Madonna

Like A Virgin

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    Madonna is the benchmark by which all other female pop stars are judged, and 1984's Like a Virgin is the foundation on which her legacy is built. Like Madonna, the album was extremely of-the-time and seemed to bask in its superficiality, though even casual observers know there's more to it. David Bowie collaborator Niles Rodgers produced the album, infusing songs like "Material Girl" and "Dress You Up" with a welcomed rock/new-wave sound. Meanwhile, the title track maintains the pop-disco feel that gained her initial fame and made her an even bigger star in the process. It may not have reinvented music, but Like a Virgin is a near-perfect pop album that made Madonna an icon for decades to follow.
  • AMG Review of Like a Virgin

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    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Madonna had hits with her first album, even reaching the Top Ten twice with "Borderline" and "Lucky Star," but she didn't become a superstar, an icon, until her second album, Like a Virgin. She saw the opening for this kind of explosion and seized it, bringing in former Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers in as a producer, to help her expand her sound, and then carefully constructed her image as an ironic, ferociously sexy Boy Toy; the Steven Meisel-shot cover, capturing her as a buxom bride with a Boy Toy belt buckle on the front, and dressing after a night of passion, was as key to her reinvention as the music itself. Yet, there's no discounting the best songs on the record, the moments when her grand concepts are married to music that transcends the mere classification of dance-pop. These, of course, are "Material Girl" and "Like a Virgin," the two songs that made her an icon, and the two songs that remain definitive statements. They overshadow the rest of the record, not just because they are a perfect match of theme and sound, but because the rest of the album vacillates wildly in terms of quality. The other two singles, "Angel" and "Dress You Up," are excellent standard-issue dance-pop, and there are other moments that work well ("Over and Over," "Stay," the earnest cover of Rose Royce's "Love Don't Live Here"), but overall, it adds up to less than the sum of its parts -- partially because the singles are so good, but also because on the first album, she stunned with style and a certain joy. Here, the calculation is apparent, and while that's part of Madonna's essence -- even something that makes her fun -- it throws the record's balance off a little too much for it to be consistent, even if it justifiably made her a star.

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