Had the Pope’s protest, and action

30 years ago, on this same 13th of April, the Madonna gave the start of the tour’s most powerful and controversial: the “Blond Ambition Tour”. Filling the arenas and stadiums in the United States, Europe, and Japan, the singer, has firmly established itself as an absolute power of pop music, and has caused controversy with each and every detail of your presentation. If you do not live in the heyday of the Queen of Pop, the YOUTUBE we’ll show you all the most memorable on the tour that made history.

The division into acts

One of the innovations of the immediate, of the show’s “Blond Ambition” was to divide the presentation into five acts as in a stage play. Madonna was inspired by the German movie “Metropolis” (Fritz Lang, 1927) in the opening, then go down a block to the religious, on the other, inspired by the film “Dick Tracy” (Warren Beatty, 1990), the Art-Deco style, and by the end of the encore. Up to now, a lot of artists rely on to split their shows into more than one block.

The fashion flagship

All of the costumes in the show designed by Jean Paul Gaultier, who created the looks that crossed generations, like the sports bra in the shape of a cone, the costume of the most iconic in the show. Madonna was so powerful that it has asked the owners of the MAC, the company’s make-up, which is to come up with a lipstick to stay intact for the entire show, even with the sweat. Thus was born the “Russian Red”, which the singer wore in all of the presentations.

Read full article at Matza Review

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Blond Ambition Tour kicked off in Japan 30 years ago!

Can you believe it is 30 years ago today that the legendary Blond Ambition Tour kicked off in Japan?

One of the most discussed tours of all time, a tour that unfortunately to this day still has not been released on either DVD or blu-ray in full…..

A tour so ahead of its time that people today still think of it as the tour that changed a ‘live show’ into a full on theatrical experience. 

Check out our full dedicated Blond Ambition Tour page HERE

We will share much more Blond Ambition goodies asap!

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What happened when Madonna mania took over Leeds for her Roundhay Park show back in 1987

We are taking a look back at when Madonna mania took over Leeds as the pop princess played Roundhay Park at the peak of her powers.

The material girl played an outdoor concert at the park to a crowd of 73,000 people in 1987. Tickets for the big event were on sale officially for £15 but because it didn’t reach full capacity lucky fans could bag a ticket from touts for just £2 on the day.

At the time, the security was as stringent as it had ever been for a music event at Roundhay Park with thousands queueing to get in before the gates opened. On the day, there were 60 people arrested – mostly for public order offences.

During the Who’s That Girl tour Madonna played iconic hits such as Holiday, Like a Virgin, Lucky Star and many more in Leeds.

You can see footage from the day below in two TV reports

We’ll tell you that for copyright reasons it would be highly unlikely news crews would be able to broadcast footage from massive gigs these days – so we hope you savoured that behind the scenes access.

Speaking to the crowd on the night, Madonna, said: “I’m really cold up here, it is windy and it might rain. Wait a second though, I want you guys to keep me warm and keep each other warm.”

That got a big cheer from the audience as the superstar bounced around the stage in a wide array of outfits.

Setlist

As we said, Madonna treated fans to some of her biggest songs during her appearance at Roundhay Park.

Here’s the setlist from the 90-minute concert which happened on August 15, 1987:

Open Your Heart

Lucky Star

True Blue

Papa Don’t Preach

White Heat

Causing a Commotion

The Look of Love

Dress You Up

Material Girl

Like a Virgin

Where’s the Party

Live to Tell

Into the Groove

La Isla Bonita

Who’s That Girl

Holiday

More at Leeds Live

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The Virgin Tour kicked off 35 years ago (yesterday)

Madonna kicked off her first ever tour 35 years ago yesterday (yes I know I am a day late).

Madonna sold out the entire tour but unfortunately never brought it to Europe. To this day fans are still waiting for a DVD or blu-ray release of the official recording from Detroit. Despite having an official recording, it is not complete as for some reason three songs (Angel, Borderline and Burning Up) were scrapped from the product. 

Please check out our dedicated Virgin Tour page for press articles, memorabilia, facts, dates, video and more HERE

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Celebrating 30 years since Madonna’s Vogue hit Number 1 on the Official UK Singles Chart

“Look around, everywhere you turn is heartache – it’s everywhere that you go.”

