It's been one hell of a week for Madonna. More
than three decades into her phenomenally successful, exceptionally prolific
music career, the undisputed Queen of Pop and Dance Anthem Enchantress
officially released her 13th studio album, "Rebel Heart," to critically
acclaimed reviews.
Ticket sales launched for her next concert
series, presumably entitled "The Rebel Heart Tour," which is
scheduled to kick off in Miami on August 29 and will continue worldwide through
at least early 2016. This of course also means the Marketing Girl has embarked
on one of her legendarily calculated full-court-press media tours, which,
naturally and luckily, included several gay publications.
EDGE witnessed the media mayhem that only the
Material Girl can create firsthand last Monday night when Madonna sat down with
select members of the gay press at the Midtown Manhattan offices of her record
label, Interscope.
The album is arguably Madonna's best effort in
years. From the first single's deep-house, gospel-infused empowerment anthem,
"Living For Love" (her record 44th number-one hit on Billboard's Hot
Dance Club Songs chart) to moody and mature ballads like "Devil Pray"
and "Joan of Arc," the hauntingly redemptive "Ghosttown"
(the likely next single), and just about every other genre in between, the
album fully embraces its diversity.
Among the many standouts in the epic 19-song
set (just 14 are featured on the standard album) are the ridiculously
over-the-top "Holy Water" ("Whenever I write about sex, I always
do it tongue-in-cheek," she recently told Rolling Stone. "[This song]
is obviously meant to be funny.") and the girl-done-been-wronged track
"HeartBreakCity." And then there's the deluxe album's fierce finale,
the Avicii-produced, rock-tinged title track "Rebel Heart" (oddly not
included on the standard album).
Mondays are almost always a drag. Except on the
rare occasion when Madonna offers to sit down, face-to-face, with an intimate
group of gay journalists to talk about her new album, her favorite
collaborators, her favorite carburetors, and, well, just about anything and
everything -- except what she has planned for her next tour.
They say you should never meet your icons or
heroes, because you'll likely be disappointed if they don't live up to the
pedestal upon which you've placed them. In this particular case, though,
speaking as a hardcore, decades-long loyal fan, I am thrilled to report that
"they" were wrong. The meeting, interview and brief impromptu photo
shoot that followed were everything for which any gushing fan could hope.
As polite and professional as any superstar
you'll surely ever meet - it's quite obviously not her first time at the rodeo
- Madonna went out of her way to personally greet and shake hands with all of
her would-be questioners, not just with intent eye contact, but also a
seemingly genuine interest in actually hearing who we were. Perhaps her Stevie
Nicks-inspired flowing black gown with black chiffon half-cape and black lace
gloves helped balance an ethereal yet affable grounding that encouraged her
casual kindness and candidness. Or maybe it was the eucalyptus oil-scented
humidifier situated by her side that delicately lubricated not only her vocal
chords but the all-white-embellished ambiance as well? We may never know, and,
honestly, it does not much matter.
Here's a taste of what the gorgeous,
golden-locked goddess had to share.
EDGE: I'd like to ask you about the
process of the album -- it is a great album, by the way -- I know that you've
generally stuck with one producer on the last few albums --
MADONNA: Thank you. I try to...
EDGE: And this time you just let it rip
with multiple producers. How was it different approaching it this way?
MADONNA: I didn't mean to work with so many
different producers. First of all, I didn't know that Avicii was going to have
a life-threatening illness and disappear. So a lot of the songs that I wrote
with him or his songwriting team, I ended up having to go out and find other
producers to work on them, to finish the songs with me.
And then Diplo came along and I very much
wanted to work with him, and he also wanted to work with me, but I didn't know
that he also was working with 5,000 other people and had to get on a jet and go
to the other side of the world to play festivals and then go here and play that
and then go here and do that -- just getting him to sit still for a couple of
days to finish a song was a challenge.
So I ended up working with a lot of young DJs
and I naively didn't think it through. Oh, it's summertime -- it's the
festivals, and they're on tour, and I'll be lucky if I get them for three days,
so a lot of that had to factor in. OK, I can't wait for three months for this
dude to come back. I have to find somebody else.
EDGE: Was it ultimately satisfying? Or
you wouldn't do it that way again?
MADONNA: Ultimately satisfying...? [Long
Pause] If I had my way and I could do it again, I would make people sign an
iron-clad agreement that they would stay and ensure they would not leave me
until all the songs were finished.
ROUNDTABLE # 2: You were forced to change album
release schedule because of the leaks that happened last year. The next time
you go to create a new album or film, is your practice going to change because
of the way these new tracks [were leaked]?
