Friday, 22 September
After exactly 4 months on the road, Madonna gave her 60th and
last show of the Confessions Tour yesterday
in Tokyo, making it to be her longest tour ever. She's putting
away her dancing shoes for awhile, but now we can take the time
to think back at the amazing moments of the show. Who could forget
the dazzling opener Future
Lovers, the sexy Like
A Virgin, the controversial, but truly gorgeous Live
To Tell, the energetic Sorry,
I Love New York
& Ray Of Light,
where Madonna showed off her improved guitar skills with an attitude,
the vulnerable Drowned
World, the hedonistic Music
Inferno or the brillant mix of Lucky
Star / Hung Up as the
perfect encore... Knowing Madonna, next time she'll do a totally
different tour, but this one will always have a special place
inside us. Be sure to re-live memories with our Rome
& Paris reviews and check out all the
press reviews and the picture
galleries!
~ Thank you, Madonna for the experience and all the inspiration
you gave us!
Thursday, 21 September
After 13 years, Madonna performed in Japanese stadiums again.
She performed in Osaka first to a cheerful audience. In
Japan, because of security issues, the crowd was standing far
from the stage and the catwalk. Madonna, who loves to defy rules,
walked down from the stage to the fans, held hands with them and
talked to them, much to their delight! She sang a bit of Carole
King's 'So Far Away' on the first night, while on the second night
she reportedly threw her 'Dancing Queen' cape into the audience.
Somebody must have been very lucky!
The last two dates of the tour were in Tokyo. Madonna must
have been bored a bit, so she used a platinum blonde wig during
the second half of the show (which she'd shown off a day earlier
during her visit to the X-Static Process exhibit in the Luis Vutton
store in Tokyo). It certainly looked... different.
On the very last show, several surprises happened: the dancers
during Jump wore Japanese
headbands; for Ray Of Light,
the dancers had Power Rangers masks and the boys made a surprised
Madonna laugh; she wore a 'Japanese Do It Better' T-shirt in the
third part of the show, referring to the previous tour. In I
Love New York, after the line "Los Angeles is for people
who sleep", she added "Are you listening Guy Oseary?"
as a wink to her manager. Most importantly, after Let
It Will Be she introduced her band and took a long time to
thank everybody who worked on this amazing show.
Wednesday, 13 September
Yesterday, Madonna finally did her much talked about show in Moscow.
Unfortunately, there are hardly any reviews about the show; all
the articles before and after the show talk about the change of
date and venue, the so-called dangers of the new venue, the controversy
of the cross scene and the angry reactions of orthodox Russians.
Despite all this controversy, the show went smoothly. When the
first fans entered the stadium, Madonna was still on stage, rehearsing
Future Lovers and
Hung Up. When she finished,
she teasingly said: "See you at the second show! Time goes
by, so sloooowly!" At 9.30pm, an hour behind schedule, she
kicked off that "second" show.
She gave a rather long speech before Drowned
World, which went like this:
"So good to be here! I have to say, it's a privilege and
an honour to finally be playing and performing and singing in
your country. I've been in this strange business called show business
for 24 years. It's always been my dream to come to Russia. Finally
my dream came true. I wanna thank everybody who made it possible,
especially mayor Luzhkov, and everybody else who worked so hard
to make this concert possible, thank you so much.
The other amazing thing is that Russia has been a democracy now
for over 15 years! Wooow! I wanna give hope and inspiration to
the young people of Russia. Now that you are free you must take
advantage. You must think for yourself! You must express yourself!
Speak your mind, okay? Because America is supposed to be free
but nobody speaks their mind... So take advantage! [...] Are you
having a good time? [...] How many people want peace in the world?
No more war. Are you gonna sing a song with me?" She then
kicked into a rendition of John Lennon's 'Give Peace A Chance'.
Sunday, 10 September
Madonna moved for the first time to Eastern Europe, where she
treated Prague with two shows. As she took a sip of water
before Jump, she greeted the
audience with "Cheers, Prague! Ladies and gentlemen, thank
you for coming to my show. I just wanna make a comment that I
understand what the Czech Republic has been through in the fight
for freedom. But the freedom is inside your head, okay? Don't
forget that!" Later she got back to the topic, asking "Are
you enjoying your freedom?" She also called Prague 'a beautiful
city with beautiful people'.
During the call for flags, she noticed some familiar faces in
the crowd and asked if they were her front row bitches. She asked
one of the guys how many shows he had seen: "Fifteen?! How
can you afford that? Well, I guess I'll have to kiss you then!"
She then leaned forward, and so did the fan so he could kiss her
cheek! During Paradise,
she asked him and the group around him to sing a whole verse.
She was in a really good mood. When she started La
Isla Bonita, she was laughing so hard that she couldn't sing
a few lines.
Wednesday, 06 September
Got back yesterday from my Confessions adventure. I've spend an
entire week in Paris and then a long weekend in Amsterdam. Six
shows in 9 days. Pretty exhausting. But also very satisfying!
I've seen the show from different perspectives, but always close
and with a great view! And for those wondering, yes even the 7th
time I discovered new things. The show is a real attack on the
senses. And each show, the amount of personal highlights got higher.
The fact that I got to see the concerts with so many good friends
('old' and 'new'), made the experience even better. Thanks to
all those I met in the queue, who mailed me afterwards with their
stories and pictures. I've added some galleries with great pictures
of Axel, Daniel
and Marcin, and also some press
pix from Amsterdam. If you've seen the show yourself, your
reports and pictures are still welcome too. Madonna is doing
Prague tonight and then finishes with Moscow, Osaka and Tokyo.
But for me, the tour is over. The audio files keep playing on
my iPod. Now waiting for the DVD...
~ Bartie
Did you know... the background
video for Like A Virgin
shows x-ray scans of broken bones and imagery of horse accidents?
the dancers
during Jump are special parkour
dancers that only appear during that song (except Cloud)? Cloud keeps
sticking out his tongue throughout the whole show? the intro
of Sorry skips the "Ik
ben droevig/Sono spiacente" part? the chorus
of Where's The Party
is mixed into Music Inferno?
how beautiful
the dance is between Madonna and Jason during Erotica?
Madonna's outfit
during Erotica/La
Isla Bonita is an exact copy of the one once worn by Abba's
Agnetha? Donna DeLory
(unfortunately) only appears in the spotlights during Lucky
Star? it's the first
time in 19 years that she performs Lucky
Star? two dancers
jump in the audience right before Hung
Up? Isaac joins
the dancers during the final Hung
Up choreography, also doing the disco roll? Monday, 04 September
Live updates from Madonna's second show in Amsterdam:
16.45: Madonna doing a soundcheck with Music
& Ray Of Light.