30 years on and the opening lines from Madonna’s classic hit Vogue are still relevant today – and its acclaimed black and white David Fincher-directed video still feels as fresh and stylish as it did when it spent weeks on permanent rotation.

Vogue, which climbed to Number 1 this week in 1990, marked a new phase for Madonna. She had been around for just six years, yet her continued reinventions – a term she didn’t really embrace until her 2004 tour of the same name – afforded her a legendary status much sooner than some of her chart peers.

While Madonna was no stranger to dance music – her career was born on the dance floors of New York’s coolest discotheques – Vogue felt like she was changing lanes for good. Coming a mere year after the guitar-led pop of comeback album Like A Prayer, Vogue felt like a fresh direction.

Its sound was inspired by underground house; the dancing was straight out of the little-known Harlem ball scene; it featured a rap by the lady herself that namechecked Old Hollywood filmstars. Vogue’s impact was recently explored in Ryan Murphy’s award-winning series Pose, showing both the elated and frustrated reaction by underground queer culture as it unexpectedly found itself in the mainstream. 

With Shep Pettibone, who worked with her on the single remix of Express Yourself, which itself pretty much paved the way for Vogue’s laid-back house beats, Madonna scored her seventh chart-topper – it would be her last for almost eight years.

But Vogue was never meant the breakout smash it became. In an interview with Billboard, Pettibone revealed the song was quickly recorded in a basement studio for $5,000. A week later, the final version was sent to Madonna’s record label, who weren’t sure where to place it. It would eventually end up awkwardly put on the soundtrack for Dick Tracy – Madonna’s latest movie venture. Despite having nothing to do with the film, the song became a runaway hit. 

Here’s Madonna is lip-synching for her life at the 1990 MTV Awards in a classic performance.

Once it got there in its second week of release, Vogue ruled the Official UK Singles Chart for a whole month. And who toppled her? Superstar DJ Adamski featuring a little-known vocalist (at the time) Seal, with the first version of Killer. Vogue has sold over 530,000 copies in the UK and has been streamed 16 million times since records began in 2014. It ranks as Madonna’s eighth biggest single overall

Main image: Warner Bros 

More at Official Charts Company

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The ‘Drag Race’ Season 12 Madonna Rusical Had SO Many Great Madge Moments

RuPaul's Drag Race Season 12 Rusical

VH1/ Screenshot

If you saw the Cher-themed Drag Race Rusical in Season 10, you were not “Like a Virgin” watching Season 12’s musical challenge: “Madonna: The Unauthorized Rusical.” During the April 10 episode, each queen embodied a different moment from the Queen of Pop’s iconic career, from “Lucky Star” all the way up to “B*tch I’m Madonna.” Some found it easy to express themselves, while others were “Borderline” b-a-d. Here’s the performance breakdown.

Jan Was an Unlucky Star

The singer and performer in Jan was born ready for this challenge, and her ode to early Madonna’s “Lucky Star” music video was spot on. The vocals! The hair! The lewk! She was truly deprived of a well-deserved win.

Brita’s Cone Bra Couldn’t Save Her

When Madonna debuted the cone bra corset on her 1990 Blond Ambition Tour, it became an instant staple in pop culture history, which is why Brita wanted to wear it. Sadly, it couldn’t, uh, support her through forgetting a few lyrics.

Gigi Goode Was… Goode

Even though it wasn’t her first choice song and her studio session was slightly shaky, Gigi slayed “Unapologetic B*tch,” and unapologetically accepted her third challenge win.

Jackie Cox Was a “Boy Toy” Bride

Jackie recreated what might be the most recognizable Madonna moment of all time: the bridal look from her 1984 VMA’s performance of “Like A Virgin.” Unfortunately, Jackie’s rendition wasn’t nearly as monumental.

Madonna on YouTube

Jaida Essence Hall Went Into Full Lap Dance Mode

Jaida may have been unsure of herself in rehearsal, but her final performance channeling Madonna’s controversial “Justify My Love” music video would have made Dahlia Sin proud. Sporting a black lingerie set complete with stirrups, she got frisky with not one, but two backup dancers, and even broke out a whip.

