Happy 15th Anniversary to Madonna’s tenth studio album Confessions on a Dance Floor, originally released November 14, 2005.
Madonna’s career is most definitely the stuff of legend. Having kicked things off in the early ‘80s, the Queen of Pop has never really missed a beat (or step) when it has come to all things pop, culture, music and herself.
Smashing through the ‘80s and ‘90s with hit after hit, Madonna ended the 20th century with the incredibly beautiful and introspective Ray of Light (1998) and saw in the new millennium with yet another career defining moment in Music (2000). It wasn’t until the highly controversial and somewhat provocative American Life (2003) that Madonna faced critical backlash, something that she had faced before, but this felt different. Politically driven, but ultimately missing its mark, American Life needed a successor, one that eventually came in the form of Confessions on a Dance Floor in late 2005.
Madonna’s knack for reinvention is beyond compare and on Confessions, her tenth studio album, she again didn’t fail to disappoint. The album’s heavy disco feel, a genre that her music was almost born out of, allowed Madonna to lose the seriousness of her previous album and get playful again, both with fashion and her music. Remembering the misogynistic conversations surrounding her appearance and that leotard for “Hung Up,” the then 47-year-old Madonna was again showing why she was (and is) a force to be reckoned with: she has never been restricted by boundaries that prevent others from achieving what essentially she sets out to achieve. No matter what the reaction may be.
As the album’s lead single “Hung Up” danced through the airwaves with its impeccable sampling of ABBA’s 1979 single “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight),” with the introduction of Madonna’s new co-producer Stuart Price giving the singer a freedom and unabashed moment at disco glory, and she was reveling in it. The album’s following three singles—“Sorry,” “Get Together” and “Jump” —continue Price’s foray into disco pop territory and whilst they may not be groundbreaking, Madonna brings her updated version of disco into the 2000s and it works, ensuring that all four singles charted in the top ten somewhere around the world.
Whilst “Future Lovers” continues the dance vibe that borders on a religious exercise in clubbing, this quickly fades with the cringe-worthy “I Love New York.” With lines like “I don’t like cities but I like New York / Other cities make me feel like a dork,” the listener is left wondering if the latter part of the album can regain its momentum. It kind of does. Moving into “Let It Will Be” where she speaks about fame and herself, the uptempo beat is what keeps the quasi spiritual song interesting. In fact, it’s this “spiritual” awakening that seems to take over the rest of the album.
Spiritual exploration and Madonna have been as intertwined as any other aspect of the singer, but it is on “Isaac” that Madonna’s foray into Kabbalah is brought to the forefront. The song was accused of blasphemy, but as Yitzhak Sinwani (one of Madonna’s early spiritual “Kabbalah” guides) sings in Aramaic, the words, when translated into English, are more a symbol of heaven and angels rather than an ode to Kabbalah. “I toyed with the idea of calling the song “Fear of Flying,” because it’s about letting go and people who are afraid to fly obviously have control issues,” Madonna explained to Billboard in 2005. “We all have fears in many areas of our lives. Some people can’t commit to relationships. The song is about tackling all of that. ‘Will you sacrifice your comfort? Make your way in a foreign land?’ In other words, will you go outside of your comfort zone?”
Confessions on many accounts feels like old school Madonna. Although she toys with Kabbalah a little, there is no religious struggle like she had on “Like A Prayer,” in fact it feels like there is a calmness in her newfound faith, something that age also offers. This album defines the moment that Madonna is aware of her position and her authority within the music industry. The album’s tracks effortlessly blend into one another, taking the listener on a journey as opposed to a stop/start type of foray.
Confessions on a Dance Floor is not just a nod to dance music of a bygone era, it is also Madonna acknowledging her own music and its cultural impact. Rather than trying to “reinvent the wheel” as she so often does, this time she seems to accept it for what it is, reworking it to the present and delivering a solid dance album. And that she does.
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