The crowd gets impatient.
19.34: Paul Oakenfold is again the opening act.
21.13: Madonna arrives onstage.
21.32: She greets the Dutch audience before Like
A Virgin like yesterday. Before Jump
it's the traditional intro: "Ladies & Gentlemen, welcome
to our little show. The night is young and the show has just begun."
21.37: Time to tell a Tale.
21.57: Before Like It
Or Not, Madonna says "Talk is cheap! Fuck stupidity!
Fuck ignorance!"
22.15: "Last night I got everyone jumping so high, I want
you to jump even higher! Get the whole city jumping!" - and
the crowd gives an amazing reception for Ray
Of Light.
22.25: "Do you mind if I take a rest? I've been beating myself
up the past 4 months... You're alright, Amsterdam. I smell some
funny smoke though [laughter]. You know, there are about 36 wars
going on at this moment. If I could go to Lebanon or Iraq to stop
it, I would, but I can't. But what we can do, is feel the unity
tonight. We are one..."
22.30: As she skims through the flags, Madonna discovers her Australian
'front row bitch' again: "oh yeah it must be your 12th show."
Then the usual "Show me your flags. If the person standing
next to you is from another country, give each other a hug."
23.10: "Time goes by so slowly... that's the way aha aha
I like it!" The crowd goes wild for the grand finale of Hung
Up and as the famous "Have you confessed?" closing
line appears, fireworks can be heard outside. The tour for the
Mad-Eyes team is over, and a great one it was. And you? Have you
confessed? Sunday, 03 September
Time for another live update from Bartie, the webmaster, this
time from ArenA Amsterdam, Netherlands:
19.30: Paul Oakenfold starts shaking up the ArenA. Bartie is in
golden circle, next to manager Guy Oseary, who's taking pictures
of fans.
21.25: Show starts almost an hour and a half later than the scheduled
start. The ArenA, with a capacity of 55.000, is completely full.
21.38: Before Like A Virgin,
Madonna asks "Alright Amsterdam! Are you ready to ride with
me?"
21.44: "Ladies & Gentlemen, welcome to our show! We have
something for your mind, your body and for your soul."
22.25: Small disaster: the speakers fail at the end of I
Love New York. The grand finale gets totally lost. Before
Ray Of Light, she talks
a lot so the technical problems can get solved and the screen
video rewinded.
22.40: As she lays down after Let
It Will Be: "Where am I? Where is this beautiful place?
Oh Amsterdam, it's good to be back. Amsterdam you have a terrible
reputation, you know. Especially about indulgence. Like me."
As she asks her 'front row bitches' to show their flags, she recognizes
an Australian die hard fan: "I've seen your face before!
Common tell me, how many shows have you seen? Oh it's your 11th!
You're definitely not a virgin anymore!. She mentions a few more
flags (among which again Belgium :-), has to ask which country
is represented by "that flag with the ball". Then launches
into her "no more war, we are one" speech.
22.52: Before Paradise:
"This is my friend Isaac. I don't have many, but he's one
of them." 23.15: Another technical problem; her Lucky
Star cape fails too, the disco balls inside aren't properly
lit.
Friday, 01 September And some update from the
webmaster:
Just got back from an amaaaaaaazing week in Paris!
The stop in the City of Light is always something special
in a Madonna tour. It seems to be the central place where
fans from all over Europe 'get together'. I've enjoyed 4 Madonna
shows with so many great people: my good friends Krissy
(Belgium) and Marcin (Poland) joined me for all 4 shows.
Daniel (Spain), who I first met during the Drowned
World Tour was there all week too. I finally got to meet
my assistant Dani (Hungary) in real life (I see he's
been entertaining the Mad-Eyes readers with a long but great
review). Francesco (Italy), who I met at the G.A.Y
gig and Confessions in Rome was always queueing early
morning with his Italian gang. My girls Peggy, Marie &
Christine (Belgium & France) joined for the 3rd show.
And then I made lotsa new friends: Dorrith and her
sister (Holland), Gaia and her friends (Italy),...
Music/Madonna makes the people come together!
It surely made the long hours of waiting a lot more enjoyable.
The first day we queued from 7am but still suffered a difficult
rush in the afternoon. We avoided that for the 2nd and 3rd
show by coming at 6am, which earned us a spot at front row
at the catwalk, with a great view! For the 4th show we were
so exhausted that we came in the afternoon, but we still ended
up with a pretty good spot near the end of the catwalk.
While Madonna was a bit stiff during the first show, she really
opened up during the other 3. She talked a lot, and tried
her best to entertain the crowd with her funny French. The
2nd show was certainly one of the best shows I'd ever seen.
The last one was very special, when we received the surprise
appearance of Lenny Kravitz, and when she mentioned my homecountry
Belgium among the flags. And I finally got to catch a Confessions
balloon! :-)
The show is such an attack on the senses! Each show I noticed
new details. In Rome my highlights were Live
To Tell and Music,
with Forbidden Love
and Paradise as strong
runners-up. In Paris they still were, but I noticed how incredibly
energetic Ray Of Light
was (especially with my good mate Krissy next to me, jumping
together all the time). How beautifully she sang Drowned
World. How fantastic the dancers were on Jump
(sorry but did you SEE that six-pack?!). How original the
new version of Erotica
sounded, with the beautiful choreography. And how superbly
Stuart mixes Lucky Star
with Hung Up. There's
so much in that show that I just can't get enough. After Rome
and Paris, I'm glad I can feed my hunger a bit more in Amsterdam.
Gotta start packing for tomorrow's trip! To be continued...
:-)
~ Bartie Friday, 01 September My review of the August 28th show:
I have a tale to tell... sometimes it gets so hard to put
it into words. In the last week of August, the tour finally
reached Paris, where Madonna plays 4 shows. On the first one
(27th) she was reportedly stiff, didn't talk to the audience
more than usual. She greeted the audience with "Ladies
and Gentlemen, Mesdames and Messieurs", later on the
show she asked "Do you think my French is bad?"
fans of course couldn't lie, she replied with "Well at
least I'm trying!"
The second show was more special, as the Mad-Eyes team was
finally together: Bartie the webmaster, Marcin the now-famous
photographer, Krissy the good friend of the team, and myself.
