https://we.tl/t-uN3JGkZeos
    Unfortunately either broadcast was really low volume and has this error on Nothing really matters when M sings "e v e r y t h i n g´s changed".
  3. Like
    shane54 reacted to Lucas B. in How to watch Celebration in Rio   
    There's a forum in which I use to download shows, mv, live albums, instrumentals etc. The people there do an amazing work and I'm sure someone will rip the concert and share it there.
    Not sure if I can say the name, so here goes the hidden link: 
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    shane54 reacted to Redha DBL in DJ Honey Dijon to spin at Docklands Festival Münster Germany   
    Ask him about Madonna's new album !
  5. Like
    shane54 reacted to Askeroff in Stuart Price Shares Sonic Secrets From Madonna’s Celebration Tour   
    Stuart Price Shares Sonic Secrets From Madonna’s Celebration Tour
    https://www.billboard.com/music/pop/stuart-price-madonna-2023-celebration-tour-interview-1235449185/

    A few days after Madonna’s The Celebration Tour kicked off at London’s O2 Arena to a sold-out crowd and rave reviews, the tour’s music producer Stuart Price – previously a part of the pop icon’s orbit as the co-producer on her high-BPM classic Confessions on a Dance Floor – welcomed Billboard into his London studio.
     
    The English producer/DJ’s flat is in the thick of the fashionable Notting Hill district — close enough to the action that during the annual Notting Hill Carnival, Price says “the alarms in the studio always go off because there’s all these bass systems pummeling through the walls.”
    The second-floor recording studio is a clean, neatly arranged space dotted with guitars, comfortable chairs and a cornucopia of electronics, much of it vintage (at least by the ever-shifting standards of technology). As we speak, Price is seated next to the wood-paneled board he used to mix Confessions; not far from it casually rests the $250 microphone that Madonna used to record a number of songs for that 2005 LP.
    With no live band backing Madonna’s 78-date trek – her original recordings take center stage on this tour — Price’s role as music producer has afforded him more opportunities for input and innovation than someone in the same role might have on another pop star’s tour. To that end, The Celebration Tour includes sonic Easter eggs and clever references for the faithful to parse as they’re engulfed in an aural and sensory journey through the life and art of Madonna.
    For as much time and thought as Price has put into the Celebration Tour, he’s certain it pales in comparison to what the Queen of Pop has invested in it. “As much as Madonna demands of anyone working with her, she demands that much of herself as well,” Price tells Billboard. “It’s always in the pursuit of, ‘How can we improve this? How can we aid the arc of the show?’ It’s nice to have a show you can unpack whether through memories or during a second visit. It’s a show that can keep giving.”
    Of a tour that covers four decades of classics – and is notably her first tour not in support of a new album – Price opines that, “It’s impossible to look back without looking forward.” Referring to the airborne platform that permits Madonna to float above the crowd during “Live to Tell” and “Ray of Light,” he explains, “That’s why there’s a window frame in the show. That window frame is about reflecting backwards and reflecting forward as well.”
    From providing glimpses into his creative process with Madonna to revealing certain audio Easter eggs that pop up during the show to potential setlist changes, here’s what Stuart Price told Billboard about working on Madonna’s The Celebration Tour.

