Madge and Mariah Switch Beds

On Friday night at the Ritz, that trumped-up gay bar up in Hells Kitchen, something entirely too ordinary happened once too often: Madonna’s “Get Together” came on.
That’s the one that goes: “Can we get together? / I really, I really want to be with you.” (OMG, LOL, she’s so like deep.)
The gays pretty much always freak when something from her 2005 album Confessions on a Dance Floor gets played. It has hit its expiration date hard. They like it—but at this point, it’s as inflected with nostalgia as “Borderline” or “La Isla Bonita.” And on Friday night, according to two attendees, a distinct expression of “meh” accompanied the ritual playing of the Madge.
The DJ might as well have brought out some Laura Nyro. Immaterial, girl!
And so Madonna’s sterling collection of gay mini-anthems is played out. Time goes by—so quickly!
The Asperger-techno affect of Confessions (“In the evidence of its brilliance,” she repeats unfeelingly on one track) and its intention-span disorder (“I’m gonna tell you about love,” she promises, on the same track—but then she never does! What up?) made for intensely irritating listening … the first eight times around.
But and then. Last year I bought a mildly expensive pair of Bose over-ear headphones—and I found out that the album was actually brilliantly assembled. It was a noncommercial, Euro-friendly whomp of giddy-serious club music. (Lesson learned. Throw those awful iPod earbuds away.)
It might even be her only real album.
But while it took her deeper into gay hearts, it took her out of the increasingly segmented radio world of America. And that seems to be where she now intends to return—the radio.
Over the past week, her newest single, “4 Minutes,” to be released later this month, has been leaking in lawyer-influenced stops and starts on the Internet.
It is an incredible mess. From what can be judged through the clippy audio of the leak, at least, it is awful. It has Justin Timberlake on it, which is just weird, and tardy.
And, fine, let’s just say it, and risk the everlasting wrath of her empire. Why is Justin Timberlake cutting a track with his mom?
It sounds like something cheesy for the soundtrack of a “Heroes” tie-in giveaway CD, with her vocal way back and a thumpy beat not quite thumpy enough and a terrible non-hook hook. (O.K., yes: In a month, for two whole days, I’ll think it’s the best song ever. That’ll pass.)
So the gays are in a quandary. They’re done with Confessions. What if they hate Hard Candy—release date April 29—this newest calculated collection of semi-music?
They really might. This album isn’t intended to buy their love. (Unlike last time around. For Confessions, Madonna showed at the New York gay clubs to hand-sell it to her longtime influencers.)
But now: “Madonna remains ensconced in club mode but this time adds an urban hip hop beat,” goes the press release for the new album. Oh … an URBAN hip-hop beat. Good grief!
Meanwhile, back in New York—because, despite her silly “I Love New York” track on the last album, Madonna left us for England, in an unfortunate trade for David Beckham’s wife; heck, she bought an actual pub in the West End the other day—Mariah Carey is preparing to eat the rest of Madonna’s lunch with her incredibly titled E=mc². Next Page >

















I love Madonna and Mariah and I am as gay as the come.
Mariah's album has been getting RAVE reviews from Rolling Stone, B96 in Chicago, VH1 online and other notable music insiders that have been lucky enough to preview the tracks. "That Chick" and "Bye Bye" sound the perfect songs to keep the gays happy through another summer of Mimi! Down the Jersey shore of course ; P (see you at Paradise!)
Madonna is an icon, but from what you wrote it sounds like she won't have the "hits" on this one. Two leaked tracks (both "first" singles at some point) were pretty weak. She's the performer, Mariah's the singer. Let's just have both, shall we?
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No offense, but whoever wrote this "commentary" sounds like a "RUBBISH GAY" and doesn't really know what he's talking about. Thank GOD there's more to life than being a gay club kid, ugh.
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I've never in my life met someone who thinks Bedtime Stories is among Madonna's best albums, and anyone who would say they think Pink, Britney (???) or Janet (???!!!) are chipping away at Madonna's accomplishments is not a very good "observer." The fact is, some people won't like Madonna's new record and many will, but it's such lazy nonsense that's been written a dozen different ways to argue that this, THIS, could be the one thing that will cast Madonna out of the garden forever. I wasn't wild about "Candy Store" or "Beat Goes On" (though I loved the remixes of the latter that leaked or were bootlegged), but the version of "4 Minutes" that I've heard is totally credible hip-pop and a lot of fun. I think it's going to do well. And that has nothing to do with Mariah Carey's probable E=MC2 hit.
Well done for writing an article which manages to be ageist, homophobic, sexist while so badly written that it manages to be completely hysterical (sadly unintentionally). Is the New York Observer handing out columns to sheltered 12 year olds now?
I actually love Bedtime Stories! ....except for "bedtime stories" made with Bjork. Funny you should mention Bedtime Stories and Confessions album because I have one quibble: Why did Madonna forget to remember that she had a song called Forbidden Love on Bedtime and have ANOTHER song of that title in Confessions?! I actually love both songs but hey Madge, I think you have a lot of people/worshipers in your entourage to get your attention about that "oversight" :) And yep... running to Timbaland and "Timba"-lake smacks of desperation. But we still love you Madonna... just keep giving us good music and everything will be fine. Cheers!
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