MADONNA: Well, I'm never going to put
anything on a server and send information back and forth as had been done. That
was the first mistake. That's when we first realized that the music was being
hacked on the server. But then the last leak came from a mastering lab and that
was just a technician's oversight. After everything had happened and everyone
knew we had to crack down and be really super secure, someone sent the record
on the server - AGAIN! My hacker's very clever, obviously. It was not up for
very long, but it was snatched. So I would never do anything like that again.
Hand delivery.
ROUNDTABLE # 3: Did it change anything about the
way the album was -- like how the tracks were sequenced?
MADONNA: It changed EVERYTHING. First of
all, it drove me insane and made me feel an overwhelming sense of anxiety, and
it made me second-guess everything, because suddenly I thought, "Oh God,
everyone's heard all these demos" -- because there were some demos that I
actually liked the demo version of and I thought, well, they've heard the demo
and now they're going to be expecting other things. Then they heard the next
level of versions and it kept making me think, "Should I change it or
should I just leave it how it was?" I was second-guessing everything,
rather than just choosing for myself and putting it out as I would normally, as
an artist. It started making me think, I don't even know which version I should
be putting out!
Because some people were like [of the demos],
Oh, I love it, I love it. And I was like, No, don't love it because it's not
done. So it made me crazy.
ROUNDTABLE # 3: It was devastating as somebody who
has always admired your work, too, I thought, wow, what a horrible thing to do.
MADONNA: Yeah, and also very confusing.
Because a lot of these things were being shared on my supposed "fan
sites," and I was thinking, "Well, my fans should be supporting me
and protecting me." So I don't know -- the whole thing confused me...still
does. And what [the hacker] did -- he's in jail in Israel -- what he's done is
considered a white-collar crime, so I don't even know what's going to happen to
him. I hope he goes to jail for a long time. But let's not dwell on that stuff,
though [smiles and laughs].
ROUNDTABLE # 4: Of all the collaborators you worked
with on this album, who was the biggest surprise -- or was there a particular
track that you felt was the most unexpected?
MADONNA: Hmmm...I felt like I wrote a lot of
good songs with Avicii's writing team, and I didn't expect that, because I
ended up writing a lot of personal and very soulful songs with them, whom I
refer to as my Viking Harem, who are all really wonderful, intelligent, soulful
people, and they made me feel really comfortable. So I guess I felt like I was
safe enough to write those kind of songs, and that surprised me.
EDGE: We're all very excited about the
upcoming tour. Can you give us a preview of what you have planned?
MADONNA: No. [GROUP LAUGHS] Now why would I
do that? I want it to be a surprise for you.
[Editor's Note: With some floor seats selling
as high as $860 at Madison Square Garden - and others legally
"reselling" as high as $8,155 at the same venue - without any arenas
sold out or second nights announced thus far, perhaps a little teaser may have been
wise and helpful?]
EDGE: I'll accept that. Getting back to
the collaborator issue, who do you feel -- over the years you've worked with so
many people -- who's pushed you the furthest as an artist, a writer, and a
performer? Who challenged you the most?
MADONNA: Well... [long pause]...I would say
as a songwriter, working with Toby Gad -- he really pushed me a lot. He was
constantly questioning my choice of words and sometimes I would get really
irritated with him. "Just because I like it, okay? Just leave me alone.
The song is finished. Stop." And then we'd be done and he'd send me an
email, What about this one little word? He'd just drive me crazy. I'd be
calling him an SS Officer, which he's clearly not -- he's the sweetest, most
lovely guy ever. He really pushed me.
And Diplo really pushed me. As crazy as
everybody thinks he is - "he's a fun party boy," whatever -- he
really was particular about lyrics and praising me on my vocal performances. He
pushed me a lot, too. Of course I don't like it, but it served me well on this
record.
EDGE: DJ Paulo, who did a remix of
"Living For Love" --
MADONNA: Yeah, yeah, he's amazing!
EDGE: He's going to be playing at Viva
[at Stage 48 at 48th St. & 11th Avenue in Manhattan] in a couple weeks. If
you want to go, just let us know. [GROUP LAUGHS]
MADONNA: Is he really? What date?
EDGE: Black Party weekend, which I
believe is March 21st, Saturday night?
MADONNA: [To Publicist Liz Rosenberg] Am I
here that weekend?
LIZ: Yeah, you may be.
EDGE: He is so amazing live! [The party
is produced by] John Blair, who used to do Roxy Saturdays.
MADONNA: Well, [Paulo] better drop
"Living For Love" ... or I'm not coming! [GROUP LAUGHS]
ROUNDTABLE # 5: Thematically and lyrically, I would
say "Rebel Heart" is a lot more self-referential than you've been in
the past. During the process of the writing and the production, was that
something you did maybe intentionally, or was it just part of the process, like
you're looking back on your career now?
