| HARD
CANDY PROMO at Roseland Ballroom, NYC - 4.30.2008 |
| The dance
floor is still Madonna's |
| NEW YORK
- Madonna's new album, "Hard Candy," was released on Tuesday,
and the very next day she celebrated by unleashing her latest creation
into its natural habitat: the nightclub dance floor. |
 |
| Hard was
the operative word for the pop diva's brief but kinetic set - just
six songs in 35 minutes - at the Roseland Ballroom Wednesday. Her
punishingly sculpted hard body was in fine form as she boogied in
formation with her dancers to the hard-hitting beats - courtesy of
collaborators Timbaland, Justin Timberlake, and Pharrell Williams,
and pounded out by her hard-working band. Each part of the package
helped to rile up the 2,000-plus crowd of Madonna fanatics who ran
the gamut from drag queens to soccer moms. |
| The audience,
some of whom camped out for more than 48 hours to nab wristbands for
admittance to the free show, was primed by an energetic DJ playing
early MTV-era hits, many by artists long left in Madonna's dust. At
the appointed moment, the DJ platform swiveled to reveal Her Madgesty
brandishing a scepter on an "M"-emblazoned throne. |
| Clad in
black tails, satin track pants, and high-heeled boxing boots, Madonna
shimmied off her perch and from the first downbeat of the throbbing
"Candy Shop" got into her groove and rarely paused for breath,
reveling in the cleansing powers of her first love. |
| She may
be turning 50 in August, but AARP membership will have to wait as
the latest Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee danced with a vigor
that would shame performers half her age. (Although she sang live
throughout, all that aerobicizing meant that Madonna relied on the
assistance of prerecorded vocal tracks as well as back-up singers.) |
| After
a quick hello, she segued neatly into "Miles Away." The
five video screens - one central and two smaller pairs flanking the
stage - featured quick-cut images of air travel, boarding passes,
and airports. The backdrop underscored the disco-fied lament about
long-distance love affairs, which Madonna sang while strumming an
acoustic guitar with a sparkly silver strap. |
| When Timbaland's
image appeared on the central screen, the already-frantic crowd whooped
even louder. As the band rocked the synth line and martial tempo of
"4 Minutes," a duet with Timberlake, the side screens began
to slide across the stage, their frames filled with images of speakers
shuddering under a booming beat. |
| As Timberlake's
visage appeared on one screen, it revolved to reveal the man himself
clad in a white jacket and black scarf. The pair teasingly orbited
each other in tight choreography, then let loose with a jubilant freestyle
dance that was the high point both for the crowd and seemingly Madonna
herself. For all her admirable perfectionism, Madonna rarely acts
like she's having any fun. |
| Scurrying
offstage to grab an electric guitar, Madonna returned strumming the
opening lick of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and asked
the crowd if they were there to see the Rolling Stones. When they
answered emphatically in the negative, she said, "Yeah,
[expletive] that." She then thanked Timberlake and called
herself the "luckiest girl in the world"
to have worked with him, Timbaland, Williams, and Kanye West on the
new album. But, she declared, she had had enough of the present and
was now venturing into the past. |
| The very
recent past, it turned out, as she dedicated a near-metallic rendition
of 2005's "Hung Up" to those in the crowd who had spent
the night waiting for tickets. Citing her famous impatience mid-song,
she simulated what waiting sounds like in her brain by coaxing a cacophony
of noise from her guitar. |
| An even
nicer gesture of thanks to those indefatigable fans would have been
to play for longer than 35 minutes to justify their love. |
| Source:
The Boston Globe by Sarah Rodman / Photo:
Lucas Jackson / Posted: May 2,
2008 |
| Back
to Hard Candy Promo Index |