| | Madonna Like A Virgin CD Madonna Discography of CDs
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Includes rare 12" dance remixes previously unavailable on CD. Personnel: Madonna (vocals); Nile Rodgers (guitar, Synclavier); Lenny Pickett (saxophone); Rob Sabino (synthesizer); Bernard Edwards (bass); Tony Thompson (drums); Jimmy Bralower (programming); Curtis King, Frank Simms, George Simms, Brenda King (background vocals). Digitally remastered by Ted Jensen (Sterling Sound, New York, New York). Personnel: Madonna (vocals, background vocals); Nile Rodgers (guitar, Synclavier); Lenny Pickett (saxophone); Robert Sabino (synthesizer, bass synthesizer); Jimmy Bralower (drum programming); Curtis King, Frank Simms, Brenda King (background vocals). Audio Mixer: Jason Corsaro. Audio Remixers: Michael Hutchinson; Jellybean. Photographer: Steven Meisel. Arranger: Nile Rodgers. Madonna had already made serious waves with her 1983 self-titled debut, springing her irresistibly exuberant, sexy dance-pop onto an unsuspecting public. But it was 1984's LIKE A VIRGIN that exhibited the calculated pop mastery that would define the singer's career. Everything from the cover art (which features Madonna splayed out provocatively in a wedding dress) to the sleek production from Chic's Nile Rogers announced Madonna's arrival as the queen of pop. If only for the album's two gargantuan smash singles, the bouncy, coy, gold-digging ode "Material Girl" and the racy title cut, LIKE A VIRGIN would go down in pop history. The dominating force of both songs, their videos, and their subject matter helped make Madonna a household name. The rest of the album delivers too. The energetic shimmy of "Dress You Up" and "Angel" are infectious dance floor workouts, and her cover of Rose Royce's "Love Don't Live Here Anymore" is sharp and compelling. LIKE A VIRGIN still shines as an indispensable `80s dance-pop classic. Madonna had hits with her first album, even reaching the Top Ten twice with "Borderline" and "Lucky Star," but she didn't become a superstar, an icon, until her second album, Like a Virgin. She saw the opening for this kind of explosion and seized it, bringing in former Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers in as a producer, to help her expand her sound, and then carefully constructed her image as an ironic, ferociously sexy Boy Toy; the Steven Meisel-shot cover, capturing her as a buxom bride with a Boy Toy belt buckle on the front, and dressing after a night of passion, was as key to her reinvention as the music itself. Yet, there's no discounting the best songs on the record, the moments when her grand concepts are married to music that transcends the mere classification of dance-pop. These, of course, are "Material Girl" and "Like a Virgin," the two songs that made her an icon, and the two songs that remain definitive statements. They overshadow the rest of the record, not just because they are a perfect match of theme and sound, but because the rest of the album vacillates wildly in terms of quality. The other two singles, "Angel" and "Dress You Up," are excellent standard-issue dance-pop, and there are other moments that work well ("Over and Over," "Stay," the earnest cover of Rose Royce's "Love Don't Live Here"), but overall, it adds up to less than the sum of its parts -- partially because the singles are so good, but also because on the first album, she stunned with style and a certain joy. Here, the calculation is apparent, and while that's part of Madonna's essence -- even something that makes her fun -- it throws the record's balance off a little too much for it to be consistent, even if it justifiably made her a star. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Madonna had hits with her first album, even reaching the Top 10 twice with "Borderline" and "Lucky Star," but she didn't become a superstar, an icon until her second album, Like a Virgin. She saw the opening for this kind of explosion and seized it, bringing in former Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers in as a producer, to help her expand her sound, and then carefully constructed herQ (7/01, p.131) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...The record that propelled her into the stratosphere - and rightly so. The songs are smart, funny, sexy and irresistible..." Madonna Like A Virgin Songs Like A Virgin Music Review Average Rating: (4.9 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Ohhhhh! One of the best albums of the 80's. Hits Material Girl, Like A Virgin, Into he Groove are incomparable. Non-single songs Angel and Pretender were fantastic!
