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joyinrepatition
16th February 2008, 04:13 PM
Madonna’s New Album and Video: Exclusive Rolling Stone Preview (http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2008/02/15/madonnas-new-album-and-video-exclusive-rolling-stone-preview/)

2/15/08, 5:05 pm EST
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Madonna has managed to keep most details about her still-untitled follow-up to 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor (due April 29th) under wraps, but Rolling Stone got an early listen to five tracks today and some behind-the-scenes info from producer Nate “Danja” Hills.
Fans who worried that Madonna might be losing inspiration as she approaches fifty need not be concerned. The new album takes a few steps away from the hyper-polished future disco of Confessions toward a more urban-oriented, thumpy funk, featuring production by Timbaland and Pharrell, as well as collaborations with Justin Timberlake. Danja says he worked on the album in London, and that Madonna indicated “she just wanted uptempo, dance, club [sounds] and everything to have a hip-hop underlining.” He adds that Madonna was easy-going and frequently in the studio putting in long hours alongside himself, Timbaland and Timberlake: “She would come in and sit in her chair in the corner and just vibe with us.”
The record’s first single is “4 Minutes to Save the World,” the track Timbaland partially debuted (http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2007/12/17/used-led-zeppelin-tickets-go-for-new-ticket-prices-madonnatimberlake-song-leaked-juice-crew-biopic-casting-underway-and-more/) during a Philadelphia Christmas concert in December. “4 Minutes” has a bit of a marching band aesthetic as blasting brass play a scale-like riff, a hard, clanging beat enters and Madonna sings that the “road to heaven is paved with good intentions.” Timberlake and Madonna trade verses, and he appears on the chorus, doing his best Michael Jackson impression while quickly crooning, “We’ve only got four minutes to save the world.” The track ends after a brief breakdown where everything drops out but one of Tim’s signature Bhangra beats, some stabs of brass and Madonna’s urgent tick-tock’s. It’s a loud, busy, energetic track that is apparently getting an equally adventurous video: As previously reported, the clip (which is still being completed) is directed by hot French duo Jonas & François (Justice’s “D.A.N.C.E.”). Timbaland makes an appearance, and Madonna and Timberlake play superheroes tackling physical obstacles. The clip features choreography by Jamie King, who worked on Madonna’s Confessions, Re-Invention and Drowned World tours as well as her video for Confessions‘ “Sorry.”
The Pharrell-produced “Candy Store” opens with a big beat and Madonna’s invitation to “Come on in to my store, I got candy galore.” The track is pretty bare on the verses, but there’s a flash of brassy soul on the chorus when harmonies join Madonna singing, “I’ll be your one stop (one stop) candy shop.” The track is punctuated with throbbing breaks filled with hypnotic synths, and Pharrell jumps on the mike for a brief rhyme.
The most lyrical of the five songs is “Miles Away,” a wistful tune about a long-distance relationship with a melody that resembles Timberlake’s FutureSex/LoveSounds, an album Danja says Madonna admired. “We would come up with a track and him and Madonna would come and do lyrics and melody together,” Danja explains. The song opens with a quickly strummed acoustic guitar, then a stuttering beat drops in and the track slowly swells until it’s filled with atmospheric synths. “You always seem to have the biggest heart when we’re 6,000 miles apart,” Madonna sings grandly, lamenting, “I guess we’re at our best when we’re miles away.” The song has a more airy aesthetic compared to the heavy beats on other tracks, which reflects its more emotional lyrics.
The track that sounds most like a more urban, edgy continuation of Confessions is the excellent “Give It to Me,” which bumps along to a thick synth tone Danja employed on Britney Spears’ Blackout. It’s an aggressive, clubby track with a raw, house-y beat that’s ripe for remixing, and Madonna sings, “When the lights go down and there’s no one left I can go on and on.” It ends after a fast, killer breakdown where she chants “Get stupid” over a xylophone chime as the beat builds into a frenzy and she proclaims, “Give it to me / No one’s gonna stop me now.”
The dance floor theme returns again on “Heartbeat,” which boasts a thumping hip-hop beat with a sandpaper shuffle and twinkling Eighties-reminiscent synths. Madonna opens up her voice more, singing, “Can’t you see when I dance I feel free / Which makes me feel like the only one the light shines on.” The song features a brief rap breakdown that recalls Nelly Furtado’s chanty “Promiscuous” (”See my booty get down,” Madonna speak-sings), but returns to its clubby roots in the end.

