Madonna - Ray Of Light [album]

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  • Yoshie
    Legend
    • 16 Jan 2006
    • 29012







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    • Yoshie
      Legend
      • 16 Jan 2006
      • 29012

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      • Yoshie
        Legend
        • 16 Jan 2006
        • 29012





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        • Yoshie
          Legend
          • 16 Jan 2006
          • 29012





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          • Yoshie
            Legend
            • 16 Jan 2006
            • 29012



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            • Yoshie
              Legend
              • 16 Jan 2006
              • 29012

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              • Yoshie
                Legend
                • 16 Jan 2006
                • 29012



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                • Yoshie
                  Legend
                  • 16 Jan 2006
                  • 29012

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                  • Yoshie
                    Legend
                    • 16 Jan 2006
                    • 29012

                    [youtube:vn6bymrt]wCvFAjQ4Aqk[/youtube:vn6bymrt]

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                    • spiritboy
                      Legend
                      • 11 Jan 2004
                      • 36868

                      Re: Madonna - Ray Of Light [album]

                      Gosh, she was stunning that era.
                      Cha Cha Instructor

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                      • MusicRecords
                        Legend
                        • 17 Feb 2012
                        • 18237

                        I wish she would've done a tour in 1998/99 to support this album directly ...
                        Hi, I’m Nick

                        Follow me babes
                        https://www.instagram.com/nick_rivas/

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                        • innocenteyes
                          Legend
                          • 08 May 2006
                          • 11184

                          I decided to listen to this album again yesterday night after Yoshie slayed this thread.

                          Forgot how strong the melodies are. Madonna's voice is a delight on this record as she sounds so pure and calmed. The songs are very well produced too.

                          My Top 5:

                          1. Sky Fits Heaven (one of her very best songs ever)
                          2. Ray Of Light
                          3. Drowned World / Substitute For Love
                          4. Frozen
                          5. Mer Girl

                          I'll listen to the last half of the album tonight, as well as Has To Be.

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                          • Yoshie
                            Legend
                            • 16 Jan 2006
                            • 29012

                            Originally posted by MusicRecords
                            I wish she would've done a tour in 1998/99 to support this album directly ...
                            Me too, but I think the album was well represented on the almost flawless Drowned World Tour, which is by far my favourite Madonna concert. I think the only song from Ray of Light that was truly missing is, perhaps bizarrely given that it birthed said image, Nothing Really Matters in the show's geisha segment. I'd love to have seen Skin performed live as it was rehearsed with Bedtime Story for the Reinvention Tour. Hopefully she'll perform it one day.

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                            • BodyShop
                              Superstar
                              • 25 Feb 2015
                              • 7595

                              Thank you so much for all the work and effort put in this thread,Yoshie!
                              So many things are familiar for me from back in the day but there are so many things I hadn't seen until now .
                              A treasure !
                              Thanks a lot ! <3

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                              • Artoo
                                Moderator
                                • 01 May 2005
                                • 35571

                                Re: Madonna - Ray Of Light [album]

                                I’m sort of glad she didn’t tour ROL because DWT was such a statement. Had she toured ROL she’d have mixed it up with older songs and I love DWT because it’s eternal proof she genuinely didn’t need they in that moment in time.

                                She returned to the touring scene with 2 brand new albums, proved her worth and then went on the road with an unofficial GH tour and brought back all of her biggest hits, most of which hadn’t been performed for 10 - 20 years, and charged a fortune. Yes, I think she should have included Skin and Nothing Really Matters, but in fairness I don’t miss them and DWT is no worse for their exclusion.

                                The tour I wish she had done was a Bedtime Stories Tour. The album is so intimate, gentle, dark and depressing... I’d have loved to have seen how she have presented that and which of her hits she’d have picked.
                                I don't need no good advice, I'm already wasted​.

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                                • CandyShop
                                  Manager
                                  • 01 Feb 2015
                                  • 2638

                                  Originally posted by Yoshie
                                  Originally posted by MusicRecords
                                  I wish she would've done a tour in 1998/99 to support this album directly ...
                                  Me too, but I think the album was well represented on the almost flawless Drowned World Tour, which is by far my favourite Madonna concert.
                                  So true!!
                                  That Tour is SO underrated!!!