We started queueing very early, at 6 am, I would have never
imagined that could happen, I wasn't fond of the idea at first,
but fortunately it turned out well (je suis désolé
for complaining!)... The weather was bad, but we had protection
at least, and we were also left out of the chaos. Two people
who stood with us in queue have to be mentioned: Danielillo
the funny Spanish fan with a fan (thanks, it did help a lot!)
and Gaia, the devoted Italian girl, who wrote a banner to
ask Stuart Price to marry her, and he reportedly liked the
idea. We surely don't want to miss that wedding. ;-)
We got in the venue after 6 pm, David Guetta was the opening
act. He wasn't universally well received, we could hear a
few booing here and there. He left around 8:45, still almost
half an hour to wait for Her, I think it was the worst part
of all the waiting, but I quickly forgot about it when the
lights were turned off. Our site was recognized by fans, in
much delight to the webmaster.
Around 9:15, the screens were finally starting to play the
opening video, with Madonna glamourously walking around horses,
while the bassline and the spoken lines of the amazing Future
Lovers could be heard. The crowd went nuts and the disco
ball started descending from the top. After the second spoken
verse, the ball opened and she was standing there in all her
glory! The crowd was so loud that I barely heard her singing
first. As we were standing near the stage at the right side
of the catwalk, we couldn't see her performance on the end
of catwalk that well, but we got to see the male dancers dressed
in horses passing by, escorted by the female ones, who were
dressed in nineteenth century-inspired riding clothes, just
like Madonna herself. When the girls cracked their riding
crops, the "horses" crouched, it was perfectly timed.
One of the horse-dancers got lucky as Madonna mounted him
and then she confessed that she "feels love" during
horse riding, via a few lines of Donna Summer's most enduring
hit 'I Feel Love'. The crowd ate it up, and after she sang
two verses of her own song, she galloped through the catwalk,
so I could finally see her, just 2 meters away, realizing
she's so beautiful, no videos or pictures can capture her
essence. She turned to the audience on top of the stairs and
sang the last line of 'I Feel Love', it was magical, greatly
sung, even if she's not totally live. Then she took off her
hat and coat, but didn't take a break before going into the
next song, Get Together.
Surprisingly it's one of the more memorable performances to
me, for several reasons. It was the perfect song to keep the
mood, sounded much better than on CD. Madonna walked around
stage, two male dancers joined her, with red screens behind
them. During the breakdown she came down to the catwalk, and
for half a second, she looked at me! Her eyes are truly gorgeous,
I've never seen anything compared to that before. She lied
on stage in front of us, what an experience! And from that
night, this song will always have a special meaning to me:
as Bartie and I held hands in the air when she was finishing
the song, I realized that after 4 years of keeping contact,
we did "get together" and did check Madonna out
together - the song for me is about our friendship. Thank
you, my favourite webmaster! :-)
The next song in line was the first big sing-along of the
show, one of her signature songs, Like
A Virgin. Before the song, Madonna greeted the audience
with "Ladies & Gentlemen, Mesdames & Messieurs"
(like on the previous show). Then asked if we were ready to
ride with her (of course we were!), she asked "Are you
ready?", even in French too "Vous êtes prêt?".
She started the song and then rode the famous saddle with
the pole. It went very high, she did some hot and dangerous
moves up there, while the fans kept on singing. The screens
showed Madonna's X-ray pictures and horse accidents, only
she could make fun of an accident like that!
She finally took a moment of catching her breath with sitting
down on a table and taking a bit of water, while new elements
of the stage descended from above. It was time for the inspirational
Jump, with many dancers
and parkours doing acrobatics on the set. As a big contrast,
Madonna practically just walked around and sang the song.
We couldn't enjoy this performance in its full because the
catwalk became higher and there was so much happening on stage
at once. The end of her performance was even comical, when
she went to the rails and did some exercices near the real
parkours. Well at least she tried. It was time for her to
go offstage to change costumes as it was the last song of
the Equestrian segment.
The moment I'd been waiting for was about to come. But before,
the first interlude of the show happened, with 3 dancers telling
their story about their though times and how they ended up
as professional dancers. Even if it's obviously the least
eventful part of the show, I do appreciate how Madonna cares
about other people that much now, and it does fit with the
upcoming song. Then, with some church organ music, the most
talked about moment of the show was happening: Madonna emerged
from beneath being hung up on a mirrored cross, dressed in
a red blouse and velvet pants, with a crown of thorns on her
head. It looked absolutely iconic, my chin practically fell
on the floor. And then, she started singing my all time favourite
song, the beautiful Live
To Tell. I couldn't help myself, I was singing it with
all my heart and my soul. Her voice was totally perfect, and
for a brief moment, I saw her smiling on the cross! The line
"I know where beauty lives, I've seen it once, I know
the warmth she gives" couldn't have been more fitting
to me. After the second chorus, she climbed off the cross
as the counter above her stopped at 12 million (number of
African children dying in a year of AIDS). Then she sang the
bridge with the most inspiring lyrics ever written (at least
to me) as an acapella with standing in front of the cross:
"If I ran away, I'd never have the strength to go very
far...". To me it was also her best vocal performance
ever. After the last question she asks ("How will they
know?"), the screens showed explosions and Madonna took
her crown off. As if she couldn't carry the burden of the
tragedies anymore, she lied down on stage, facing the same
fate as those who raise their voices, but never get understood.
The character she was playing died in front of us. It truly
is a highlight of her long career. To all the people, who
think it was controversial or offending, let me quote Madonna
herself from a later song: "Is anyone listening?"
After the one of the greatest highlights of the show, Madonna
was 'reborn' to the opening horns of Forbidden
Love. She sang the first verse and chorus slowly, walking
near the cross. Then, the beat kicked in, made the audience
moving. Two half-naked dancers with the Jewish and Muslim
body paints came to stage and did a great hand-dance. Madonna
joined them, it was like she was trying to say that she brings
together the different people. It was also a huge statement
to portray same sex love and love between different religions
in front of the symbol of Christianity. Because of this, I
even forgave the fans who sang "Once upon a time, there
was a boy and there was a boy".
Madonna then left stage, and even if we were still in the
same segment of the show (officially named 'Bedouin'), I immediately
thought if the first two songs were about the shortcomings
of Christian religion, and then the following songs were focusing
more on the Middle-East. For the very least, this part of
the show was really touching important subjects. The man called
Isaac appeared on the right catwalk, with blowing a traditional
horn, and starting to sing the song Isaac.
A cage was lowered to the main stage, with a female dancer
dressed as an oppressed Arabic woman. Madonna came back to
stage at the end of the catwalk, so she was far again, but
then she came near us and kneeled down at the same spot again.