MADONNA: I don't know, is the only answer I
can tell you. I didn't set out to write certain kinds of songs, I just set out
to write GOOD songs, and that was the mood I was in and that was what I was
channeling. Sometimes I was in nostalgic moods and looking back; sometimes I
was in the mood to write a song as I was writing in my journal, and reveal
certain parts of myself that I was ready to reveal.
ROUNDTABLE # 5: You've talked in interviews about
the way you approached this album was that you wanted to go about it in a
singer/songwriter approach, and a lot of the songs are like that -- without the
production, all the [bells & whistles] -- you could perform them without
all that.
MADONNA: Like when we run out of oil, and
then we run out of electricity, I can just light a candle and strum my guitar
and sing you a song, yeah.
ROUNDTABLE # 1: I wanted to ask you about one of my
favorite songs on the album, "Body Shop" --
MADONNA: YAY!
ROUNDTABLE # 1: What I love about it is that the
method of music is folksy, like you said, and maybe a little bit like a
lullaby, but then you listen to the words and they're --
MADONNA: Sexually provocative.
ROUNDTABE # 1: Was that your intention to contrast
the instrumental and music with the lyrics?
MADONNA: No. Again, it just happened. I was
working with Toby Gad who spent a lot of time in India, and actually there's a
sitar -- the song has a very Indian flavor to it -- and I liked the idea: a car
-- the body of a car -- it's a kind of sexual metaphor -- what you do TO a car,
what you do IN a car -- DRIVE. Lots of innuendos, lots of fun. I mean, we all
love a really cute mechanic, right?
ROUNDTABLE # 2: "Body Shop" is also one
of my favorite songs. If you were a car, what type of car would you be?
[GROUP LAUGHS]
MADONNA: [Long pause] ... that's a good one
... I'm probably a Bentley.
EDGE: I was going to say Lamborghini.
MADONNA: Lamborghini...But I might be an
Aston Martin. And then I might be a Jaguar. And then I might be a Cadillac. So
it depends on what day it is. I'm not a Smart Car.
[GROUP LAUGHS]
ROUNDTABLE # 5: Back to the "Living For
Love" video, is [this] going to be something we're going to get to see
again?
MADONNA: You mean the cinematic aspect of
it, and the storytelling aspect of it? I guess so. The thing about that song,
it's such a passionate song. I had to present it in a passionate way, and I
used mythology to tell the story, with the story of the Minotaur - the matador
- fighting for love. And the color red. And flowers. Horns, and death. And
naked men. You know, the important things in life.
I don't know. I don't want to make every video
the same. But I did love the richness of that video. To me it felt like a
painting that came to life. That's what I was trying to do. But I wouldn't want
to do that for every video. Like when I do "Bitch, I'm Madonna," it's
going to be a whole different aesthetic.
ROUNDTABLE #5: Well, I'm glad that one's getting a
video! [GROUP LAUGHS]
MADONNA: If Diplo has his way, there will be
one.
EDGE: Last year when you dressed up as
the Mother of Dragons for Purim, you looked amazing!
MADONNA: Thank you.
EDGE: Do you watch "Game of
Thrones?"
MADONNA: Of course. It's a family ritual.
Besides "Game of Thrones," which I watch with my kids -- we all watch
it together -- it's like a family bonding thing. The only other TV series I
watch are "True Detective" and an Irish series called "The
Fall."
ROUNDTABLE # 1: I wanted to ask you about Vene Vidi
Vici -- somebody talked about referencing your earlier work. Was it a trip down
memory lane for you, or were you trying to make a statement of moving past some
of those places where you were in the past, and are in a different place now?
MADONNA: It was a trip down memory lane. To
be honest, to be in this business for over 3 decades is -- I don't actually
think about it that much. But a lot of the people that I worked with were
asking me so many questions, like, What was it like -- What was Keith Haring
like? What was this person like? What was that person like? In a way,
sometimes, I think I underestimate what I've been through, and what I've
witnessed, and I think it was just important to do that.
ROUNDTABLE # 2: At this stage in your career, what
still frightens you?
MADONNA: Ignorance.
ROUNDTABLE # 3: Do your kids have a favorite song
of yours?
MADONNA: They really love "Bitch, I'm
Madonna." [GROUP LAUGHS] That's my teenagers' favorite song. My son
David's favorite song -- he plays guitar -- and he likes "Devil
Pray," that's his favorite.
EDGE: With Truth or Dare, you kind of
revolutionized reality TV. Any regrets about that?
MADONNA: No, I don't regret doing Truth or
Dare. I guess people show what they want to show. What kind of life you are
leading.
[AS THE INTERVIEW ENDS, LIZ PROCEEDS TO CALL IN
ASSISTANTS FOR PHOTO SHOOT.]
MADONNA: Should we stand up on the stage?
[MADONNA GETS MAKEUP TOUCHED UP]
LIZ: [TO ROUNDTABLE] You guys are not getting touched
up, I'm just telling you.
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