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                                  • CandyShop
                                    Manager
                                    • 01 Feb 2015
                                    • 2638

                                    even Candy Parfume Girl which is my least fave on the album, is a track I enjoy to see it performed live.

                                    Again ..... Drowned World Tour is soooo underrated .... Amazing tour

                                    [youtube:t2r2vq88]zm09uHE5wJM[/youtube:t2r2vq88]

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                                    • GetBack
                                      Legend
                                      • 11 Jun 2010
                                      • 34075

                                      She looked stunning in the Ray of Light era.

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                                      • Westen
                                        Legend
                                        • 11 Jun 2013
                                        • 13425

                                        Articles are not slowing down. RollingStone published another one!

                                        [center:mnifnmhb]Madonna&#39;s &#39;Ray of Light&#39; at 20: Celebrating Her Psychedelic Masterwork
                                        Inspired by motherhood and yoga, the icon reinvented herself on her most passionate album to date[/center:mnifnmhb]

                                        Happy birthday to Ray of Light, the masterwork that introduced the world to Cosmic Psychedelic Madonna, 20 years ago this week. Ray of Light was the queen's first proper album in four years, dropping on March 3rd, 1998, a week after she unveiled her new sound with the single "Frozen." It was Madonna's motherhood album, after giving birth to daughter Lourdes. It was her avant-techno move, with U.K. producer William Orbit. It was her spiritual-awakening statement. But Ray of Light holds up as her most soulful and passionate music ever – a libido-crazed disco-hippie mom pushing 40 and proud of it, flaunting her artiest emotional extremes. As "Ray of Light" boomed out of radios all year, with Madonna chanting her mantra – "And I feeeel! And I feeeel!" – she seemed to be feeling twice as hard as everyone else.
                                        By all rights, Ray of Light should have been a pretentious disaster. Yet it turned out to be a new peak, setting Ms. Ciccone off on a glorious four-year run: the 1999 single "Beautiful Stranger," the 2000 album Music, the 2001 Drowned World Tour. If you're the kind of fan who reveres her as a musician first, not a celebrity, this was the hot streak of her life. You could compare it to Elvis Presley's mature phase with the '68 Comeback Special and From Elvis in Memphis. Except at 42, Elvis was dead, while Madonna was just gearing up for her next phase, where she discovered Kabbalah, converted to Judaism and started asking people to call her "Esther." Never say she isn't ecumenical.

                                        Ray of Light is easily the most intense pop album ever made by a 39-year-old – Madonna spends these songs celebrating her newborn daughter, mourning her long-lost mother and reckoning with her messed-up adult self. She also contemplates her newfound Lilith Fair–era consciousness, going off about karma and yoga. As she explained in Billboard, "I feel like I've been enlightened, and that it's my responsibility to share what I've learned so far with the world." Ominous words from any pop star, let alone this one. But she made it feel mighty real. (Like another album we all loved in 1998: Hello Nasty, a spiritual manifesto from the opening act on her first tour, the Beastie Boys.) Even those of us who'd devoted our lives to worshipping Madonna weren't prepared for an album this great.

                                        Strange as it seems now, people back then were mildly obsessive about the idea of Madonna being "over." Predicting the end of her career was a weirdly popular Nineties fad, like swing dancing or psychic hotlines. The semi-monthly "is she finally done?" debate kicked up every time she did something ridiculous, which she did all the damn time, from her poetic musings in the Sex book ("My pussy is the temple of learning") to her erotic thriller Body of Evidence, where she played a serial killer who specialized in humping men to death. The U.K. music mag Melody Maker, for its 1992 year-in-review issue, polled experts on the year's big question: Has Madonna turned into a pathetic exhibitionist? The wisest answer came from (of all people) Right Said Fred's lead singer: "Being an exhibitionist is only pathetic when nobody's watching you."

                                        The queen kept expanding her sound – the Babyface collabo "Take a Bow" spent seven weeks at Number One in 1995. She also did vocal training for the Evita soundtrack. (Count me among the fans who thinks Babyface taught her a hell of a lot more about singing than Andrew Lloyd Webber did.) But it was still considered exotic to take Madonna seriously for her music, rather than her image. It took Ray of Light to change that.