She freed the dancer from the cage and she was joined by a
few dancers for a very exhausting choreography, that actually
saved the performance. I think this song was performed only
to feature Isaac himself, even if it's one of the more innovative
songs on the latest album, the song after it on the CD would
have been a better choice.
Coming up, Madonna's latest hit single Sorry.
I didn't expect much from this song as it was never my favourite.
But the live version blew me away. It started with the Pet
Shop Boys vocals from their remix while Madonna took on a
leather jacket. She walked around the stage while singing
the verses (though she was miming), building up the tense,
and making it explode all with "I don't wanna hear, I
don't wanna know". This song got one of the biggest reception
from the audience. During the breakdown, Madonna did the staggering
yoga choreography, recreating the video, another spectacle
of the show. At the end, instead of her usual speech, she
told us "repeat after me: talk is cheap".
She quickly went into the following song, Like
It Or Not. She took off her jacket, finally showing some
skin on the front, for my pleasure. They looked perfect too.
She went to the end of the catwalk again, so we couldn't catch
the chair choreography, but we could see the slithering snakes
and flowers on the big screens to match with the lyrics "I'll
be the garden, you'll be the snake". After she finished
the song, it was time for another costume change.
Before Madonna came back, the audience got an amazing interlude,
one of the best tour interludes she ever did. It was again
the song Sorry, but in
a totally new remix version, named 'Don't Talk, Don't Speak'
by the fans, even with a melody change. The video showed Madonna
of the original video in front of a screen performing the
song, interspersed with images of various tragical pictures
and past or present world leaders. Mr Bush obviously got the
rightful reception from the lovely audience. ;-) At the end
of the video, the line "Is anyone listening?" was
written, probably directed at her detractors. Well Madonna,
at least your fans are listening, and you're more convincing
with your own songs, than with covers.
For the third segment of the show, Madonna came back on stage
dressed in a leather jacket with a furry collar, holding the
electric guitar, hinting at glam rock. She went into the energetic
I Love New York
right away while skyscrapers appeared on the screens. Her
guitar playing was amazing, especially in the extended ending
of the song. Naturally, for the line "Paris and London,
baby you can keep" she got booed, but the audience appreciated
the song nonetheless. The infamous "And you can suck
George Bush's dick" was well-received too. At the end
of the song, she said we shouldn't take it personally, because
"I love Paris too".
When she started playing the next song, she asked us to jump.
It was a fantastic rock version of the fan favourite Ray
Of Light. Actually I can't really put this performance
into words as it felt out of this world. The whole venue was
jumping, I even closed my eyes during one of the choruses
to feel the energy, it was like heaven!
She took no break after that remarkable performance, just
took off her guitar and jacket and then the beats of the Paper
Faces Mix of Let
It Will Be started playing. As I was totally out of breath
because of the previous song, I didn't follow it that much,
but I saw her hesitating between a few cowboy hats, finally
taking one from a fan this time, not from an inside person.
The woman totally amazed me for still having the energy to
do a performance that draining...
Before continuing with the show, she actually took a long
break now. She told us in French that she was tired, and asked
if we were having a good time. After two convincing replies,
she said "well you better, I slept only 3 hours yesterday".
Then she asked us to show her our flags, she actually went
around the catwalk and said "Germany, Canada, Italy".
Representatives of the last one were so loud that she went
there and actually removed her earplugs just to hear them
perfectly. She went back to the stairs, sat down and did a
quick song with the lyrics "We want peace/no more war/we
are one!", and she asked us to repeat, she was really
talkative that night. Finally, the music started and she did
a beautiful acoustic rendition of one of my favourite songs,
Drowned World.
It was a simple performance, resembling a lot to her older
tours, but it was a great emotional moment with everybody
singing along.
Many fans complained that she did another slow song right
after, but I think both Madonna and the audience needed it
to recover from all that jumping and dancing. She sat down
on the stage with the acoustic guitar in her hand, next to
the man she introduced as "This is my friend Isaac",
she was in such a good mood that she just laughed after. She
started singing a totally different version of Paradise
(Not For Me). Her voice was sincere but beautiful. Isaac
sang the originally French parts in (probably) Hebrew. Madonna
played the guitar well again, during the instrumental break,
I looked at Monte and he wasn't even playing his, it was just
Madonna. The screens showed images of a beautiful tree with
pink petals that were falling down slowly. Madonna surely
knows how to do a lot of great performances with an atmosphere!
At the end, she sang the well-fitting line "Into your
eyes, my face remains" through a vocoder.
Madonna went offstage again and a montage of her old videos
appeared on the big screen, although it was much more subtle
than the previous ones she had on concerts. The crowd cheered
for past hits, but then the dancers appear with roller-skates
and do an amazing choreography to the beats of the famous
70s anthem 'Disco Inferno'. Hardcore fans notice the vocodered
chorus of 'Where's The Party' added, they happily sing along.
Then, Madonna appears glamorously in a white suit, similar
to the one John Travolta wore in Saturday Night Fever, and
to the beat of 'Disco Inferno' she starts singing her own
hit Music, making it
to be Music Inferno! Madonna's eyelashes shine like
diamond. She's joined by two of the female dancers, dressed
in suits too, and they dance through the whole song, then
Madonna goes to the end of catwalk and does the legendary
disco gun choreography, done by Travolta, accompanied first
by the rollerskaters, then the two girls join her. When Madonna
came back to the main stage, she even imitated Travolta's
hair fixing, it was so funny to see! The best performance
of the song, no doubt!
She took off her suit to reveal a striped unitard, an obvious
homage to ABBA who wore a similar clothing on one of their
world tours. The following song confuses many, as it's a Kraftwerk-inspired
rework of 'Erotica', but using the lyrics of You
Thrill Me, the original version of the track, making it
to be another confessional song ("you are who you are
and I wouldn't want to change a thing"). With Madonna
and her company doing a 2-on-2 dance, while disco balls shining
above them, she brought back the heyday of Studio 54. I did
appreciate this rare song on tour, but it kills a bit of momentum
among the mammoth hits of the Disco segment. It was nice to
hear her saying "I'd like to put you in a trance"
at the end of the song though.
She then invites us to 'the beautiful island' with asking
France to "wear your dancing shoes" as she starts
the tribal version of La
Isla Bonita. This version is quite similar to the closing
song of the previous tour, but this song is one of my favourite
80s Madonna songs, so I was enjoying it, but many fans were
left confused as Madonna changed the pace of the chorus and
took breaks during some lines. At the end, they do a big choreography
in front of the tropical scenery. When she finished the song,
not everyone showed appreciation, but I surely did.
