Kenny and Mark face Madonna’s baby voice vocals and why never performing a song in a live setting may be a good thing on deep cut “I Know It”.
copyright Richard Corman
Kenny and Mark face Madonna’s baby voice vocals and why never performing a song in a live setting may be a good thing on deep cut “I Know It”.
copyright Richard Corman
Kenny and Mark tackle “Burning Up” the third song on Madonna’s self-titled 1983 debut. Topics include punk roots, the Breakfast Club band, scratch vocals and the impact of Madonna’s breathing in her music, and the arrival of Stephen Bray.
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Episode Two. Kenny and Mark discuss the importance of car songs, romantic yearnings, generational innocence, the power of Madonna’s vocal ad libs, and make a case for bringing back “the fade out” in a classic 80s pop song called “Borderline.” After this week, all future episodes will be released on Tuesday.
Essential links to consider:
12 Inch Remix of Borderline by Madonna
Madonna performing Borderline on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (2016)
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Pilot Episode. Kenny and Mark kick-off “All I Want to Do is Talk About Madonna” by going all the way back to the very beginning: the first song on the first side of Madonna’s first album. Discussed: Madonna’s demo recordings, “Crimes of Passion”, early ambitions, Danceteria DJs, Maripol, Erica Bell, and the power of synths.
Essential links to consider:
Season One: From ‘Star’ to ‘Girl’ (1983-1987)
In this provocative (naturally) and confessional (essentially) new podcast, two long-time fans have the conversation you wish you could have about the one and only Queen of Pop: Madonna. Writers Kenny Finkle and Mark Snyder start at the very beginning, to where it always begins with Madonna: the music. Each episode tackles a single track in the Madonna canon (beginning with, yup, “Lucky Star”) as they move through the boundary-pushing videos, norm-challenging performances, hair-dying transformations - climaxing with Madonna’s first world tour - the “Who’s That Girl?” show. Four years into a nearly-40 year career - and she (and we!) are just getting started.
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