    I’m going to start with a granular question. In the Celebration Tour, “Like a Prayer” is melded with bits of Sam Smith & Kim Petras’ “Unholy” and her own “Act of Contrition,” which features electric guitar from Prince.
    Yes, correct.
    The medley is inspired. Was everything from “Contrition” that appears in the tour from the album? There were some parts of the Prince solo where I was listening and thinking, “I don’t quite remember this bit.”
    Part of the joy of working on this tour specifically was how we were going to approach featuring original recordings. It’s a tour which is essentially biopic in style, documentary in style. When you see a great documentary you get archival footage, a real taste of stuff that happened at the time. Madonna’s archive of multi-track recordings covers a vast era: multi-track two-inch tapes all the way through DAWs today. When you work in a DAW today, you delete what you don’t use, and the file is gone. But the old tape multi-tracks, everything was recorded and what was muted was done at the time of the mix. So if you now listen to those recordings 25 years later and have the channels open, you hear all this stuff that was not present in the final recording but is available. I used everything I could of the guitar because it’s incredible. For a tour that is connecting memories of relationships, partnerships and musical experiences, using original stuff is so important. If you’re able to find stuff in that original recording that no one has ever heard, you’re actually getting to peek behind the curtain.
    Was there anything else like that?
    There’s another moment like that at the beginning of “Erotica.” We were searching for atmosphere for the intro — “Erotica” begins with this big, booming bass line and we needed to fill some time. In the original multi-track to “Justify My Love,” there’s this great moment about 30 seconds before the song begins. Madonna gets into the vocal booth and she’s waiting to record and she’s getting into the mood of the song and Lenny Kravitz appears. He says something very innocent like, “We’re gonna put some reverb on your voice, we’re gonna f–k with you a bit.” And she says, “That’s okay, you can f–ck with me.” It’s such a great soundbite. That’s a great example of this thing that’s from the time but has never appeared.
     
