AL album review - by L.A. Times 三顆星
Madonna
"American Life" *** <- 我不會畫星星, so...
LA Times 最高分是給四顆星,所以...不錯啦!
Maverick/Warner Bros.
When Madonna says, in effect, that she doesn't believe in material
girls in the title track of this ambitious new collection, the
declaration doesn't hit with the emotional or artistic impact of
John Lennon's "I don't believe in Beatles" from his first solo
album three decades ago. But it does reflect much of the same
deeply felt superstar self-inventory
Scores of pop artists, including Sinead O'Connor and Alanis
Morissette, have followed Lennon's lead in pointing out the
dangers of false values and goals, though most spoke in the
relentlessly stark tone of Lennon's "Plastic Ono Band" album.
What's different about Madonna's album (which arrives in stores
Tuesday) is that she sometimes frames her musings in bright
electronic and dance-music textures that would fit on a radio
playlist with the next party-starter from Pink. She even sings
some of the songs (notably "I'm Stupid") in a distinctly
adolescent tone, as if to separate herself from the "blond
ambition" of the past.
Listeners used to hearing messages in more somber settings may
find the bouncy beats working against the seriousness of Madonna's
themes. (It also doesn't help her credibility to poke at Hollywood
shallowness when her film career seems to be a shambles.)
For those listeners, Madonna, whose vocals are more confident and
convincing than ever, is probably more affecting on "American Life"
when she and co-producer Mirwais Ahmadzai serve up the songs
(including "Love Profusion" and "X-Static Process") with more
intimate and confessional-toned arrangements
Madonna has delayed the video for the song "American Life" to make
sure none of the imagery offends anyone during the Iraq war, but
there is nothing about the war or President Bush in the song.
Rather, it is a tale of Madonna's own early, misguided values:
Do I have to change my name?
Will it get me far?
Should I lose some weight?
Am I gonna be a star?"
While more catchy than profound, the song, like the album, strikes
you as the honest feelings of a woman who, since the birth of her
daughter in 1996 and her marriage to director Guy Ritchie in 2000,
has gone through such a personal and spiritual awakening that she
sometimes has trouble putting it all into perspective. You sense
that struggle in "Nothing Fails," when she sings, "I'm not religious
/ But I feel so moved / Makes me want to pray."
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