The Verdict Is in: Madonna's New Confessions II Album a Critical Triumph
Critics say the 15th studio album revives her dance-pop formula, while Spotify reported 13.07 million first-day streams.
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8 Articles
The verdict is in: Madonna's new Confessions II album a critical triumph
Confessions II, which was released Friday, takes everything that made its 2005 precursor Confessions on a Dance Floor a critical success and finds a way to make it feel fresh again. Critics are calling it her best work in decades.
In an hour-plus dance music odyssey, Madonna revisits old flames, formative places, an unfamiliar vulnerability, and even regret. It's her best album in a long time.
With nods at its beginnings in the New York club scene, the new music of the pop queen is a dance floor celebration, designed to make you dance until you get soaked in sweat
While the world wonders about the age of popstar she continues to talk about something else, even with Confessions II. And perhaps this is the true message of freedom against the criticism of the passing time
Madonna - Confessions II (Album Review) - Stereoboard UK
Photo: Rafael Pavarotti Madonna has always been both an artist and the creative director of her career. Yet her greatest records have been built on genuine collaboration – whether with Patrick Leonard, William Orbit, Mirwais or, in this case, Stuart Price. With Price, she has recaptured a kind of magic that has eluded her for the best part of two decades, returning to the scene of one of her greatest triumphs in order to summon another one.
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