Monday, July 2, 2012

The 10 best Madonna Moments





Everybody debut - 1982
Before the conical bra and colourful yogatards, the world met a plainer Madonna in the video for debut single “Everybody”. Call it the Amelia Earhart look: waxy leather jacket, checked shirt, sensible trousers, utility belt. Plonked in the middle of a dozen lethargic extras, Madge did a hypnotic side-to-side dance for nearly six minutes, mainly singing truisms about music making people happy. Only once was there a glimpse of her future, when, in a spoken interlude, Madonna delivered chat-up lines at the camera. There was something in the eyes that said: mischief imminent






Like a Virgin live - 1984
Dressed in wedding whites, perched atop an 8ft cake next to a mannequin bridegroom, Madonna eased in to this legend-making appearance at the MTV awards in 1984 by kicking off her heels. The following performance sent spinning, too, all previous standards of acceptable raunchiness in pop. The singer writhed; she panted; at one point she simulated sex with her own bridal veil. Two decades later, the song was reprised at an MTV bash in 2003, this time with co-performers Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera donning whites. Madonna, in black, played the groom






Catholic scrap - 1989-2006
Touring in 2006, Madonna appeared on stage, night after night, strung up on a giant crucifix and wearing a crown of thorns. She had already vexed the Vatican with her 1989 video for “Like a Prayer” (it featured a love scene between her and St Martin de Porres) and the mock crucifixion revived old tensions. “I think [Pope Benedict] would enjoy the show,” said a spokesperson for Madonna, issuing an invitation for the pope to come along that the holy father never took up. Probably wise, as the production also featured images of him intercut with shots of Benito Mussolini






Sex, the book - 1992
Madonna’s foray into the art-porn game was described by a tabloid in ’92 as a “re-re-relaunch” for the singer. (How many extra prefixes would we need in 2012?) Photography book Sex was a commercial triumph, its 100,000 UK copies selling out immediately. Content-wise? More than 100 pages of Madonna and pals pictured nude, part-nude, cross-dressing, gagged, sexily ordering pizza, all sorts. Naomi Campbell made a cameo, as did Madonna’s beau at the time, Vanilla Ice. “It looked like she was screwing all these other people,” Ice later complained, apparently not briefed properly






Courtney Love clash - 1995
Not an obvious tent-pole moment in a 30-year career, but this encounter merits mention for its rare example of Madonna, imperturbable, getting rattled. She was being interviewed at an awards show in 1995 when missiles came flying in: Courtney Love was off-camera, throwing makeup. “Don’t, please,” said Madge when Love joined them. “Oh my God, talk into the big ice cream, yes,” she was soon telling herself, out-of-sorts and reminded by a producer to use her mic. The segment ended with Madonna backing away from an uncomfortable few minutes out of the image-control bubble






Evita - 1996
“Only I can do Eva Perón,” said Madonna, newly cast in a film of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical Evita. “Like me, she left her hometown in order to succeed. I went to New York and she went to São Paulo.” Well... the geography was close enough. Argentina’s famous first lady ultimately provided Madonna with her best screen role to date, and won the singer both a Golden Globe and a top 10 hit for centre-piece song, “Don’t Cry For Me Argentina”. Some Argentinians did, inevitably, cry over Madonna’s involvement. “Satan in drag, a real insult to [...] the memory of Eva Perón,” was the archbishop of Buenos Aires’s measured view






Ray of Light - 1998
There had been lots of distractions: the rarity of critical approval for her acting (Evita), the birth of a first child (Lourdes), the abrupt embrace of ancient Rabbinic philosophy (Kabbalah). “Ray of Light”, 1998’s enjoyable head-nodder, marked a return to frontline pop. The William Orbit-produced single (from an album of the same name) was brisk and efficient, a rock meets dance track with a video that had Madonna convulsing in front of footage of speeding cars and later getting sweaty in a disco. On release, it was held off the top of the UK charts by an All Saints song, but was later voted into a list of “No1s that should’ve been.”






Swept Away - 2002
“For starters,” wrote Rolling Stone of this Madonna-starring, Guy Ritchie-directed film, “it blows.” “Leaves men with the quaint notion that the best way to a woman’s heart is through enslavement,” said the New York Daily News of its love-on-a-desert-island conceit. Our own Philip French went for “dire”. Still, there can be profit in disaster. Ritchie was urged back to the enjoyable London-based capers with which he first made his name, and Madonna – after an uncredited cameo in a James Bond flick in 2002 – has never appeared in a film again (though her direction of last year’s W.E. invited comparable reviews)




Parkinson interview - 2005
At the beginning of a Michael Parkinson interview for ITV, Madonna exchanged pleasantries with her host before launching into a song. Hadn’t she...? Wasn’t that...? Only after an ad break, Madonna parked in a swivel chair, did realisation strike. She was speaking in a British accent. Not full-bore RP (there was still plenty of the famous New York-Michigan hybrid in there) but very, very odd. Perhaps it was the influence of Ritchie, to whom she’d been married for five years. But whenever Madonna slipped into Baker Street Irregular mode (“Frum moi perspective...”), it became difficult to watch while sitting still