You must own this album Submitted by Irina (Ternopil, Ukraine) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Madonna rocks!!! Like a Virgin will always be a great album. This gave Madonna the megastardom and all the songs are very good. I like specially Dress You Up that unfortunately she stopped singing and Angel that was available on the first tour but she didnt record the alive version. This album is a must!!! Submitted by shoo-bee-doo (Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Great CD I think this is one of her best CDs. Submitted by a madonna fan (california) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Madonna is, by far, THE BEST ARTIST EVER!!! I have no words to express Madonna's talent. She is the best singer EVER. Ignore the critics, forget Whitney or Mariah. MADONNA WILL LAST FOREVER!!! Submitted by JOSHUA SOARS (BRAZIL) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Why can't she make music like this anymore?? This as well as her self-titled album prove that most times, the original is still the best. Even the filler is great, some of the other songs (Pretender, Dress You Up) are even better than the ones that were hits. Being an avid Madonna listener, I think she was best when she was considered "contoversial". This album, her self-titled album, & "Like A Prayer" shall reign supreme in the Madonna kingdom (of course, Ray of Light is great also). Submitted by ppgphreak101 (Southaven) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Like A Virgin CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Madonna CD (1983) Remastered
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$5.99 Includes rare 12" dance remixes previously unavailable on CD. Personnel: Madonna (vocals, cowbell); Reggie Lucas (guitar, programming); Ira Siegel, Curtis Hudson, Paul Pesco (guitar); Bobby Malach (tenor saxophone); Fred ...
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| | Burial CD (2006)
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$13.75 Wire Magazine honored this 2006 release - ''one of the best of the year.'' This first album on Kode9's Hyperdub label comes from the mysterious Burial. On this stunning self-titled CD debut, Burial carves out a sound which sends the dormant slinky syncopations of UK garage, via radio interference, into a padded cell of cushioned, muffled bass, passing through the best of Pole's Berlin crackle dub. Burial explores a tangential, parallel dimension of the growing sound of dubstep. Burial's parallel dimension sounds set in a near future South London underwater. You can never tell if the crackle is the burning static off pirate radio transmissions, or the tropical downpour of the submerged city outside the window. In their sometimes suffocating melancholy, most of these tracks seem to yearn for drowned lovers. The smouldering desire of "Distant Lights" is cooled only by the percussive ice sharp slicing of blades and jets of hot air blowing from the bass. Listen also for a fleeting appearance from Hyperdub's resident vocalist, the Spaceape unravelling his crypto-biography. In its loud quietness, Burial takes his kitchen crackle aesthetic neither from the digital glitch nor merely from a nostalgia for vinyl's materiality. Instead, as "Pirates" suggests, Burial's crackle mutates the tactile surplus value of pirate radio transmissions. Burial's mix is haunted. Echoed voices breeze in and out, on road to another time. Pirate signals from other frequencies stream in. This is a tidal wave of noise submerging all but the crispest syncopations. ...
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| | Castanets In The Vines CD (2007)
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$12.19 Personnel: Brendon Massei, Vineland House Band, Jesse Ainslie, Chrisopher Cory, Henry Nagle, The Climbing Choir, Suzanna Waiche, Nathan Hubbard, Rafter Roberts, Sufjan Stevens, Matthew Houck, Steven Byrom, Jana Hunter, Nathan Delffs, Nick Delffs, G. Lucas Crane, Sayard Egan, Raymond Raposa. IN THE VINES was recorded during a nearly year-long bout of depression for Castanets leader Raymond Raposa. It is even more sparse and delicate than the group's previous albums, at times recalling nothing so much as Nick Drake's similarly desolate PINK MOON. More directly, Raposa's contemporaries Sam Beam (Iron and Wine) and Bill Callahan (Smog) come to mind on the haunted, hypnotic "And the Swimming" and the centerpiece epic "Three Months Paid." Taking ...
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