    The tour features music from Prince and a bit of Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean.” I’m guessing the estates gave their blessing.
    I approached everything on a musical level for the tour, I don’t know relationships or how they do that.
    “Billie Jean” appears in “vs” form alongside “Like a Virgin.” The “Virgin” vocal struck me as slightly different from the original.
    “Like a Virgin,” the vocal from that is the original recording. There’s a few things happening in the show. There are segues or mashups of songs where you just need to make it work. So that might involve transposition or time correction or stretching or shortening or whatever it is. When you’re trying to pursue storytelling ideas through music, you should never let a technical consideration get in the way. If you do that, you’re diminishing the strength of the idea. We may change the key of the song because it’s better for Madonna to sing — the A note is to serve the arc of the show. There’s probably elements of time crunching that happens.
    Opening the show with “Nothing Really Matters” was totally unexpected, and the setlist includes a few songs she hasn’t done in decades. Was the setlist locked by the time you got involved?
    I first talked to Madonna about this tour in February of this year. When we first spoke at the time, she was already prepared with her full pages of setlists and ideas of exactly what she wanted to do and how she wanted to do it. The phone call was actually Madonna directing what the show was going to be. Her preparation is always so considered. Much is always made of Madonna’s collaborators, but there’s no two ways about it: She’s considered everything before she even gets into the room with a collaborator. And it’s fantastic to work with someone with such strong direction. So to answer your question, the setlist was almost fully realized.
    On opening night, she was very candid about the bacterial infection that sent her to the hospital and postponed the tour. When she was in the hospital, did you ever wonder if the tour might not happen?
    For a tour you’ve been working on for such a long period of time and that’s had so much time invested in it — especially by Madonna — when you take a break for it, the only thing you focus on is “what’s the end result of what happened here?” To me that is someone who looks so strong, so healthy, sings so great and moves so great. Your experience when you see the show is one of wonder. Not just creatively but artistically as well.
    Her voice sounded amazing. And she does “Ray of Light,” which is a tough one to sing, and nails it.
    In terms of building the show, top of the list is got to be, “Can we make something that is enjoyable to perform? Can we make something you feel confident doing?” The number one reason for doing that is it’s all about the vocals. To give a singer the platform to sing and be themselves is the number one goal. All this stuff is aimed toward, “Does Madonna feel like she can hold the microphone and really go for it and deliver on it?” I love a comment I’ve received from fans after the show. A couple fans go, “Is that all tape vocal?” To me, that is the biggest compliment because it’s all live vocal. There’s a couple of spoken word sections in the show where we just use track. But it’s all live vocals; there’s backing singers — there always has been — but it’s all live vocals. I hope that you hear the humanness of the vocal coming across as well.
    Well, you certainly knew it was live on opening night when there were sound issues on “Burning Up” — she even joked about it.
    One thing I marvel at – I go to a lot of DJ shows, and what’s the biggest cheer of the night? Is it the beginning of the show, the end of the show, or when the DJ accidentally knocks a fader or button and the whole thing stops, the DJ pretends it wasn’t them, points somewhere else and gets this huge reaction from the audience? Because it says, “This is real. It’s fragile.” After eight months of rehearsal, the factor that changes is the audience. There’s a heat, a bunch of extra noise, and on that night, there was a technical hitch with the computer system on “Burning Up.” Whilst anyone responsible for the show is concerned, there’s this other connection going on between Madonna and the audience, which is completely improvised, off the cuff and more importantly a real human connection. It’s a unique human thing that happened for the night.
    And it gave the audience a few minutes with her, totally unscripted, which was great. When you’re watching the show now, are you still making tweaks and fixes?
    Yeah. The day you lose desire to keep improving is the day you should step aside. If you’re invested in something and care about it, it’s impossible to be an artist and not constantly be considering how you can improve or evolve over the course of a tour.
    There are a lot of clever audio moments in the show. I love when the camera is rotating around Bob the Drag Queen and we hear the “Lucky Star” synth roll as it moves. Are there any deep cuts most people won’t notice?
    Sure. Actually, prior to that movement, the startup noise of the show when Bob the Drag Queen comes on and says, “it’s show time,” there’s this sort of slow-building motorized arpeggio sound. And it’s building momentum like a clock or disco ball spinning faster. (It’s) from the song “Lucky Star” — there’s that iconic arpeggiated sound. I took that and we just stretched it out as long as we could. And then we stretched it a little bit further until we could break it down into individual component noises. So that speed-up is coming from the original “Lucky Star” arpeggio deconstructed and gradually sped up until it gets to original speed.
    That’s cool.
    There’s a little moment right before “Live to Tell” which is a very emotional part of the show, where there’s a reference to “In This Life.” When you look at her volume of work, there’s gotta be more than 70 hit songs. So how do you approach 70 hit songs in a two-hour show? The answer is by creating a continuum of references, of lyrics, of melodies of as many songs as possible, whether it’s a bridge or an overlay. (You hear) “In This Life” between the end of “Holiday,” which is about the death of people in that era, and using it as a transition into “Live to Tell.” And using a spot of “Angel” as a transition from “Billie Jean” into “Bitch I’m Madonna.” That’s how you collect all these songs.
    When she called you up, was the decision to forgo a band already made?
    Madonna, right from the start, decided she wanted to present the show in a different way. And she wanted to do it in ways that were noteworthy. With this tour, I thought it was fascinating that she’d decided, “I want to come out, be me, sing the songs and perform them front and center.” Whilst I love having a band on stage, I thought it was an interesting idea she wanted to do for this. Within that discussion came conceptually how do we create a set of performers from original recordings. The answer was, we’ll feature the recordings: we’ll deconstruct them, manipulate them, reinvent, juggle and use parts that haven’t been heard before.
    When you get to a gallery or a museum and see a sculpture, you don’t just experience it in fixed, static two dimensions; you get to walk around a sculpture and study it from different angles. Wouldn’t it be exciting if we could do that with music — study it from different dimensions? Those are different ways to peer inside.
    And it’s pretty amazing watching her kids perform during the show. Mercy James’ piano playing was so impressive.
    All Madonna’s children are gifted individuals and they’re musically gifted. It’s impressive getting to witness contributions that large in a stage show. Mercy’s piano playing is just stunning. David as an individual – as a singer, as a guitar player – you get a sense of his wonderful personality, it’s so infectious. Estere and Stella – same thing.
    Is it possible you and Madonna could be working on new music? 
    You measure a working relationship not by the gaps between but by how easily you pick up again from when you left off. As soon as we started to work together on this tour, the shorthand was there. We were able to create productively. The key component of working together is “do you understand each other?” And musically, are you able to challenge as well? That’s how you get the 1 + 1 = 3 outcome. So, I’ve really enjoyed working together again. [laughs] 
    Can we expect setlist changes or surprises as the tour rolls on?
    I think… Madonna’s reputation is for always having a highly rehearsed, highly choreographed show and she provides the element of dynamicism with her interactions. But at the same time, her mind keeps evolving and reaching further. And it’s common on her tours to start to perform to audiences, feel what works and where there’s an opening to do something new. It would be foolish to not take opportunities to act on inspiration. It’s a long tour. Right now, what audiences are seeing is the pure form rehearsal version of the show, and as it goes on, there will be an evolution.
    London’s O2 Arena has an 11 p.m. curfew, and on opening night she went a bit over. What makes it difficult to start on time and hit that curfew mark? What’s happening in those 15 minutes before it starts?
    Yeah. Well, what goes on is preparation, preparation, preparation. Madonna is committed to always showing up on stage in a zone of confidence and inspiration. Every day before the show there’s soundcheck, there is rehearsal in the soundcheck. I think being so uncompromising about making sure the show doesn’t have anything that could be overlooked takes a certain amount of time. It’s interesting, in my experience – I worked with Madonna [on tours] in 2001, 2004 and 2006 – the ticket always said 8:30 and she was always on by 9. And on this tour, the ticket said 8:30, and she’s been on by 9. No one is delaying for delaying’s sake.
    What’s your favorite moment in the tour?
    Emotionally, the strongest moment in the show is “Live to Tell.” It’s powerful. It’s a reminder that Madonna has soundtracked a lot of our cultural history. It’s so striking because she’s addressing people that have been lost, people that were friends, people that were muses and collaborators. You see them on the screen, and they’re gone, and Madonna is still here, having been with those people, and now singing to them. It’s hard not to feel something on a human level.
    Also, when the opening happens, it’s so powerful. Nothing compares to the moment when someone comes out in such strong voice, looking so powerful. It really hits you. That’s what the audience will connect to – and in turn what Madonna will connect to from the crowd. That relationship is what it’s all about.
    I also love “Nothing Really Matters” as the show opener because of the line, “Everything I give you / all comes back to me.” That seems sort of like a theme of the overall show.
    The Easter egg there is the end of the song. What she did is repeat the lines “in your arms, in your arms.” She says it once on the album but four times live, because that’s the message.
  6. Like
    shane54 reacted to Kristian_Kasell in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    I have never seen anything like it HD
     