Super Bowl gig - 2012
It’s one of the biggest gigs a singer can get: a short slot at half-time during the annual American football final, more than 110m watching in the US alone. When Madonna was booked to perform at the 2012 Super Bowl in Indiana, we wondered how big she would go. She entered on an oversized golden throne, on a ship with wings, being dragged by 50 topless men. The following 12-minute medley featured swordsmen, harpists, cheerleaders, tightrope walkers, a gospel choir and a snare drum corps – the population, basically, of a small town. “I’ve never worked so hard,” said Madonna, who didn’t even have to haul the winged ship

2 comments:

  1. This one is tougher to name than her low points because she's had so many highs. Here's what I personally see as her greatest career achievements and why.

    1984 - Performing "Like A Virgin" on the First Annual MTV Awards. It was her first live, televised public performance. But more than that, I think it's the point where she went from being a minor pop personality to a high profile A-list celebrity. It also cast her image as more than just a sexy bad girl but a true entertainer and provocateur.

    1985 – The “Material Girl” song and video – Arguably, this is Madonna’s most remembered video and the one she is most associated with by the general public. It demonstrated her dedication to treating the music video as an art form, as well as a commitment and talent to creating thought-provoking if not controversial entertainment. It was Madonna’s first of many homage’s to Marilyn Monroe, began a career-long identification and endless comparisons in the press. The song also gave Madonna a nickname that would follow her to at least the Ray of Light era, if not a little beyond.

    1986 - The Papa Don't Preach song & video controversy. It was Madonna's first political controversy, as the song polarized public opinions of right to life and abortion rights. That represented a shift in the public perception: She was no longer just a Rock N Roll Sex Symbol but an activist for women’s rights. The song also proved that she wasn't just a flash in the pan (or that the phenomenal success of Like a Virgin was just a fluke, for that matter). And it ushered in the first of what would become a career of radical image changes.

    1989 - The Like A Prayer video controversy. It fueled the song to #1 around the world and has arguably become the best loved song of her career. The infamous video made her untouchable, as if controversy that would sink another artist's career only increased her success and popularity. Plus, the fact that she was too hot for Pepsi made her such a cool artist.

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  2. 1990 – The Whole Year (Vogue/ Dick Tracy/ Warren Beatty/Blonde Ambition/Justify My Love): This was a sustained wave at the peak of her popularity. She really achieved both commercial and critical success, without compromising her artistic integrity. She achieved rave reviews in Dick Tracy, which earned over $100 million at the box office. Vogue ignited an underground dance craze and once again saw a shift in public perception; she moved from being a sex symbol to a mainstream gay icon in the eyes of the general public (which were few and far between in those days.) The “look” from her worldwide tour was widely copied and set mainstream fashion trends. Following that, Justify My Love was so radically different from anything on pop radio stations that Madonna really represented the cutting edge. And by MTV banning the video, she made the music station seem conservative and unhip.

    1991 - Truth or Dare - After Madonna is long gone, this is the film that will still be analyzed and referenced by future generations. It captured Madonna at her zenith. The personality on this film is The Entertainer that will be long remembered.

    1992 - A League of Their Own - Perhaps her smartest movie role decision, this film has become a classic. It is still quoted, some 20 years later, and holds up surprisingly well today. But most of all, the character "All The Way" Mae really played to Madonna's strengths: the bad girl image, double entendre one liners, a strong female spirit, and something she really should have done more often on the big screen --- dance.

    1996 - Evita - It was the first successful musical at the box office since Grease in the 1970's. It's the movie that gave her credibility and a Best Actress Golden Globe. She spent years pursuing the role and I think it's a milestone for her personally. Though I never hear it credited as such, I believe it paved the way for a resurgence of movie musicals such as Mulan Rouge, Chicago and that film with Meryl Streep singing Abba tunes.

    1998 - The Ray of Light album - This album pulled her career up out of the Adult Contemporary basement and made her a cool rock star again. And although she had received critical success in the past, this was the album that established her credibility and respect in the music industry. After years of being snubbed, she won four Grammy awards for this album. It was a radical, unexpected career makeover that is now considered her music career's second wind.

    2005 - "Hung Up" - I think this single and video will be important in her career because obviously it returned her to the top of the music charts around the world. She also began breaking chart records set by The Beatles and Elvis at this point as well as fans, critics and the press started to notice her unprecedented achievement on the Dance Charts. (Thirty-something Number One hits!) But on a deeper note, I think this song exposed the ageism and hypocrisy of American radio and the Billboard charts. It's at this point that her image expanded to represent the often-times suppressed artistic expression of the aging adult considered by pop standards, past her prime.

    2012 - The Super Bowl Half Time Show - Not only was she performing to her largest audience ever, but it was an honor she rightly deserved. She'd come a long way since the First Annual MTV Awards.

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