Sherry Pie’s Movie Star Madonna Was Hollywood Material

Marking her foray into film, Sherry Pie poked fun at Madonna’s role as Eva Perón in the 1996 film Evita. Knowing Sherry’s musical theatre background, her solid performance came as no surprise.

Crystal Methyd Was a Joyous “Ray Of Light”

Crystal knew a singing challenge could be just that: a challenge for her. So she made the vocals work by adding a comedic twist. The judges loved it and her “enlightened Madonna,” inspired by the “Ray of Light” music video.

Widow Von’Du’s Fempire Madonna Was Badass

Widow user her lyrics to pay homage to Madonna’s trailblazing and her all-white outfit and cowboy hat tipped a hat to the 2009 video for “Music,” but the flips she turned out? Those were all Widow.

Heidi N Closet Wasn’t Madonna Enough

MADONNAVEVO on YouTube

Heidi is a top-notch performer and dancer, and that shined through in her modern-day “B*tch I’m Madonna.” Unfortunately, she was a little too much Heidi, not enough Madonna, which is why the judges put her in the bottom.

If next season gets a Rusical, this one will be hard to top.

More at BUSTLE

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Hey You discography online – Madonna’s ‘Live Earth’ single

Remember Madonna’s ‘Hey You’?

Madonna wrote the song and co-produced it with Pharrell for the upcoming Live Earth concert and campaign (2007). It was quite a different tune after the disco dance tunes from ‘Confessions on a Dance Floor’. 

First available as a free download and later as a digital only single, it did not do much in the charts.

Since there were no physical copies pressed, our discography limits itself to a couple of promo only discs. This includes the promo CD by Hit 40 UK Radio show (Somethin’ Else) that contains the rare and unreleased ‘edit’ of the song that clocks in at 2:44.

Check the discography out HERE

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Jeremiah Abiah’s reimagined take on Madonna’s catalog a highlight of Joe’s Pub Live free weekly streaming series

Get into the groove with Jeremiah Abiah, as the singer, songwriter and producer breathes new life into Madonna’s music this weekend.

The Ghanaian-American artist’s reimagined take on the Material Girl’s hits will be livestreamed Saturday during a weekly series organized by intimate concert venue Joe’s Pub, a program of the Public Theater in NoHo.

With a goal to serve as a social connection during this time of social distancing, the club has shared concerts with their audiences on YouTube each Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. for the past few weeks.

Jeremiah Abiah's re-imagined take on Madonna hits will be streamed amid the coronavirus crisis.
Jeremiah Abiah’s re-imagined take on Madonna hits will be streamed amid the coronavirus crisis. (Ronald Ji)

Abiah’s show, which will stream on Saturday, features his exploration of the pop music icon and master of reinvention.

Recorded on Feb. 16, 2019, the singer used his six-octave vocal range to breathe new life into gems popularized from the Material Girl.

“People thought I was crazy when I revealed Madonna as my next project,” the self-described “80’s kid” told the Daily News on Thursday. “Then last year, Joe’s Pub asked me to present the project there over two nights. Two sold-out nights was all the validation that I needed.”

Hits such as the Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds-produced “Take A Bow,” the Dallas Austin-assisted “Secret” and the Reggie Lucas breakthrough “Borderline” are reinterpreted with Abiah’s signature style of blending blend of jazz, soul and classical music.

“Her music is the soundtrack to my childhood and I wanted to pay homage to that time,” he said, adding that he’s similar to the Detroit-area native born Madonna Louise Ciccone. “She is unique and a trendsetter. I feel I possess the same qualities and one of my strengths is my ability to reimagine music.”

The 75-minute concert, which also includes earthy renditions of “Lucky Star,” “Into The Groove,” “La Isla Bonita” and Madonna’s first international hit, 1983’s “Holiday,” is a precursor for Abiah’s upcoming album, “Abiah Sings Madonna.” The album is planned for summer — maybe on Madonna’s 62nd birthday on Aug. 16.

Read full article at NY daily News

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Madonna choreographer pushes Drag Race queen through injury in exclusive preview

Queens of the main stage, meet the queen of pop.