Madonna was probably exhausted, but it is actually a rehearsed
part, when she lies on the stage and the backup singers (they
didn't have their share in the spotlight till now) run to
her and tell her she still has a show to finish. They help
her standing up and give her a cape that says 'Dancing Queen',
another ABBA reference. She spreads her 'wings' so the inside
of the cape with the disco balls makes fans go crazy. The
opening keyboards of Lucky
Star are instantly recognized, but that's the only thing
from the original track. I was afraid if this rendition would
sound like karaoke, since she's using the instrumental of
the upcoming song, but it turned out well. Madonna went to
both side catwalks with the backup singers, singing a light-hearted
version of the song, and when they arrive back on stage, the
music becomes so prominent, yet they sing the "You may
be my lucky star" part a several times. Then Madonna
asked the crowd "Do you want more?", the answer
was obvious. She sang the chorus of the megahit Hung
Up and then left stage to build anticipation. If this
ain't encore, then I don't know what it is. After a while,
she came back in a sequined purple leotard, a jacket and sunglasses,
similar to all of her previous performances of the track,
but I didn't mind it at all. As it was Madonna's most recent
biggest hit, the reception was astonishing, the audience went
mad. After the lovely breakdown, where Madonna showed us again
how flexible she is, she asked the audience to sing the catchy
line "Time goes by so slowly". She went around the
catwalk, even greeting her 'front row bitches'. We sang the
line like twenty times then Madonna went back to the main
stage to finish the song. Unfortunately, it was her time to
go, but left a question for us "Have you confessed?".
My greatest experience was over, but I'll never forget it.
Thank you, Madonna! A big shout out to everyone who was in
the audience, you did a great job!
~ Dani
Thursday, 31 August
Webmaster Bartie is reporting live from the last show of Paris,
Bercy:
20.15: DJ Dimitri from Paris is tonight's opening act
21.19: The show starts 49 minutes behind schedule
21.36: Similar to the other Paris shows, she greets the audience
with "Hello Paris! Are you ready to ride with me? Vous êtes
prêt?!. Then after Like
A Virgin, she continued with "Ladies and Gentlemen, Mesdames
et Messieurs. Bienvenue à notre spectacle! Ce soir on va
tout niquer!" (= Welcome to our show, tonight we're gonna fuck
all!)
22.05: After Sorry, she says "When
I say 'fuck you', I say 'fuck you' to stupidity, I say 'fuck you'
to ignorance!"
22.15: A surprise for the last Paris show: Lenny Kravitz joins
Madonna on stage during I Love New York!
He appears at the end of catwalk and then walks to the main stage.
Madonna and Lenny play electric guitar together and at the end
of the song they give a friendly kiss on the mouth.
22.30: She ends Let
It Will Be with "Let... it... will... you let me down motherfucker...
beeeeeee"
22.34: Before Drowned
World: "C'est mon dernier show, je suis très triste.
I've always had a connection with France. I've always worked together
with French collaborators. Three of them are in the audience tonight:
Jean-Paul Gaultier, Jean-Baptiste Mondino, and Mirwais. They are
real good friends. Talking about friends, show me your flags"
She then walked down the catwalk, naming some flags. She even
mentioned Belgium (a guy standing close to Bartie) She then
continued her usual peace message: "So many different flags, different
cultures, different belief systemes. All different, but we're
all together here. That's a good thing. Repeat after
me: No more war! we want peace! fuck George Bush! no more pain!
we are one! let's have some fun!"
22.39: She lets the audience sing the first chorus of Drowned World
22.43: "This is my friend Isaac, he came all the way from
Yemen tonight" - yesterday she called him her #1 fan from Israel!
Some celebrities in the crowd tonight: Mirwais, Mondino, Gaultier,
Lionel Ritchie
Friday, 25 August
Reports from last night in Horsens, Denmark are coming
in slowly and they're not looking very good. Seems the Danish
crowd is the most underwhelmed of the tour. Critics slammed the
show for being too 'automatic' and 'robotic' and not spontaneous.
Some compared it to watching a two hour long music video. Apparently
Madonna once slipped and dropped her mic, which was hailed as
"the only prove it was a real living person on stage".
The venue seemed to be cause of a lot of agitation as well. Holding
a massive 80.000 people, it seemed that the view in the back was
really bad, and the sound even worse. Looks like Madonna shouldn't
bother about ever repeating her first-time visit to Denmark...
Anyway, I'm leaving for Paris tomorrow to see all 4 shows in Bercy.
My assistant Dani will be there too, so there won't be any updates
for a few days. We'll make up for that with a full report when
we come back!
Wednesday, 23 August
I've heard from many people that the German shows were a real
highlight. The Hannover show yesterday reportedly was great.
Although she did seem a bit tired (at one point she said "The
tour's got to me") she was in a great mood and very talkative.
She changed some of her speech, doing a funny singalong with the
audience that went like:
"Are you hot yet? If you're hot, say "fuck you!".
If you're hot, say "hell yeah!". If you're hot, say
"hell fuckin yeah!". If you're hot, say "fuck George
Bush!" The crowd ate it like sweet cake :-)
It had rained all day but fortunately it stopped right before
the show. The stage seemed to be a bit wet still though, and Madonna
slipped a bit during Jump.
When she was doing Drowned
World, an assistant came on stage to bring her a warm coat
to wear.
Sunday, 20 August
23.00 CET: Madonna has delivered a great show tonight! She did
the cross scene, despite the treat of German prosecutors. She
adressed the crowd in German and thanked them for always supporting
her.
18.27 CET: One of our sources is reporting live from Düsseldorf:
after queueing in the rain for hours, the die hard fans are receiving
a very special treat. They were led into the stadium while Madonna
still needed to do a sound check. So she did the sound check in
front of 1.000 fans! Madonna was performing Future
Lovers, followed by Get
Together, wearing only a black track suit. The dancers were
also on stage, as well as Angela Becker. The lighting and the
video imagery was just as during the show, so apart from the clothing,
it was as if Madonna had started her show already. She talked
to the audience and asked not to take any pictures (which of course
they did anyway). Naturally, fans went totally crazy!
Thursday, 17 August
Madonna gave her 8th and final show in London last night.
