| HARD
CANDY PROMO at Roseland Ballroom, NYC - 4.30.2008 |
| For Madonna
Fans, the Wait Is Worth It |
 |
| Halfway
through her 32-minute set on Wednesday night at the Roseland Ballroom
in Manhattan, Madonna offered a message of sympathy. "All you
people I saw sleeping in the street last night," she said, "this
song is for you." |
It
was "Hung Up," about the agony of waiting. And as she
finished the song, she added, just in case the message wasn't clear:
"Anybody who knows me knows how much I hate to wait." |
| New York
may be a city of the impatient, but for Madonna's fans, Wednesday's
show proved that seeing her for free in a 2,200-capacity hall -- minuscule
by her usual touring standards -- was something worth waiting for.
And waiting for a very long time. |
| The line
outside Roseland, on West 52nd Street, formed 60 hours before show
time. By late Tuesday it had stretched around the block as the faithful
stood and sat and slept and caffeinated themselves for the chance
to score one of the 750 wrist bands that would guarantee free admission. |
| Erica
Gabriel, a 28-year-old makeup artist, waited through the night in
line with friends. Once duly wrist-banded some time after 6 a.m.,
she returned home to prepare the elaborate, swooping hairstyle and
"stewardess-Madonna-tricky-tranny look" that she sported
early Wednesday evening -- as she waited on line again to receive
a second wristband. |
| "Gays
don't camp out," said one of Ms. Gabriel's friends, as the group
laughed, "but we'll camp out for this." |
| Even those
who joined the queue relatively late proved to be professionals of
a sort. |
| "I'm
not fanatical," said Walter Sharpe, 36, an interior designer
from Brooklyn. "But I do collect Madonna magazine covers, and
I've got maybe 170 of them." |
| There
is something almost quaint about an overnight line for concert tickets
in an era of Internet pre-sales and ordering by text message. But
Madonna's show, to promote her new album, "Hard Candy,"
was also part of a technologically sophisticated, 21st-century product
rollout that involved multiple media tie-ins. It was broadcast live
on the Internet by MSN and on cell phones worldwide by Verizon and
Vodafone. In addition to the 750 spots given to fans on the line --
that's on a line, not online -- about 1,000 were given to radio contest
winners, and 200 to members of Madonna's fan club, which now has a
social-networking component. |
| And at
49, Madonna remains on the entrepreneurial vanguard of the music business.
"Hard Candy" is her last album for her longtime label, Warner
Brothers; in October she announced a new deal with the touring giant
Live Nation that will encompass recordings, tours, merchandising and
various other projects, and is valued at 0 million. |
| Not that
all of the Music Biz 2.0 stuff mattered much to the people who crammed
into Roseland on Wednesday, even those who breathe media and marketing.
One of them was Tanesha Fields, a pretty 26-year-old who works in
advertising and said her nights are filled with business parties.
"I don't have to go to another media event for a year,"
she said. "This tops them all." |
| The room
roared with "Omigods" and lit up with digital camera flashes
when Madonna emerged at 10:09 p.m. from behind a revolving stage barrier,
dressed in shiny black and wearing lace-up boots. Backed by a live
band whose members worked in the far corners of the stage, she performed
six songs, four of them from "Hard Candy." |
| Another
big roar rose for the third song, "4 Minutes": Justin Timberlake,
who is featured on the song and is one of the writers and producers
of it, took the stage in a sharp white jacket and black scarf, and
joined Madonna in some dirty dancing that had slight bondage overtones
-- with Madonna dominant, of course. |
| The show
was swift clockwork. At 10:23, right after "4 Minutes,"
Madonna picked up a black electric guitar and, after picking out the
riff to the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction,"
led a grungy version of "Hung Up." At 10:32 there was a
slight costume change -- she put on a black top with "HARD"
in silver letters on the front and "CANDY" on the back --
and she sang the new "Give It 2 Me." |
| Then came
"Music," much dancing, and a quick makeup and hair fix on
the wings. By 10:42 Madonna and her dancers had swung back through
the revolving wall and the lights went up. |
| Some had
waited for more than two days for a half-hour show. But no one seemed
to be complaining. |
| "I
had the time of my life tonight," said Jeanrené St. Pierre,
a fan club contest winner from Montreal who wore a "BOYTOY"
necklace. "Of course it was worth it." |
| Source:
The NY Times / Photo:
Ben Sisario / Posted: Thursday
May 01, 2008 |
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