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    shane54 reacted to Winn in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
  8. Like
    shane54 reacted to proxy in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    I don't know if this was posted already, but UK press is going wild about her! 




















     
  9. Like
    shane54 reacted to PlasticLimbo in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
  10. Sad
    shane54 reacted to NRMX in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    Yes he was suffering with AIDS and committed suicide at 41
  11. Sad
    shane54 reacted to MikeyK in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    It is. And he did die of AIDS.

  12. Like
    shane54 reacted to vespertine in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    Madonna said: "show hole"

     
  13. Like
    shane54 got a reaction from Voguerista in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    This curfew thing in the UK is really weird.
    Nonetheless she could be in time!

    When I think of the MDNA Tour in Berlin, where M was not beginning before even 22:45pm and people were really pissed off already inside of the venue. Not only for her being late, but also because you couldn´t take the heat in the hall.
    The whole day was super hot in Berlin and ended in a huge thunderstorm one hour after the concert.
    Live To Tell from the opening night.
     
  14. Like
    shane54 reacted to PlasticLimbo in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    I am so emotional , I've cried so many times, the homage to the victims of AIDS with Live To Tell, again praying for souls, is phenomenal and powerful, one of the highlights , for me !!! Martin , Christopher , Herb ...So many orthers

     
  15. Like
    shane54 reacted to eXtremeOccident in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    These takes defending her on late starts have GOT to stop. Enough with this shit already. I’m so mad for the people who went this evening.
    She can get there early enough to start the show. 8:30 on the dot. Other acts manage to do it. She’s the only one who seems completely incapable of doing it, and she has zero excuse. There was a time when her shows were far and above more technically advanced than others but that isn’t the case anymore. No other major artist has these regular issues where they have to offer abridged versions of shows because they can’t manage to get on stage on time.
    Last night was excusable. The issues in the middle of the show were unfortunate and it was probably hard to adapt in real time.
    This on the other hand was avoidable. Don’t use all the cameras if that’s what it comes down to.
    Come ON Madonna. The world is ready to give you a chance to redeem yourself with your touring reputation and here you are fucking it up yet AGAIN.
  16. Like
    shane54 reacted to Kieran in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    I managed to snatch a couple of Mdollas at the end of the runway which Bob threw… (I also had Graham Norton sat directly behind me in B3!)