                                        Her producer William Orbit had just worked wonders with U.K. ingenue Beth Orton, on her classic folkie-techno debut Trailer Park. Madonna playfully renamed herself "Veronica Electronica," throwing in lots of what she and Orbit called "teenage-angst guitars." They set the tone in the opening ballad, an emotional powerhouse called "Drowned World/Substitute for Love." There's too many gimmicks in the mix: moody electro bleeps, wind chimes, sitar, drum 'n' bass snare rattles, Sixties string samples, a very 1998-sounding vibraphone. Yet it never feels crowded or contrived – Madonna gives herself room to breathe deep, as she sings about letting go of the past and moving on. She keeps looping back to a mantra from John Lennon: "Now I find I've changed my mind." (The Beatles' "Help," where John confessed his adult despair, was the perfect song to echo here.) When the rock guitar kicks in, at the three-minute point, it hits like a moment of pure serenity.

                                        The goth power ballad "Frozen" was the first hit, but "Ray of Light" was the one that really summed up the new Madonna in one big kundalini disco rush. It came from the same place as the Talking Heads' similarly titled Remain in Light, about how the world moves on a woman's hips. The album's premise was trip-hop, as we called it then – the moody electro-funk sound perfected by Massive Attack, whose mind-freak opus Mezzanine dropped around the same time. (She'd worked with them in 1995 – a bluer-than-blue cover of Marvin Gaye's "I Want You.") I interviewed Massive Attack in March 1998, right after Ray came out, and naively asked if they'd noticed how much it sounded like them. Yes, in fact, they noticed. As Daddy G cheerfully told me, "I put on that first track and said, 'Here we go again.'"

                                        The music is full of odd hooks – the Moroccan ghaita of "Swim," the bossa nova of "To Have and Not to Hold," the Britpop guitar in "Ray of Light." She makes the Sanskrit chant "Shanti/Ashtangi" sound like Devo's version of "Working in a Coal Mine." In "Sky Fits Heaven," she takes her sacred text from a Gap ad – the iconic TV spot starring bartender/poet Max Blagg and Twin Peaks siren Madchen Amick: "The sky fits heaven, so ride it!" (She even cut Blagg in on the credits.) And her spiritual pretensions were ripe for mockery – hence the brilliant parody in the Drew Barrymore flick Music and Lyrics, where the pop star shares her "Buddhism-in-a-thong philosophy."

                                        Ray of Light sounds like an anthology of "only in the Nineties" ideas, from its coffeehouse-techno vibe to the whole notion of seeking mystic wisdom from a Gap ad. Yet the most Nineties thing about it is the way Madonna assumes you'll put in the time the music demands. It's pop designed to unfold over time, from an artist serenely confident her listeners will pay attention. If Ray of Light came out now, it would get dismissive Friday-morning quickie reviews listing the flaws of her latest rollout strategy. But because people still paid for their music in 1998, people really did put in the time to absorb it. Buying an album was an emotional commitment – walking into the store, plucking the CD off the rack, taking it into your home. You gave it a few chances before you gave up. So people stuck with Ray of Light, even if they initially laughed at it.

                                        She picked the right moment to swerve hard into adulthood, just as a new crop of teen stars was rising. By the end of 1998, MTV's newest star was a young Madonna fan named Britney Spears. Madonna kept tarting up the psychedelia with her bizarre 1999 paisley-disco hit "Beautiful Stranger," from the soundtrack of Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. It's Madonna at her most breezily seductive, not to mention her funniest. (It's also a righteous salute to then-incarcerated black hippie pioneer Arthur Lee and his band Love, goosing their 1966 flower-child classic "She Comes in Colors.") Music was equally masterful, except now she was into line-dancing and cowgirl hats. Yet Ray of Light still stands apart in Madonna's career. After 20 years of heavy listening, it remains the album of a lifetime.

                                        Madonna's collaborators on 'Ray of Light' delve into the making of the star's pivotal 1998 LP. Watch below.
                                        https://www.rollingstone.com/music/feat ... ck-w517002

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                                        • BodyShop
                                          Superstar
                                          • 25 Feb 2015
                                          • 7595



                                          Her new Facebook cover photo

                                          The profile pic is the ROL album cover .

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