Being on her birthday made it extra special and the crowd was
clearly in the mood. Before she could do her speech, Donna and
Nicki led the audience into a Happy Birthday singalong, with Madonna
smiling and enjoying the moment. Visibly touched, she adressed
the crowd with following speech:
"I couldn't think of a better way to spend my birthday
and to tell you the truth it's a hell of a lot better than the
way I spent it last year! If somebody had told me that a year
ago when I was in bed with ten broken bones, pumped up with morphine,
that I would have such an amazing year I would say 'Yeah, and
I'm the Queen of England!'
I feel so grateful, blessed and loved. I also want to say to everybody
watching the show tonight, I look into the audience tonight and
I see flags from all nations, I see people from all walks of life,
different colour skins, different languages, different belief
systems, different educations, different opinions - we are all
so different - and yet we are all here together as one. That is
proof that we can do it in the rest of the world. The best birthday
present you can give to me is to leave this place tonight with
that feeling in your heart - that we are one."
After the show, Madonna celebrated her birthday at a private party
with family and friends (see picture)
Here's an article about last night: Audience in Madonna birthday salute
Madonna
treated to a rousing rendition of Happy Birthday on Wednesday
night - by 12,000 people. The pop queen - who has just turned
48 - was in the middle of a concert at London's Wembley Arena
when her backing singers urged the excited crowd to sing to her.
The entire audience started warbling happy birthday as the slim
blonde stood smiling on the stage.
Madonna, who is on her Confessions tour,
thanked fans and then said her best birthday present would be
world peace. "I cannot think of a better way to spend my
birthday than with you tonight," she added. Wembley also
presented the star with a beautiful mirror ball of roses.
The gig wrapped up the London leg of Madonna's tour. She is now
heading to Germany, where it has been reported prosecutors will
be watching to see if she goes ahead with her controversial crucifixion
scene. During the song Live
To Tell, Madonna is suspended on a mirrored cross wearing
a crown of thorns, as images of African orphans are projected
behind her. A government spokesman said this act could be construed
as an insult to religious beliefs, which is illegal in Germany.
(source: PA
via Yahoo!)
~ Check out some great photos that we
received from Axel, who attended the London show on August 12th.
Wednesday, 16 August
Happy birthday, dear Madonna! You looked ravishing when I saw
you on stage in Rome - keep on singing, dancing, jumping, shocking,
entertaining, smiling,... We like it that way!
During yesterday's show, Madonna held a small speech to thank
her entire crew: "Earlier in the show I sing this song where
at the very end I say I can make it alone. You know that song,
right? You love that song, right? But it's a lie! Because I can't
really make it alone, and I would like to take this opportunity
to thank the hundreds of people thap help me make this show happen
every night. Please give them a big hand!
You know, I don't ever really thank the people I work with publicly
and I should. The crew, the lighting people, the sound people,
my amazing band, my dancers who keep flying around me, hair, makeup,
wardrobe... I mean, it sounds really tedious but so many hard
working amazing people help me put this show together and I can't
make it alone!
There's also my fans! Give yourself a big hand! Come on, let's
shed some light on this subject! I can't make it alone! Thank
you!" At the end, the lights went up in the arena and the
crowd cheered approvingly.
Tuesday, 15 August
Prosecutors plan to keep an eye on Madonna's weekend concert in
Duesseldorf to see if the pop diva repeats the mock crucifixion
scene that has drawn fire from religious leaders.
Johannes Mocken, a spokesman for prosecutors in Duesseldorf, said
Tuesday that a repeat of that scene during Sunday's concert could
be construed as insulting religious beliefs.
Madonna, who is known for her theatrical, action-packed shows,
wears a crown of fake thorns while performing on a mirrored cross.
The stunt, which has been included from the outset of her worldwide
Confessions tour, has been criticized
as an act of hostility toward the Roman Catholic Church.
Representatives for the singer, who will be 48 on Wednesday, have
said the scene is not disrespectful toward the church.
Mocken said authorities would rely on media reports rather than
sending observers to the concert and that the show might be covered
by laws protecting artistic freedoms.
Earlier this month, religious leaders in Rome condemned the concert
stunt. Some 70,000 fans attended Madonna's performance at Olympic
Stadium, some two miles from the Vatican. (source: AP)
Monday, 14 August
Woops, another week went by! I'm still in a daze after seeing
the show in Rome and I can already count down to Paris, yay! Meanwhile,
Mrs. Ritchie is playing her hometown London. I heard the
first show after Rome wasn't that great. She seemed to have a
bit of a cold, and the crowd WAS cold. Lotsa business men and
older people, who kept in their seats. Nothing better than a stadium
with standing places, right Madge? Anyway, she still said she
was glad to be back home and asked the audience if they'd missed
her too.
It seems the cowboy hat that she wears during Let
It Will Be, is part of the show. In Rome it seemed as if it
was a one-off spontaneous thing. Apparently, she wore a blue one
on Thursday's show.
I was also surprised to hear about another detail that I didn't
know when I was in Rome. Apparently the two dancers of Forbidden
Love didn't have those symbols painted on the torso during
the US shows. So she must've added that to make a peace statement
in regard of the Israel-Lebanon conflict (very glad there's a
cease-fire since today BTW).
And British newspapers reported about a remark Madonna made during
one of the London shows. She complained about the lack of sleep
caused by construction workers: "I only got three hours sleep
last night because I have got construction work going on in stereo
at my house. This morning I was so tired I thought: 'F**k, I can't
do my show.' But I'm getting lots of energy from the smiles on
your faces." The site manager for one of the construction
firms responded to one newspaper afterwards: "Usually we
work from 8.30am, but we agreed to be quiet before 10am so Madonna
could get her lie-in. We have a job to do. I am surprised she
has decided to complain."
Tuesday,
08 August
Sitting back at my desk, in the aftermath of a wonderful weekend
in Rome. Saturday I spend a sunny day at the beach
with friends, enjoying the nice italian esthetics (ahem ;-)
and of course anticipating sunday's show. Francesco, whom
I met at the London G.A.Y. gig in November had decided to
start queueing on saturday evening. I decided to take my chances
and only go in the morning. When I arrived at 9am, there were
already hundreds of fans but I managed to get there with the
first 3000 lucky ones who obtained a wristband for the golden
circle. The waiting wasn't easy, because the expected Italian
hysteria quickly got hold of the heated crowd. Many times
there was a rush forward, giving us less and less space. The
afternoon got a bit more bareable when we enjoyed Madonna
doing soundchecks. We heard songs like Like
A Virgin, Get
Together and Isaac,
and Jump over and over
again. The soundcheck delayed the scheduled entrance time
of 4pm. By this time I had met Chris, whom I met in Paris
for the Drowned
World Tour and who coincidently ended up next to me in
the queue. Together we survived the hectic entering of the
stadium, where many people got crushed and scratched. As rain
started pouring down, we crossed the olympic field, running
on the slippery floor but screaming with excitement all the
way. At the front I passed the entrance of the golden circle.
