| |
This (Sad) American Life
On her new CD, Madonna lectures on the crises
of modern life. Her personal crisis is more compelling
By Josh Tyrangiel
If Madonna's lyrics are to be trusted - and given her
penchant for public disguise, that's a big if - then mark
my words: something ain't right at the Ciccone- Ritchie home.
Presumptuous? Maybe. But a casual glance at the lyric sheet for
American Life, Madonna's bipolar 10th album, proves that at
the very least, the world's most famous yoga-practicing B-movie
Cabalist is going through a rough patch. If you don't believe
her words, listen to her voice. American Life is the first Madonna
record that suffers from a complete lack of exuberance. It's
not bad, but like a Prince album without lust or an Eminem song
without rage, it takes some getting used to.
Like Music, Madonna's far more buoyant previous album, American
Life is evenly split between upbeat techno tunes and midtempo ballads.
Most of the techno songs are about the mechanization and superficiality
of modern life. The production, by Mirwais Ahmadzai, is predictably
stuttering and jumpy. The tracks sound fussed over, but they're
also full of surprising grooves and are primed for club play. It's
the vocals that could use a remix. Like Laurence Fishburne's
oddball Morpheus in The Matrix, Madonna tries to accentuate the
plight of humanity by enunciating like a robot. Her mechanical rap
at the end of the first single, American Life - "I'm
drinking a soy latte/ I get a double shoté/ It goes right
through my body/ And you know I'm satisfied" - may
be ironic, but it's also thoroughly annoying. There are a
couple of other techno dogs, most notably Die Another Day, which
isn't just the worst James Bond theme of all time (and no,
I haven't forgotten Sheena Easton's) but also the most
soulless song of Madonna's career.
Blessedly, there's plenty of soul elsewhere on American Life.
For most of the gorgeous Love Profusion, Madonna wraps her voice - that
candy-coated piece of plastic we've come to know and love - around
a simple acoustic-guitar hook and some achy lyrics: "There
is no comprehension/ There is real isolation/ There is so much destruction/
What I want is a celebration." She is similarly relaxed and
woeful on Nothing Fails, Intervention and album standout
X-Static Process, which opens with the delicacy of a Gordon Lightfoot
song and peaks with the self-pitying bridge "I always wished
that I could find/ Someone as beautiful as you/ But in the process
I forgot that I was special too."
These sad songs are pretty good, but they're not eloquent
enough to make you forget the techno disasters or to push American
Life up to the level of Tunnel of Love, Bruce Springsteen's
"Who the hell did I marry?" album. Instead, they just
leave you feeling sad for her, sad for us and curious as to what
will come next. |