On this page you'll find the
press reviews for the concerts in Europe. Also check the press
reviews from the US West coast,
US East coast and US
mid-West.
Slane - 29 August - Madonna wows crowds at Slane Castle
Thousands of fans went wild as Madonna erupted through the stage
floor to take her throne at Slane Castle.
The Queen of Pop wowed a sell-out 80,000-strong crowd of festival-goers
with her dramatic 45 minute late entrance for her first-ever Irish
concert.
Fans who have waited 20-odd years were not left disappointed by
the technical onslaught as images moved across the stage screens
as the heavily-jewelled star spoke a passage called The
Beast Within.
The atmosphere was electric as the first female to headline the
County Meath Festival confidently began her hit parade with Vogue.
There were no pointed bras in sight but the 46-year-old mother-of-two
still lived up to her sensational image as she donned a slightly
camp outfit of a sparkling silver corset, thigh-high boots and black
hot pants.
Madonna's filmmaker husband Guy Ritchie watched her perform from
a viewpoint close to the stage and their two children Lourdes and
Rocco were also at the event.
Other celebrities greeted by the castle owner Lord Henry Mount Charles
included former Labour politician Mo Mowlam, some members of rock
band U2, Coronation Street star Keith Duffy and his wife Lisa, Westlife
singer Kian Egan and his girlfriend Jodi Albert, from Hollyoaks.
Madonna's Re-Invention Tour is a mix of her hits which have spanned
three decades, including songs from her Like
A Virgin album to American
Life.
The wizardry erupted behind as the 12-strong dancing troupe swung
down from the ceiling to perform acrobatic feats including trapeze
tricks and tap dancing.
Aileen Barnes, 40, from Walkinstown in Dublin, said: "I've
been a fan of hers since the early 1980s. As a young girl I always
wanted to see her. She never came so I never got a chance."
(source: Yahoo!
UK) London - 18 August - Papa Needn't Preach
In culmination of a life-long dream, well a fairly long held desire
anyhow, I went to see Madonna last night. The queen of pop played
London to an enthusiastic crowd of fans and celebrities and we had
perfect seats, near the front, on the side, first row. No heads
in front; nothing between me and Mrs Ritchie, my favourite new British
resident, living legend and the most recognizable face post-Diana.
There was a massive commotion just before it started as Kylie and
Dannii Minogue were there - in the block next to us. Omigod, Madonna,
Kylie, and Dannii. Where were Britney and Diana Ross? Certainly
not in the rows round me.
Loads of people left their seats and gathered around them, taking
photos and shouting. Of course, we were very blasé and cool,
and the Minogues just sat there waving, not rattling their Jewellery
as John Lennon would have suggested. Brit fashion darling designer
Matthew Williamson was there bringing the celeb-fashion quotient
up to par. Supporting the rock-chick element was Spice Girl Geri
Halliwell, just a Baby when Mads started out as a Virgin in a gondola
in white lace.
But, onto Madonna - she was fantastic. Absolutely no smut - she
is definitely a mother! The Pope would have no problems with this
show; neither would Diet Pepsi, so Papa Needn’t Preach. Her
Ritchieness started with Vogue
and did a mixture of oldies and newbies from recent album American
Life.
As usual, the dancing was brilliant and really athletic. I must
stick with my yoga. Madonna had about six costume changes throughout
the show; one with a tee-shirt saying 'Brits do it better' which
I thought was cool. There were some people playing bagpipes and
for a while she was even in a kilt which was fun.
The show was fabulous. We danced and sung all the songs but it seemed
to be over so quick. There was no encore which I couldn’t
believe. At the end everyone was leaving and I was sure she would
come back on. James had to drag me out.
Madonna didn't disappoint and is a true entertainer that puts the
youngies to shame. Well, I’m back to dancing in my room…
(source: Lauren Taylor
for Thread) London - 18 August - Madonna leaves
fans ecstatic
Pop queen Madonna's world tour has hit London and her fans were
left ecstatic after an electrifying gig at Earls Court. She kicked
off the concert with a crowd-pleasing show at London's Earls Court
Arena. Wearing black hot pants, a sequinned silver top and knee-high
black boots, the material girl mixed classics like Vogue
and Into The Groove with more
recent tracks such as Frozen.
The mother of two, sporting a new muscular physique, struck a series
of impressive gymnastic poses. She also performed an explosive version
of American Life - the title
track from her latest album - featuring a troupe of backing dancers
dressed head-to-toe in military garb. The Re-Invention Tour has
been getting rave reviews since landing in England but with tickets
priced between £75 and £160 the she has a lot to live
up to. (source: ITV) Manchester - 15 August - Tremendously
well-crafted, perhaps somewhat calculated and soulless
Dancers cavorted in army battledress, Madonna stepped up in flatteringly-tailored
fatigues and the screens flashed up unsettling images of explosions
and middle Eastern children lying injured.
Then a strange procession strutted the long gantries suspended over
the audience - a priest in red, a nun in a skimpy habit, a similarly
saucy burqua-clad woman.
On stage, a soldier struggled to escape from a cage while the screen
behind him showed a woman in flames, then a George Bush look-alike
kissing a Saddam Hussein lookalike.
What did it all mean? That war is bad? Or merely that, like a Madonna
concert, war is spectacular?