Inside there was enough space to dance during the show. I
met some cool people around me and together we waited the
last few hours. The rain had stopped and it had turned the
hot day into a nice and still warm evening, just perfect.
That evening got right into the right groove when Paul Oakenfold
launched his dance music on the crowd around 8pm. Tunes of
David Guatta, Nelly Furtado, U2 and Tiesto got everybody into
the right mood.
Around 21.45, fashionably late, the lights turned off, and
the sound of running horses filled the stadium. The three
back screens as well as the iron screen showd Steven Klein's
fantastic horse photos, as the disco ball was lowered down.
The stage was much bigger than in the closed arenas but the
catwalk wasn't as high as described in the Cardiff reports.
Myself, i was standing next to the disco ball and the catwalk
didn't seem much higher than two meters. So I had a perfect
view when Madonna appeared from the disco ball. The crowd
was electrified at her sight. The mood was immediately set
and we screamed with amazement as she rode her dancers like
horses. Future Lovers
was perfectly blend with Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love'. She
continued with two dancers for her current single Get
Together in front of a redish background video. She greeted
us with "Ciao Rome! Are you ready?!" before climbing
her horse saddle for a cool version of Like
A Virgin. the images of x-rays with broken bones gave
a whole new meaning to "i made it through the wilderness"
- typical Madonna irony. I was so close to watch her do her
yoga moves on the pole. She was smiling a lot, obviously enjoying
the show. As usual she repeated the "Ladies & Gentlemen,
the night is young and the show has only just begun"
before Jump. I hadn't
read too much about the show yet and was surprised to see
the acrobacy tricks of Cloud (cute and talented as ever) and
the other dancers. Madonna joined them at the end, although
her moves on the rack seemed more calculated.
My absolute highlight of the show was Live
To Tell, which started off with the confessions of three
dancers, followed by the raising of the cross. That scene
had been the cause of a lot of controversy in Rome. Only last
week, the Vatican and other religious leaders had ex-communicated
Madonna for this. During the day, there were people handing
out protest letters against the show. Meanwhile, fans in the
queue held up a fake cross, with the message "Santa Subito"
(make her a saint soon). But when we saw the infamous scene,
it was not shocking, but really moving! The confessions of
the dancers and the images on the screen only made Madonna's
amazing performance of Live
To Tell stronger. Her voice felt so powerful. Forbidden
Love was the perfect follow-up, with another strong message.
The choreography between the two dancers was amazing. Whether
she was symbolizing the forbidden love between two men, or
between different cultures and religions, symbolized by the
Star of David (Jewish) and the crescent moon (muslim) painted
on their torsos, is up to the interpretation of the viewer.
Isaac started off
the song that was named after him, playing a horn and then
singing the duet with Madonna. For Sorry,
Madonna used the Pet Shop Boys remix and a cage choreography
resembling the video of the song. It was on eof those crazy
songs with all the dancers on stage going wild. Madonna closed
the Bedouin part with the mid-tempo Like
It Or Not. The Sorry remix, dubbed by the fans 'Don't
Talk, Don't Speak' was a great interlude, showing images of
the Sorry video, intertwined with images of world leaders,
dictators and mass murderers like Saddam, Hitler, Mussolini,
Bush, Blair, Bin Laden,... The image of Bush, stupidly blinking
his little eyes, was followed up by Madonna lifting her middle
finger. Ironically, many Italians cheered at the sight of
their prime minister Berlusconi. 'I heard all your lies and
stories' was heard, while the video screen asked 'Is anyone
listening?'
Madonna returned on stage in leather rock gear and sporting
her electric guitar for I
Love New York (same version as on the promo tour) and
Ray Of Light. I
always loved her performances of Candy
Perfume Girl and Burning
Up, and obviously so did she coz she was slamming her
guitar like crazy. Lenny Kravitz, who was attending the show,
must've been proud. Like at Koko and G.A.Y., Madonna went
totally balistic during her performance of Let
It Will Be (in the Paper Faces Remix). She then took some
time to address the crowd. The plan of the Italian fans to
sing Crazy For You
didn't really work. Madonna spoke of two miracles in Italy:
"Italy has won the world cup! And secondly, the rain
stopped before my show!" Of course she referred to her
Italian roots and said she had dreamed about doing an open
air concert in Rome for her entire career. She continued "I
see many Italian flags, but also signs that there are many
other nationalities here. See, we can all come together. And
in peace. Together we can make a difference!" She followed
this moment of reflection with two beautiful ballads: Drowned
World, with Isaac on backup, and a wonderful sung version
of Paradise, in full
duet with Isaac. Beautiful blossoms twirled down on the screens,
setting a nice mood.
Another highlight for me was right up: images and sounds of
Madonna's passed career traditionally announced her megahit
Music, but this time
it was fantastically mixed with the 70s disco hit Disco Inferno.
The dancers took over the stage in a crazy rollerskating choreography.
Then Madonna appeared with Donna and Niki, all three dressed
in a stylish white suit. So much class and grace! It was the
third and maybe best time I saw Music
being performed live!
Jumping a bit back in time, madonna re-invented Erotica,
largely replacing it with lyrics from the early version You
thrill Me, which made it less controversial but it sounded
very good. It was probably one of the better dances between
Madonna and her dancers of this show. She had revealed her
Abba-like leatard and continued with the (probably too) rushed
version of La Isla
Bonita. I couldn't help but compare to the superior version
she did on the Drowned
World Tour. At the end she fell down on the floor, pretending
exhaustion, and Donna and Niki covered her with the disco
cape annd pulled her back on her feet. The crowd gasped as
she opened it to uncover the stars inside. Lucky
Stars apparently. I wasn't totally convinced about this
choice of song and the intertwining of the Hung
Up beat mostly made me long for that song. Of course I
knew that meant the end of the show so I put all my last energy
in dancing like crazy. Fortunately it was an extra long version,
where she made everyone sing the line 'Time goes by so slowly'
over and over again.
I was totally exhausted after the show but so satisfied. All
the impressions of the show went through my mind. The incredible
show, the impressive stage with the disco horses, the catwalk,
the video screens and everything displayed on them, the disco
ball, the talented dancers and their choreografies, the duets
with Isaac, the Gaultier costumes, Madonna's gorgeous toned
body and her "billion dollar" voice. It was so much
that I'd need to see the show again to get it all in better
perspective. Fortunately I will, in Paris in three weeks :-)
~ Bartie
Monday, 07 August
I'm back from a wonderful weekend in Rome. The show was simply
AMAZING! It's 1am, just got back from the airport and I'm totally
exhausted. Check back tomorrow for a full report and more updates.
