It is a DVD-sized hinged box containing the CD (with 2 extra remix tracks), a 16-page full-color booklet, and a package of Starlite Mint candies. The package is jewel case width, 8 inches tall, and 1 1/2 inch deep....has hard candy in the package.
Side A: 1. Candy Shop 4:15:58 2. 4 Minutes 4:03:66 3. Give It 2 Me 4:47:68 Side B 1. Heartbeat 4:03:28 2. Miles Away 4:48:69 3. She's Not Me 6:04:38 Side C: 1. Incredible 6:19:38 2. Beat Goes On 4:26:67 3. Dance 2Night 5:03:07 Side D: 1. Spanish Lesson 3:37:45 2. Devil Wouldn't Recognise You5:08: 3. Voices 3:39:35 Bonus 12 Side A: 1. 4 Minutes (Tracy Young Mixshow) Side B: 4 Minutes (Peter Saves New
Seven track CD pressing of the first single from the Pop superstar's 2008 album Hard Candy. '4 Minutes' is a collaboration between the Dance diva and former boyband member and current solo star Justin Timberlake. Rock And Roll Hall Of Famer Madonna, a multi-Grammy-award-winning singer, songwriter, producer, cultural icon, world renowned stage performer, video visionary, children's book author, director and documentary film maker has sold 200 million albums in the course of her unprecedented two decade plus career. But I think you already knew that. Features seven versions of '4 Minutes': Bob Sinclar Space Funk, Peter Saves Paris Remix, Junkie XL Dirty Dub, Tracy Young House Mix, Album Version, Rebirth Remix and Junkie XL Remix. Warner.
Madonna's eleventh, and final, studio album for Warner Bros., Hard Candy is a brilliant up-tempo collection that adds a hip-hop beat to the cultural icon's club sensibilities, thanks to collaborations with Timbaland, Justin Timberlake, Pharrell Williams, and Nate "Danja" Hills. Following her previous studio album, 2005's Confessions On A Dance Floor, which debuted #1 and has sold more than 8 million copies around the globe, Hard Candy punctuates the first 25 years of the album career of the most successful female artist in history with a musical exclamation point.
Madonna Photo
More from Madonna
The Immaculate Collection
The Confessions Tour - Live from London (CD+DVD) [LIVE]
Confessions on a Dance Floor
Madonna: GHV2 (Greatest Hits Volume 2)
Ray of Light
Madonna [ORIGINAL RECORDING REISSUED] [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]
Like a Prayer
The Immaculate Collection (1990)
Something to Remember [SOUNDTRACK]
Like a Virgin [ORIGINAL RECORDING REISSUED] [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]
True Blue [ORIGINAL RECORDING REISSUED] [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]
Music
Madonna - Video Collection 1993-99 (1999)
Madonna - Drowned World Tour 2001
Madonna - The Girlie Show (Live Down Under) (1993)
Bedtime Stories
Erotica [EXPLICIT LYRICS]
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You Can Dance
Madonna "The Confessions Tour - Live from London (CD+DVD)"
$15.47
The world can't get enough of Madonna, and with CD/DVD sets like The Confessions Tour dropping regularly, it's little wonder why. As a thrower of fantasy dance parties, she is peerless. As a physical role model for the 40-ish women who grew up on her music, she rules. And as an arbiter of what's going to sound shockingly original in any given decade--well, duh. The Confessions Tour rounds up songs from way back--"Ray of Light" and "La Isla Bonita" make the DVD, and "Lucky Star" and "Like a Virgin" are on the CD as well as the DVD--but this concert, filmed in 2006 at London's Wembley Arena, aims its sturdiest spotlight on Confessions on a Dance Floor, Madge's 2005 disco disc. You could argue, then, that unless you're in it for the sheer DVD spectacle (and what a spectacle it is), there's no sense in owning this package. Only you wouldn't be right. Because as any on-the-ball Madonna fan knows, what she's doing musically is telling a story--you may already know the characters, but that doesn't mean she hasn't completely reworked the plot. To that end, "I Love New York" gets its rock on, "Let It Will Be" has a musical temper tantrum, and "Hung Up" goes for the drama queen award. You've heard these songs before, but you've never heard them quite like this, to borrow a bad informercial phrase. As twisted and hopped-up as they've become, they're all worth getting to know again. --Tammy La Gorce
Apparently there's nothing in Kabbalah that disallows sweaty, head-spinningly good dance music, because here comes a flame-haired Madonna hawking a dozen songs' worth: Confessions on a Dance Floor darts seamlessly from Madge's early days, when she emerged as the genre's enduring darling, through the political, kiddie, and acoustic pap that drove a wedge between her and early adopters of the fingerless glove look. Songs like the pop-leaning "Jump" and first single "Hung Up"--an adrenaline drip on high that, like many of these tracks, will inspire mild shame among those who've thrilled to the much thinner disco-dusted outpourings of younger divas recently--represent both a return to form and an unmistakable march into the future. "Get Together" is a sonic freak-out in the best sense; "Push" traffics in gut-level futuristic trance; and "Forbidden Love" loops in '80s blips and bleeps for a follow-me-into-the-past effect that's both neo and retro. For all the image-affirming innovations here, though, these confessions find Madonna framed in her share of reflective moments too. "Was it all worth it/How did I earn it?" she asks on "How High," a song featuring vocoder. "Nobody's perfect/I guess I deserve it," comes the answer. A later lyrical inquiry is left for the listener to judge: "Does this get any better?" Madonna wants to know. But that opens the door to a dizzying proposition. Few of us would have guessed, after all, that it got this good. --Tammy La Gorce
The naughtily titled Immaculate Collection culls 15 of Madonna's Top 10 singles from 1984 to mid-'90, plus 2 new ones that continued the run (the dirty, trunk-bumping funk of "Justify My Love"--a Lenny Kravitz production that justifies his entire career--and the danceable desperation of "Rescue Me"). Rooted in disco and classic AM pop from girl groups and ABBA to Strawberry Alarm Clock, Madonna made savvy, touching music throughout her first golden era. These tracks retain their sonic and historical significance while, like "She Loves You" or "Rocket Man," still brightening any space they're being played in. Far more than just a wise, irreverent image-maker--like the Beatles or Elton, come to think of it--Madonna during these years was the gift that kept on giving, forever fresh, sexy, hooky, and joyously sharp. --Rickey Wright