Skip to main content

"If I could melt your heart... "


Day three of the Top 10 Albums Challenge is upon us! Without further adieu, here is our latest entry:

#8 - Madonna / Ray of Light (1998)

Consisting of great singles and solid deep cuts, Ray of Light is not only my favorite Madonna album, it's one of my favorite albums of all-time. Led by the haunting hit single Frozen, I was immediately enraptured by this release.

In early 1998, some friends and I drove over to Indianapolis for a night. There we went to one of the gay dance clubs, and it was having a Ray of Light release party. They had limited edition copies of the CD, and were playing some tracks off it. The one that I remember most was the Victor Calderon's extended remix of Frozen, and the DJ played almost all 11 minutes of it, which retains the song's stirring quality, while turning it into a dance-floor stomper.

Of course, for an album to be considered an all-time favorite, it takes more than one song. That is why Ray of Light makes the list. From 1998 through most of 1999, I spent a lot of my off-time listening to it from beginning to end. I was writing what would become my one and only novel, and found the rhythms and melodies soothing. From Candy Perfume Girl, to Nothing Really Matters, to Sky Fits Heaven, to Shanti/Ashtangi, I was carried away by the music.

Perhaps my favorite album track from Ray of Light is Madonna's ode to her then-barely-year-old daughter, Lourdes. Little Star is a soft, gentle song that features the strength of a mother feeling love and protection for her child. It's beautiful, and perhaps the most touching track Madonna has ever recorded.

Ray of Light is a gorgeous and lush album, one that (in my humble opinion) Madonna has never topped since.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Yesterday's Restaurants

The local newspaper has a feature from one of Champaign-Urbana's most legendary restaurateur's, John Katsinas, on what his favorite area restaurants were that have now since closed (or will soon be closing).  It's a nice little read, and has made me stop and think about the restaurants that have come and gone that have left an indelible (and edible) impression on me throughout the years. Here we go....

31 Days of Horror Movies: Thir13en Ghosts

While not a scholar or even a purist, I am somewhat of a film snob. Not a big fan of remakes, specifically when the originals don't need updating. It is therefore an unusual position I find myself in, preferring a remake to an original, and by leaps and bounds. Let's take a look at today's feature...

31 Days of Horror Movies: The Woman In Black

Yesterday, we had a lady in white, and today we have.... The Woman In Black Just as Nosferatu was our oldest horror film to be reviewed this month, The Woman In Black is our most recent. Released earlier this year, the film stars Daniel Radcliffe in a more adult role than previously seen in his Harry Potter career. He plays a young lawyer whose wife died in childbirth, so he has been raising their son (mostly) on his own. With money tight, and his job on the line, the young attorney takes an assignment in a remote village, much to his dismay. The small, closed community Radcliffe's character finds himself in is apparently haunted by a woman dressed in all black. When she is seen, a child dies. She is seen quite a lot during the course of the film. The locals get edgy with the attorney, making him feel most unwelcome. And when he is doing his work, sorting through the papers of a deceased elderly woman, he discovers the secret of the woman in black. It doesn't