MDNA - THE QUEEN OF POP LATEST OFFERING to the pagan rites of music, pop magic and idolation is a trippin trip in itself .Highly confessional and biographical over the last years of her marriage , career and tribulations this album boast strong references to her life this time around. not a cookie cutter album as the last Hard Candy.
As the Mother of
reinvention and morphing into personas that mix the magic of
music,
religion and
sexuality over subjects of
taboo that stir and envelopes our
imagination, she has remained relevant over her nearly 30 years span of music when other Pop stars drop like flies.
Yes, Madonna’s in a rapturous state of mind in 2012, and in more ways
than one: A bulk of her latest album, an incredible, varied collection
of pounding club cuts, bloody revenge odes and swinging, psychedelic
’60′s-tinged anthems, seems to be tripping out on acid–or, more
accurately, ecstasy. After all, the euphoria-inducing club drug (MDMA,
formally speaking) is largely responsible for the cheeky,
initial-inspired album title,
MDNA.
This time around with
MDNA , an offering that she is here to reclaim her Throne as the Queen Of Pop. below are the Hottest tracks remixed frm MDNA -from various sources
Like her classic 1989 release,
MDNA is a post-divorce record. Unlike
Like A Prayer, which was released only a few months after her divorce from
Sean Penn,
MDNA comes almost four years after the fact. Since then, new love has already sprung.
As a result, there’s contrasting moods at play:
MDNA is an
incredible, explosively defiant record–full of both euphoric club cuts
and swoon-filled swinging ’60′s pop anthems, yes–but also unexpectedly
raw, introspective balladry, all of which showcasing far more
vulnerability than one might have concluded from the album’s two lead
singles.
MDNA won’t help to reassert Madonna’s position on the throne as
the Queen because of forward-thinking production or a particularly
relentless promotional campaign. Instead, it serves as a reminder of
what Madonna has always represented (and what most other modern pop
stars fail to truly grasp): Fun.
There’s the religious aspect–a signature characteristic in the Madonna
catalog. This time however, it’s back to Sunday School: Gone is Ester,
Kabbalah-centric songstress present in the earthier cuts of
Ray of Light and the Hebrew-soaked mysticism of tracks like
Confessions‘ “Isaac.” No, Madonna Ciccone has us returning “Like A Prayer” territory on
MDNA, down on our knees and grasping at our rosaries for forgiveness.
Forget the bible: Everything one ever needed to know about Catholicism can be found in
MDNA.
most of these awesome remix tracks can be found on Youtube