joyinrepatition
22nd March 2008, 05:57 PM
Madonna's new album, Hard Candy, is out April 29.

http://www.vh-m.com/

http://www.madonnalicious.com/images/extra/2008/hardcandy_full_cover_news.jpg (http://www.madonnalicious.com/images/extra/2008/hardcandy_full_cover.jpg)

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joyinrepatition
30th March 2008, 10:59 AM
Madonna to launch 'Hard Candy' on mobile

By Emma Thelwell

Last Updated: 12:10am GMT 19/03/2008

Madonna plans to give more than 250m Vodafone customers access to her new album ahead of its official release set for April 28th with Warner Music.
Madonna enters the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/11/wmadonna111.xml)
More on the media industry (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?menuId=242&menuItemId=10287&view=HEADLINESUMMARY2&grid=F7&targetRule=14) The Material Girl is hoping to reach millions of fans by releasing seven songs from the album, Hard Candy, at a rate of one song a day the week before the album is available.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/graphics/2008/03/18/bcnmadonna.jpgMadonna is hoping to reach new fans through mobile distributionBeginning on April 21st, each track will remain live and exclusive to Vodafone customers for 24 hours for download before being replaced by the next one.
Customers in some markets, including Spain, Portugal, Germany and Belgium will be given access to the newly released single '4 Minutes To Save the World', a collaboration with Justin Timberlake about fighting poverty and disease.
The single was released yesterday, not in record shops or online, but bizarrely in a shampoo advert for Sunsilk. The advertisement, featuring the slogan 'Life can't wait' showcases Madonna's different looks throughout her career.
Vodafone's deal with Warner will allow customers access to Madonna's mini site on Vodafone live! where the week of music can be found alongside associated mobile phone content, including ringtones and text message tones.
advertisement.

John Reid, vice chairman of Warner Music, said: "This is an innovative way to reach millions of Madonna fans around the world, building anticipation and excitement around this landmark release and helping to create a real event for Vodafone customers."
The news comes as Madonna, who will be 50 this summer, denies reports that her marriage to British film director Guy Ritchie is on the rocks.
Rumours of a split followed the failure of Mr Ritchie to appear at Madonna's induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the US last week.
However, a spokesman for Madonna said the pair were happily married, and simply working on different projects. Madonna is currently in the US promoting Hard Candy, while Mr Ritchie is in the UK wrapping up his new film RocknRolla.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/money/2008/03/18/bcnmadon118.xml

unique
8th April 2008, 12:24 PM
Review: Madonna's Hard Candy



By Mark Savage
Entertainment reporter, BBC News
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http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44549000/gif/_44549717_madonna_promo_226_177.gif Hard Candy is Madonna's first studio album since 2005

On Madonna's 11th album, Hard Candy, the queen of pop invites us to imagine her as a confectioner running a musical sweet shop.
But, after sitting through the 12 tracks on offer here, you'll begin to wish she'd stocked more than two varieties of candy.
Those flavours come from two of America's most bankable songwriting teams: The Neptunes and Timbaland, who between them have conjured up hits for the likes of Britney Spears, Jay-Z, Missy Elliot and Justin Timberlake.
Timberlake crops up on five of the tracks, posing a particularly pertinent question about who is running this particular show when he asks "Who is the master? Who is the slave?" as the album closes.
This sort of top flight production is an unusual step for Madonna, who has a reputation for seeking out relatively obscure dance producers like Mirwais, Shep Pettibone and Stuart Price to helm her albums.
This time round, however, the queen of reinvention is trying to win back the hearts of her US audience - who were largely unimpressed with her 2005 love letter to disco, Confessions On A Dancefloor.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/shared/img/o.gif http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/v3/start_quote_rb.gif The main themes are love, revenge, sex and music - subjects on which Madonna surely has little left to say http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/v3/end_quote_rb.gif