RuPaul’s Drag Race is going all out for its upcoming production of Madonna: The Unauthorized Rusical, and EW has an exclusive sneak peek at the remaining contestants preparing for the celebratory stage revue with the iconic singer’s Sticky & Sweet Tour choreographer (and RuPaul’s Drag Race Live! director) Jamal Sims.

For Widow Von’Du, the impending song-and-dance challenge initially sounds exciting: “The b—es that were like ‘I’m a singer!’ Guess what, b—? I’m a dancer!” she says with confidence as the queens line up in front of Sims for their first lesson.

“One thing I know about working with Madonna is that she don’t play, so, we can’t f— this up,” Sims tells the girls, though a nagging gash on Widow’s knee — sustained during a slide-split during week one’s Nicki Minaj-themed rap challenge — causes her to wince in pain through a move that requires her to land on her leg. She later rolls up her pants to reveal a deep cut, which Sims quickly notices and asks if she’s ok.

 

“I can do it, I just need to switch knees. Or, I need a knee pad or I’m going to just bleed all over the place and make it do what it does!” Widow says before the camera cuts to fellow competitor Jackie Cox casting a shady glance.

“It seems to me that Widow has trouble rolling with the punches,” Brita observes in a confessional. “I understand that your leg is cut up, but also that was challenge one and that should be healed by now, sis. Why are you complaining?”

See how Widow’s injury holds up throughout Madonna: The Unauthorized Rusical when RuPaul’s Drag Race airs tonight at 8:00 p.m. on VH1. Until then, watch EW’s exclusive preview above and keep up with our running ranking of season 12‘s best runway looks here.

More at EW.com

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How Madonna’s ‘Vogue’ Transformed The Dance Floor

In spring of 1990, Madonna‘s career and creativity was on an upward trajectory. She was already an international icon and had successfully made the transition from ’80s pop star to global megabrand. The singer’s visual component played an arguably huge role in helping her become a phenomenon, as she questioned, pushed and confronted many accepted societal norms. In the early part of her career, this was mainly via her own overt sexuality. Yet unlike many other female artists, Madonna was not simply eye candy.

Madonna’s Coat of Armour

While she became synonymous with wearing ‘underwear as outerwear’ – I have never seen a white men’s tank top and boxers look better than when she dons this combo in 1985’s Desperately Seeking Susan – it was her ability to transform these then daring looks not into something to simply be consumed by the masses, but to make them a coat of armour. I was seized with the overwhelming urge to appear at my junior high school wearing one of my dad’s oversized dress shirt with garters (note: this would not have gone down well with my Italian Catholic mother)- not because I wanted people (boys) to look at me, but because Madonna made her fashion and attitude about showing strength, confidence and a celebration of being a thinking, authentic self.

Madonna in Desperately Seeking Susan
This last part is the hardest to grapple with, as if you dressed like Madge, it was easy to be seen as a blind acolyte helping fuel the multi-million dollar Ciccone machine. But if you were brave enough to scratch below the surface, Madonna was all about questioning gender and expectations, whether that was strutting around proudly in masculine attire or piling on yet another rosary on an already bead-ladled neck. Madonna taught me acceptance, not by TELLING me I had to be different, but by SHOWING. In the aforementioned boxer outfit, she never says, ‘LOOK AT ME BEING SO TRANSGRESSIVE!’ She simply flops around doing her daily Madonna things, as if she was wearing a T-shirt and jeans, not men’s underwear, and a holy piece of jewelry from the Catholic church. This made the [engaged] fan ask themselves, WHY NOT?, or maybe more importantly, WHY? to not question tradition.

Full article HERE

Thanks to Marc

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Dance pop track features Madonna’s longtime backing vocalist duo Niki Haris and Donna De Lory

This wasn’t supposed to be how it went down. For the past four years, Rod Thomas, who performs under the alias Bright Light Bright Light, has DJ’d an afternoon dance party called “Romy & Michele’s Saturday Afternoon Tea Dance” in New York City at Manhattan’s Club Cumming and Brooklyn’s C’Mon Everybody. Last month, he released the first track, “This Was My House,” a fantastically fun disco bop off his forthcoming album, Fun City (due out in September). And for the video, which debuts today, he involved a slew of New York performers — Glow Job, the Illustrious Blacks, Angelica Torres — as well as other activists, philanthropists, and friends to share their joy of nightlife. Instead, every club in the country is shuttered and queer people around the globe are attempting to forge virtual party bonds.