Thursday, 03 August Madonna saves crucifixion routine for TV special
Madonna has won her battle to keep a controversial crucifixion
routine in her Confessions concert in
her upcoming TV special. Religious leaders were outraged when
they first heard about the part of the show where Madonna, wearing
a fake crown of thorns, descends on a suspended mirrored, disco
ball-type cross. They urged the pop superstar to scrap the irreverent
routine, but she refused - and now the singer insists it remains
when the concert special, Live
To Tell, airs in America in November (06). Kevin Reilly, an
executive at NBC - where the concert special will air - says,
"She felt like that was a cornerstone of the show. We viewed
it and didn't see it as being inappropriate." (source: ContactMusic)
Wednesday, 02 August
Yesterday Madonna kicked off the first of 8 shows at Wembley Arena
in her hometown London. She was very energetic and talkative.
Adressing the London crowd, she said: "I never thought I'd
say this about London but it's good to be home. I missed my house,
I missed my horse, I even missed the congestion charge."
As the crowd laughed she grinned "I'm just joking. But we
need to do something about that." Later on she asked: "Did
you miss me too? Did you really miss me? Did you really really
really miss me?" As in the previous shows she accompanied
the politically loaded video images with the line "A lot
of people talk the talk, but how many walk the walk?"
Among the celebs in the audience was Stella McCartney, right at
the end of the catwalk. It seems Madonna noticed her, because
she laughed at her when the disco ball opened and lost her concentration
for a moment. At the end of Hung
Up, Madonna playfully kicked a balloon at her.
Tuesday, 01 August Madonna tour finds new ways to manipulate and display video
content
Pop superstar Madonna is getting a lot of noteriety these days
for her current Confessions Tour, but,
from an engineering point of view, the real news is the aggressive
and challenging nature of the show's video content creation and
display approach. At least, that's the view of Jason Harvey, the
tour's assistant director and lead video engineer — and
he ought to know. Harvey has spearheaded content creation and
engineered display solutions for dozens of major live musical
tours in recent years, including the current Bon Jovi Have a Nice
Day tour, which he says was the first live concert tour to deploy
multiple HD cameras from a fly package setup (as opposed to a
separate broadcast truck) for image magnification (IMAG).
The Madonna tour, however, relies so heavily on synchronized mixes
of live IMAG and high-end, preproduced video content on seven
large screens that the sheer volume of material was too great
to use HD efficiently on the tour's deadlines, although Harvey
says it was seriously considered. Nevertheless, he insists, the
tour's method of creating and displaying video content was more
sophisticated than any he has ever worked on. Among the job's
innovations, he adds, was the liberal use of traditional postproduction
tools, such as Adobe Production Studio (running on an HP xw8200
Workstation), not only to produce packaged content, but also to
previsualize changes and to add graphics and other changes onsite
immediately before or after live performances. »
Continue article at DigitalContentProducer.com
Sunday, 30 July
Madonna has kicked off her European tour with a show in Cardiff's
Millenium Stadium. Paul Oakenfold warmed up the 60.000 fans with
a DJ set at 7pm. Madonna arrived on stage at 9pm and played a
good two hours. The show and setlist didn't change. The stage
was adapted to the open stadium, with the stage and the catwalks
being much higher. The sound towers aside of the stage had backdrops
of the discohorses.
Saturday, 29 July
14.30 GMT: Madonna has arrived in Cardiff, Wales. One of our correspondents
is standing outside the Millenium Stadium and could hear her rehearse
Like It Or Not and
Erotica. Rumours persist
that there might be a change in the setlist but we'll know for
sure tomorrow, when she kicks off her European tour. The first
fans have already arrived to start queueing...
16.00 GMT: Madonna is now rehearsing Jump.
She stopped to give comments (similar to the rehearsal in Japan
for the Blond Ambition
Tour, as seen in Truth
Or Dare)
16.30 GMT: Fans outside the Millenium Stadium can now hear the
rehearsal of Like A Virgin.
18.30 GMT: Madonna has finished nearly 4 hour of soundchecking.
She did almost all the songs of the show (except a few, like Lucky
Star, Music & Drowned World).
Madonna ready for European tour (source: BBC)
Final preparations are being made as Madonna kicks off the European
leg of her Confessions tour in Cardiff.
The show on Sunday at the Millennium Stadium will be the biggest
arena yet for the world tour, which started in the Los Angeles
in May.
Around 59,000 fans are expected for the show, the first of 21
dates across Europe, including eight in London.
Adapting her show to each venue, the singer will include an equestrian
theme during the opening in Cardiff.
The star's tour director Chris Lamb, from California, has worked
with Madonna for 20 years.
He and his "army" have been constructing the set in
the stadium since Monday. With 150 workers over from the USA,
Mr Lamb said they also employed around 200 local people.
"We've done 35 shows in America in indoor arenas, this here
is the first stadium show for two years," he said. "People
are not coming to see a rock concert - this is a show, closer
to theatre than a rock concert."
Mr Lamb said the cost of the concert was "enormous"
but added it was all relative the whole expense of the tour.
After two decades of working with Madonna Mr Lamb believes the
singer will never retire. "I don't think she'll ever stop.
"She's a perfectionist, focused and she knows every little
thing about the show," he added. "She wants to outdo
herself and challenges herself."
And with regards to the set she "comes up with the basic
idea and is involved from square one."
The tour director said the set was "enormously technical"
and was state of the art with its video show.
However two large silver "disco horses" backdrops placed
on each side of the stage have not been approved by Madonna yet.
Even though she's seen the drawings Mr Lamb awaits her verdict
before they get final approval. The media, invited to the stadium
on Friday, were not allowed to photograph them.
DJ Paul Oakenfold will open the Hung Up singer's concert at 1900
BST and will perform his set for around an hour and a half before
Madonna's two-hour show.
There will be a "golden circle" to hold around 3,000
fans in front of the stage on a first come first serve basis.
Madonna's tour continues at Wembley Arena and finishes in Prague
before it moves to Japan in September.
CONFESSIONS FACTS Stage
and equipment weighs 200 tons Eight
pairs of shoes and boots and seven costumes are worn nightly by
Madonna 22 dancers
perform There
are 600 costumes in the show $2m crystals
embellish a giant disco ball