It all starts off well enough. Opening track Candy Shop is an agenda-setting call to arms, with Madonna promising a "special connection" and "plenty of heat".
The minimal, skittering drums are punctured by colossal stabs of synth, while Madonna purrs weak sweet shop-related innuendos: "Don't pretend you're not hungry, there's plenty to eat... I got Turkish Delights."
You get the picture.
Things step up a gear with the Justin Timberlake collaboration 4 Minutes, which features the best use of cowbell in pop since Free's All Right Now, but sounds so futuristic it could realistically have been beamed in from the end of the world.
'Pop moments'
Lyrically, the album plays it safe. Madonna may have been inspired to make a documentary about the Aids epidemic in Africa when she adopted two-year-old Malawian orphan David Banda, but you would be hard pressed to find any social commentary in her music.
The main themes are love, revenge, sex and music - subjects on which Madonna surely has very little left to say at this stage in her career.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44549000/jpg/_44549521_madonna_liveearth_2_203300.jpg Hard Candy featurs five collaborations with Justin Timberlake

She even repeats herself, echoing Into The Groove when she sings "Don't you know, can't you seem when I dance I feel free" on Heartbeat.
Then again, Madonna has always been at her best when extolling the virtues of music as a release, and it is on Hard Candy's club-orientated tracks that she excels.
She's Not Me, a Neptunes production, feels like a five-minute musical summary of her career to date.
It kicks off with Chic-esque guitars that are reminiscent of Holiday before morphing into a pulsing club groove that could have been lifted straight from her last album.
Track three, Give It To Me, is already pencilled in as the album's second single. It is one of the record's few out-and-out pop moments, featuring a cute, bouncy beat and a sense of humour that has been missing from Madonna's music since her Dick Tracy days.
"If it's against the law, arrest me, if you can handle it, undress me," she chirps as the song builds to a blistering crescendo that will surely be the highlight of any future live set.
Blistering crescendo
But the song also showcases the fatal flaw in Madonna's battle plan. A middle section where she chants "get stupid, get stupid" instantly brings to mind The Neptunes other female muse, Gwen Stefani.
Similarly, Timbaland's tracks are frequently reminiscent of his (superior) work with Nelly Furtado.
Madonna, a notoriously hard task master (she gave Justin Timberlake a vitamin shot when he appeared to be flagging during recording sessions) seems to have been unable to tame the idiosyncrasies of her omnipresent hitmakers.
Over and over again, she subsumes her pop sensibilities to their arsenal of clattering beats, hollered raps and over-fussy production.
On a ballad like Incredible, the overbearing din of an inexplicable electric guitar completely spoils an otherwise beautiful and delicate melody. It's almost like they threw everything at the wall to see what would stick, without realising it was a very sticky wall.
And that's a real shame because, if a handful of the tracks had been delivered to more producers with a touch more subtelty , Hard Candy could have ranked alongside Madonna's best.
As it stands, however, the album is more akin to Madonna's last attempt to harness the urban market, 1994's underwhelming Bedtime Stories.
Bah, humbug.
Hard Candy by Madonna is released in the UK on 28 April.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7336448.stm

unique
8th April 2008, 12:27 PM
i think people might be getting a bit sick of timberland's chart overkill. 4 minutes isn't particularly good. mariah's new cd isn't that hot either, but the new single is pretty catchy and has a great video

joyinrepatition
12th April 2008, 12:44 PM
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The One
23rd April 2008, 05:37 PM
Posted on Wendy & Lisa's Myspace blog...

Wendy on Madonna’s Hard Candy

Wendy plays some stanky guitar on She's Not me from Madonna's new album Hard Candy in stores April 29th in the U.S.

joyinrepatition
26th April 2008, 10:34 PM
http://www.vh-m.com/

http://vh-m.com/madonna/GI2MCover.jpg (http://www.vh-m.com/home)

joyinrepatition
28th April 2008, 05:16 PM
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Monday, 28 April 2008

Madonna releases 11th studio album

Popstar Madonna has released her 11th studio album Hard Candy.
The album features the production skills of The Neptunes and Timbaland.
Her latest hit 4 Minutes, taken from the album features Justin Timberlake and is currently number one in the UK singles chart.
Her album has been hailed as her best since Ray of Light.
She has been quick to sign sponsorship deals for the new songs, licensing them to be used on TV adverts, mobile phone exclusives and TV shows.
The Material Girl shot to fame in 1984 with the song Holiday. She has also appeared in the Hollywood films Desperately Seeking Susan, Shanghai Surprise and Evita.
Madonna has recently written and produced a documentary I Am Because We Are about the fate of orphans in Malawi.
She is married to British film director Guy Ritchie and will celebrate her 50th birthday this year. From ITN News

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