“It’s really strange balance between not trying to contextualize and do too much overthinking about putting out in a time of crisis,” Thomas explains by phone from his apartment in the East Village of Manhattan. “I’m being mindful about wanting to share with people about how they can stay safe and — listen to my new song! At least it’s an upbeat song people have enjoyed dancing to at home.”

The video for “This Was My House” opens with Thomas lounging on a sofa in his living room, a big glittering disco ball between his thighs as he calls up his pals on a pink phone while playing a board game. “This was my house and I was not supposed to worry ’bout it/ This was the place that I was not supposed to fear,” he sings. The lyrics are meant as an ode to LGBTQ+ safe spaces, and should be a new staple for Pride events everywhere, but it’s easy to now interpret public health crisis with millions urged to shelter at home while social distancing. “It’s cold outside/ And this should be my shelter/ Nothing here is comfort to me/ Oh it’s cold outside/ But I can brave the weather,” it continues in its bittersweet vein.

Thomas says he’s grateful he’s a “mom-type” artist, planning and prepping way in advance, so he actually filmed the video (which is directed, shot, and edited by Tyler Jensen) in February and had it ready to go. While he used his own apartment for the at-home scenes, the party shots were captured at Bedlam, an East Village club staple. “Finally it’s paid off, all that planning!” he says with relief. But he’s quick to share his concern for the clubs and bars and staff who are all struggling economically. “These spaces have been threatened and they feel even more attacked than ever.”

While firmly rooted in our contemporary world — the song was produced by Initial Talk, best known for his remixes of songs like Dua Lipa’s “New Rules” and Rihanna’s “Bitch Better Have My Money” — the throwback references are also strong (and not just because of those pink leg warmers). Thomas credits Madonna’s “Truth or Dare” and its ensemble for introducing him to queer culture, so having Niki Harris and Donna De Lory — Madge’s longtime backup singer duo — on it meant the “world to me.”

At the moment it seems a disco vibe has seeped into the mainstream, with pop artists such as Dua Lipa and the Weeknd releasing their own take on the catalog. And Bright Light Bright Light’s latest song offers its own buoyant beat to dance through pain and trouble. “For me, it’s sort of dancing through pain and struggle; the subject matter of disco is turmoil and defiance,” Thomas explains. “You have this call to arms: don’t give up, push on through, find the joy where you can.”

Check out video at RollingStone

Thanks to Marc

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Drag Race Sneak Peek: Which Queen Doesn’t Have a Prayer of Winning the Madonna Musical Challenge?

With Aiden Zhane out of the game, her feud with Brita has been squashed (for now), but there’s still plenty of drama in the RuPaul’s Drag Race workroom this Friday (VH1, 8/7c).

As revealed in the preview clip above, the queens still have a few “unresolved issues” from last week’s Untucked, particularly Heidi N. Closet and Widow Von’Du feeling like some of the queens went too far with their unsolicited, hurtful critiques. “You’re going to have to call me the umpire, because I’m about to call these bitches out,” Heidi tells the cameras.

Gigi Goode apologizes, insisting she would never imply that Heidi is ugly. Other queens like Jackie Cox and Sherry Pie follow suit, but not everyone is interested to hear what they have to say.

After saying that she hopes they fall down during the next dance challenge, Widow tells the queens, “I hope someone tears you down just as much as you tore us down.”

Needless to say, the energy in the workroom is tense when the queens come back together for this week’s challenge, Madonna: The Unauthorized Rusical. And that tension only escalates when the queens start casting roles, especially when Brita’s limited vocal range leads to her stealing Gigi’s No. 1 pick.

At least Jan seems to have the right attitude going into this challenge. She isn’t thrilled to be portraying “early” Madonna, nor does she want to have to be the first queen on the stage, but she accepts it and moves on with a hearty, “Yeah, I’ll sing my t–ts off!”

More at TVLine

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