Albumcover, designed by Jeri and John Heiden
Photography by Herb Ritts
Hover over the text to read the song title and click for lyrics and more details.
Album
By the end of the eighties Madonna had released four successful
studio albums, a remix album and some movie soundtracks. She had
already scored eight #1 hits in the US, seven in the UK and Canada,
and eleven in Japan. With the Blond
Ambition Tour Madonna's success was higher than ever; the
timing for a greatest hits album was perfect. On November 13th,
1990 Madonna released The Immaculate Collection. The
cheeky title referred to the Byblical 'immaculate conception'
and showed Madonna's sense of humour after all the religious controversy
surrounding her single Like
A Prayer. On top of that she dedicates the album to "The
Pope, my divine inspiration".
The compilation album contained 15 of her greatest hits. Chronologically
there were three singles from the
first album, two singles from Like
A Virgin, four singles from True
Blue and three singles from Like
A Prayer. There was also Crazy
For You, which previously featured on the Vision Quest soundtrack.
Into The Groove was
from Desperately
Seeking Susan, but had also appeared on the re-issue of Like
A Virgin. Vogue was her
latest #1, coming from I'm Breathless.
Rather surprising was the absence of Who's
That Girl, a #1 hit in the US, UK, Canada and Japan, and True
Blue, which hit #1 in the UK and Japan and #3 in the US. Shortly
after The Immaculate Collection was released, there was a CD single
released, called 'The Holiday Collection', which contained the
original album version of Holiday,
plus three 'forgotten' tracks True
Blue, Who's That Girl
and Causing A Commotion
(Silver Screen Single Mix). The tracks that did make the selection
were mixed by Shep Pettibone, Goh Hotoda and Michael Hutchinson.
Most notable are the different versions of Like
A Prayer, Express
Yourself and Vogue.
To boost album sales, the compilation also contained two brand
new tracks, which were both released as singles. Madonna collaborated
with rock-star Lenny Kravitz for Justify
My Love, which became a huge success and one of Madonna's
most controversial singles (especially because of the video).
Rescue Me often disappears in the
shadow of that first single, but is a very powerful Madonna song,
often underestimated.
The greatest hits album shot to the top of the album charts. While
it dominated the charts in Australia, Canada and the UK for several
weeks, it stalled at #2 in the US and France. To date it has sold
over 25 million copies worldwide, making it the best selling
Madonna album and the best selling female greatest hits album
ever. In October 2001 the RIAA honored Madonna with a Diamond
Award, denoting sales of more than 10 million copies of The
Immaculate Collection in the US. It was Madonna's second Diamond
Award after receiving one for Like
A Virgin in 1998. In the UK it was certified 12 times Platinum
in January 2003, where it remains the 10th best selling album
ever with more than 3.5 million copies sold.
Following the release of the career-spanning Celebration
compilation in 2009, The Immaculate Collection was phased out.