what's up with "Did You Do It?" though!
Moderator: tdc2000
I think it is supposed to be has sexy/naughty as Justify My LoveMerci wrote:Stupid Qthe way she says waiting on "Waiting" is very similar to "Justify My Love" is it supposed to be like a sample/reference?!
I totally agree!crazycool wrote: I still think it's her best album to date.
I'd much prefer listening to Erotica (As well as Bedtime Stories) than the bigger "blockbuster" albums like Confessions + Ray Of Light
People who don't know her say she always follows what's current and what's on fire...crazycool wrote:Really? I've never heard anyone even suggest that.TiagoRodrigues wrote:People always say she never takes risks on her music

Where Life Begins, Secret Garden, Waiting, Bad Girl (which actually was her lowest charting single in ten years when released) all come to mind as totally unlike anything people expected to hear from Madonna before that album.Grybop wrote:Are we talking about the same album here? Yeah, it may have been different by Madonna's standards, but all the singles, possibly bar Erotica, didn't sound out of place at all on contemporary radio back then, so I don't get where that "very musically different" comes from?
When you say singles i can think of Deeper And Deeper and Rain as commercial songs...Erotica, Fever, Bye Bye Baby, Bad Girl don't have really that commercial sound...it's never gonna be the kind of songs to be played 24 hours per day on radiostations...Grybop wrote:Are we talking about the same album here? Yeah, it may have been different by Madonna's standards, but all the singles, possibly bar Erotica, didn't sound out of place at all on contemporary radio back then, so I don't get where that "very musically different" comes from?
Jesus! Madonna was the most known pop-star before releasing Erotica...she always released songs that anyone would like...this album compared with everything else she released was NOT commercial at the time, and surely nothing her fanbase wanted to hear!Grybop wrote:Hmmm, yeah , OK. That says it all.TiagoRodrigues wrote:Erotica, Fever, Bye Bye Baby, Bad Girl don't have really that commercial sound...I get the feeling you've never heard non-commercial music, so there's no point in this.
I agree. You're viewing Madonna from a post-ROL perspective where she's done a lot of "different" things. There is nothing off Erotica that has had any sort of enduring airplay power. Rain might get played once in a blue moon but besides that, have you heard Erotica, Deeper And Deeper (mainstream but it is largely forgotten in the sea of her hits) or Bad Girl on the radio anytime past 1993-1994? At a time where Whitney Houston was doing The Bodyguard, Erotica could've been pig Latin compared to most of what was on US radio in 1992-1993. Up until the release of Erotica, Madonna was one of the most dependent artists in terms of being able to score massive hit singles. She might've had the occasional chart misstep (Oh Father breaking her top 5 streak for example) but for the most part she would always rebound with the next single. Erotica was the first time where a Madonna album wasn't guaranteed to spawn four or five blockbuster singles that would dominate radio. Rain being the only song on the album that has managed any sort of recurrent airplay (and then it's very tiny when compared to the recurrent airplay many of her 80's hits get to this day) once the initial chart runs of the singles were over.TiagoRodrigues wrote:Jesus! Madonna was the most known pop-star before releasing Erotica...she always released songs that anyone would like...this album compared with everything else she released was NOT commercial at the time, and surely nothing her fanbase wanted to hear!Grybop wrote:Hmmm, yeah , OK. That says it all.TiagoRodrigues wrote:Erotica, Fever, Bye Bye Baby, Bad Girl don't have really that commercial sound...I get the feeling you've never heard non-commercial music, so there's no point in this.
If that's not taking risks then i don't know what is!
If Madonna's career ended the first time someone predicted she'd be over soon, she would've fallen off the charts by 1986-1987. I saw a Billboard review from one of her Virgin Tour performances (April/May 1985) that said her career would be on the outs within six months and that Cyndi Lauper would completely leave her in the dust.TiagoRodrigues wrote:yeah...in 1992 who would've thought she would still be relevante in 2010?![]()
Seriously...how many times people already killed her career? 1992? 1994? 2003?![]()
I didn't include 2008 because Hard Candy was still the 10th best selling album of the year...that's not bad in any way
NothingFails wrote:If Madonna's career ended the first time someone predicted she'd be over soon, she would've fallen off the charts by 1986-1987. I saw a Billboard review from one of her Virgin Tour performances (April/May 1985) that said her career would be on the outs within six months and that Cyndi Lauper would completely leave her in the dust.TiagoRodrigues wrote:yeah...in 1992 who would've thought she would still be relevante in 2010?![]()
Seriously...how many times people already killed her career? 1992? 1994? 2003?![]()
I didn't include 2008 because Hard Candy was still the 10th best selling album of the year...that's not bad in any way
I love Cyndi as wellNothingFails wrote:I always loved Cyndi and still do (I'm looking forward to her blues album coming out next month), but I think even back then it was evident that Madonna was going to be bigger and last longer. Cyndi's image in the 1980's was very novelty driven and she was slow to adapt and change (think how Boy George's career faded fairly fast because he was slow to change while Annie Lennox was initially expected to be a flash in the pan but she was smart and changed her image and sound fairly quick and still has a career). Cyndi did change her sound and look but sadly the mainstream had quit caring by the time of A Night To Remember, Madonna worked overtime to make sure people knew she was planning to be around for the long haul.