  17. Like
    shane54 reacted to Kieran in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    So I got to meet Stuart and had a little chat before the show 🥰

  18. Like
    shane54 got a reaction from Flo in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    @maxijazz Thanks for sharing your HQ videos! 
    Did you happen to film Live To Tell? 
    I reall need to see Live To Tell in HQ.
    Awesome performance what you can tell from the snippets on Twitter!
  19. Like
    shane54 got a reaction from Voguerista in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    Speech about Israel
     
  20. Like
    shane54 reacted to scion in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    Notice how they're both videos of the exact same performance but on the second one you can barely hear her live voice. I think tonight was plagued with sound issues by the looks of the videos.
  21. Like
    shane54 reacted to FraP in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    I just got back to my hotel after the show. I had a lot of fun and was really excited, but it was also a bit disappointing. Some moments were beautiful and thrilling. Songs like Erotica, Mother and Father, Die Another Day, Crazy For You, Ray Of Light, and Live To Tell were such great moments!
    But the overall performance felt somewhat unfinished, not quite the Madonna we know. It's not because she's no longer the super dancer with endless energy; I understand her physicality has changed. It's more about the show's concept feeling less inspired than usual. It doesn't seem like a tour that was meticulously prepared over months; it feels like it was put together hastily. At times, it seems like she lacks stage presence and a clear role in the performance.
    Musically, there doesn't seem to be a lot of creativity, and some songs were almost ruined, like Like A Prayer and Don't Cry For Me Argentina. Where's Stuart Price? It's like he just gave some casual advice. It felt like a mega medley rather than a fresh narrative. Sometimes I got annoyed because she was about to engage us with a song and then abruptly moved on.
    She did a full Live To Tell, which was beautiful, but she could have closed it like at the Confessions Tour without losing any of the song's atmosphere; in fact, it would have improved the song. It would have also made space for other songs that felt rushed.
    Then, the absence of a live band was noticeable.
    Going back to the stage presence, her choreography often seemed unoriginal and uninspired, despite its low difficulty (as there are equally simple yet more impactful choreographies)
    Still, I'm happy I got to see this concert because she gave us moments we've longed for. However, it doesn't feel like a Madonna show in its entirety.
    Each of her tours has been a unique story, even Madame X, which I liked less than the others, had a clear narrative. This time, I'm not so sure. I need some time to think about it. I'm happy to see her, glad she's alive and still performing, but my expectations were very high. I attended the show with a friend who knows an insider, and since April, I knew many details about the songs she was rehearsing. My friend explained that Madonna cut several songs she had rehearsed, more than in previous tours. This might be connected to the fact that the tour doesn't have a clear story or concept. The ending felt rushed, as if it lacked a proper conclusion. I agree, it felt lifeless.
    My friend mentioned that initially, Madonna planned to close with The Power Of Goodbye, which would have been a great finale, but later, in April/May, she decided to end with BIM + Celebration. He also told me that she performed Frozen until September. Other songs like Sorry and Oh Father had prepared performances, but my friend doesn't know why they were cut. The last information he received was in late August.
    Perhaps my comment is influenced by the fact that I had low expectations in January, but since my friend shared all the information, my expectations and excitement had been through the roof. Who knows, maybe the show will evolve in the upcoming stops.
  22. Like
    shane54 reacted to SecretGarden in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
  23. Like
    shane54 got a reaction from Boombox90 in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    And where are the HQ pictures from the opening night?
    Mike Roda (Lighthouse Mike) used to always share amazing press pictures.
  24. Like
    shane54 reacted to stefo in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    And with images like this, I think we can just bow down to her and close this amazing comeback night!!!

  25. Like
    shane54 reacted to Adonna in The Celebration Tour (Spoilers)   
    Another visual perspective of the opening and Nothing Really Matters:
     
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