Updated
Updated · Interview · Jun 22
Madonna Unveils 65-Minute Confessions Part II After 2 Failed Screen Projects
Updated
Updated · Interview · Jun 22

Madonna Unveils 65-Minute Confessions Part II After 2 Failed Screen Projects

1 articles · Updated · Interview · Jun 22

Summary

  • Madonna said her upcoming album, “Confessions on a Dance Floor: Part II,” is finished as a 65-minute record shaped by family trauma, including her brother’s illness and death and her stepmother’s death.
  • Two stalled screen projects pushed her back to music: a biopic collapsed after 2 years with Universal over budget, and a Netflix series effort dragged on another 8 or 9 months before she pivoted fully.
  • Stuart Price became the key collaborator after roughly 15 years apart, with Madonna saying she wanted to make inspirational dance music because “the world is in a very dark place and people need to dance.”
  • One song was written with daughter Lola as a way to heal their relationship, while Madonna said the album draws heavily on memory, grief and her club roots rather than lighter subject matter.
  • The project extends a broader retrospective phase after the Celebration Tour, while her long-delayed screen adaptation of her life remains unresolved despite finally finding a writer late in the album process.

Insights

Is Madonna's new 'memoir' album a genuine act of healing or a brilliant marketing move?
At 67, is her return to the dance floor a final rebellion or a new beginning?
Does Madonna's legendary success excuse the manipulative tactics she used to get her start?