May 16th, 2008

Myanmar Zimbabwe

advertisement


Will Madonna's latest be a hit?

(credit: www.amazon.com) 

Has Madonna become irrelevant?

What happened
Warner Bros. released Madonna’s Hard Candy on Tuesday, her 11th studio album. But some critics wonder if the 49-year-old pop icon can still compete in today’s youth-dominated music industry.

What the commentators said
Madonna “must fear irrelevance,” said James Hannaham in Salon, “but if so, her distress signals remain in the subtext.” Hard Candy “represents a high point in her Vatican II.” Madonna “sounds as honest as she’ll ever get,” and she’s “managed to throw parenthood into the mix without losing too much of her edge.” And now that she’s “becoming an elder stateswoman” in the “dance-pop world,” her “longevity becomes yet another attraction.”

Madonna’s image “used to be surprising and daring,” said Rashod D. Ollison in the Baltimore Sun. “But that was a long time ago.” On Hard Candy, she “seems to be playing catch-up with musical trends in urban-pop, which often look backward for inspiration.” Her latest is “a lifeless album in which Madonna’s disconnection with the material is palpable throughout,” and it “sounds as if she’d rather be doing yoga or writing another children’s book.”

Hard Candy “actually sounds youthful,” said Steven Mirkin in Variety. Madonna was smart to recruit producers the Neptunes, Timbaland, Justin Timberlake, and "Timbaland protégé Nate ‘Danja’ Hills” to “give the album a very of-the-minute sheen.” There’s even “a melancholy vulnerability lurking in the songs’ corners, and when she lets down her guard,” her latest album “can stand up to her best work.” But it’s also “suffused with a predatory desperation that’s not pretty at any age—here, it’s as taut and affectless as the Botoxed faces of The Real Housewives of Orange County.”

Name:

Email Address:

Comments:

Enter character string as shown below
CAPTCHA Code

Recent comments | 5 total
Ribado UMAR | May 15th, 2008
Life begins at 40, so I still like Madonna's Music, after all she is not that old, she is still a beautiful lady.
Rdlnsd | May 8th, 2008
Still trying to count her out? After 25 years why can't people understand that what Madonna really represents is pure POP music joy. Like her or not...you can never take away the 200 million in sales or her Worldwide success. Stop trying to break it all down and just have fun with it. Hard Candy is fresh, fun, and staying true to what a Madonna record has always been. A good time.
Rodney | May 8th, 2008
I think Madonnas newest work is very much a deperate attempt to still sound young....stick to childrens books and yoga grandma....do I see another CHER??? Hard Candy is that the same as old candy? Calm it down please
anonymous | April 30th, 2008
madonna jumping on bandwagons again http://aishamusic.com/lawsuit_many_artists_madonna_stole_from.htm
Warren | April 30th, 2008
I think her album is wondeful. It is hot and up tempo music. The album is going to be number one next week.
SEE ALL READER COMMENTS >
opinion awards

advertisement

FROM THE MAGAZINE

Gossip 

With her alleged stalker seated across the room, Uma Thurman read aloud a note from the obsessed fan in a New York City courtroom last week. The actress said she “was completely freaked out” by a card from Jack Jordan with a drawing of an open grave and the message, “My hands should be on your body at all times.” Jordan is accused of harassing Thurman through frequent attempts to contact her. His notes “reflected this relationship that I unfortunately imagined that we had,” he testified, and were “meant to amuse her, to her endear her to me.”

PICK OF THE DAY'S CARTOONS MORE CARTOONS >
 
Most Read
Most E-mailed

SUBSCRIBE | PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS AND CONDITIONS | AD INFO | PRESS ROOM | JOBS | FEEDBACK | CUSTOMER SERVICE | EVENTS
© 2008 The Week Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. THE WEEK® is a registered trademark owned by Felix Dennis.
THEWEEKDAILY.COM is a trademark owned by Felix Dennis.