There was no explanation from the singer, nor any in the lyrics
to the song this garish sequence illustrated, American
Life. In the absence of such explanation, the juxtaposition
of images of suffering with high-camp showmanship seemed not just
empty but distasteful.
But perhaps we should only ever expect Madonna to confound us. After
all, she had already told us in song "I've had so many lives
since I was a child" as the greatest self-publicist of her
age delivered up the implausibly-titled Nobody
Knows Me.
All those "lives", of course, add up to Re-Invention -
the tired cliche which is, somewhat unimaginatively, the title of
the world tour which had its UK debut with two shows in Manchester
at the weekend.
What we got, a neat 20 years on from her rise to fame and also from
her first UK appearance at Manchester's Hacienda club, was a two-hour
greatest hits show.
But we also got what was surely the highest-priced pop ticket Manchester
has ever known, the best seats costing a whopping £150.
By rights, we should expect the best show ever to come this city's
way. And, sure, Madonna knocks your Britneys, Kylies and Beyonces
into a cocked hat.
But she strives for more - to make the pop concert into supreme
art and theatre. In that respect she falls well short of such conceptual
geniuses as Peter Gabriel when it comes to putting on a gobsmacking
and thought-provoking show.
There were great moments - Madonna singing Frozen,
alone on a stage swathed in dry ice, the taut electro-funk of Die
Another Day and Music,
the huge singalong to Like A Prayer,
a guitar-toting Madonna doing a rockier version of Material
Girl and the kilted dance sequence to Into
The Groove. There were skateboarders, trapeze artists and dancers
galore.
From throwing her first acrobatic shapes to Vogue,
it was obvious that Madonna, 46 on Monday, is in fabulous shape,
managing to combine the jobs of singing and dancing better than
performers half her age.
This show was tremendously well-crafted, but perhaps also somewhat
calculated and soulless. The most genuinely thrilling moment came
during the last number, Holiday,
when a blizzard of red and white confetti was blown into the audience.
Ah, I thought, so that's where all the ticket money went. (source:
Manchester
Online) Manchester - 14 August
- Madonna gets back into the groove with pipers
Madonna was back in Vogue last night as she struck a pose for thousands
of screaming fans in her first British tour date in three years.
The supple 45-year-old superstar showed off her yoga moves as she
kicked off the European leg of her Re-Invention Tour with a dance
spectacular at the Manchester Evening News Arena - the first UK
date. The star came up through the floor on a moving stage to sing
her hit song Vogue. She performed
a mix of classics like Holiday from her early days and recent tracks
from her American Life album.
For the final section, the star donned a kilt to sing Into The Groove with a team of bagpipers. Wearing black hotpants,
a sequinned silver top and knee-high black boots, she belted out
hits surrounded by backing singers and dancers. She then took to
a moving conveyor belt at the front of the stage to perform Nobody
Knows Me. Before Like A Prayer
the singer said: 'We are just getting this party started. This is
a non sitting down song.' Religious images adorned the screens around
her as she sang a cover version of John Lennon's Imagine,
saying to the audience that the song was just as relevant today
as the time it was written. 'It's funny how history keeps on repeating
itself,' she said to a background of images of children in war torn
countries. The star be back in Manchester tonight before taking
the tour to London, Ireland, The Netherlands and Portugal. (source:
Sunday
Mail) Manchester - 14 August - Madonna thrills fans with a dance spectacular
Pop star Madonna thrilled fans with a dance spectacular in Manchester
on Saturday night as she kicked off the European leg of her Re-Invention
Tour. She performed wearing black hotpants, a sequinned silver top
and knee-high black boots before a packed MEN Arena. The show featured
moving video screens, conveyer belts, a ballroom dance sequence
and an electric chair. The singer wore a kilt and a t-shirt proclaiming
"Brits do it better" later in the show. The 45-year-old
performed songs from early in her career such as Holiday
and Material Girl, as well
as tracks from her most recent albums. She also included a cover
version of John Lennon's Imagine.
She has not played in Manchester since 1984 and such was the demand
for tickets for her return that an extra date was added. Madonna
will then take her tour to London, Dublin, the Netherlands and Portugal.
The 56-date Re-Invention Tour started in the Los Angeles in May,
and has so far taken the pop icon across the US and Canada. By the
time it finishes on 14 September in Portugal, an estimated 750,000
fans are expected to have seen her perform hits from her 20-year
career. (source: BBC) Manchester - 14 August - Madonna
kicks off European leg of 'Re-Invention Tour'
Madonna brought her Re-Invention Tour to Europe with
the first of two concerts in Manchester, northern England, which
were sold out within an hour of tickets going on sale last May.
Thousands of fans stood clapping and screaming at the Manchester
Evening News Arena as the US pop icon emerged through the floor
onto a moving stage to sing her hit Vogue.
Wearing black hotpants, a sequinned silver top and knee-high black
boots, 45-year-old Madonna belted out a string of hits surrounded
by backing singers and dancers. She took to a moving conveyor belt
at the front of the stage to perform Nobody
Knows Me, as she rewarded fans with a blend of classics and
new material from her American
Life album. After Manchester, Madonna is to go to her adopted
hometown of London for two nights at the Earls Court exhibition
centre and three at Wembley Arena, followed by an August 29 show
in Dublin. Later she will play Paris, Arnhem in the Netherlands,
and Lisbon. Only one Manchester date was originally planned, but
a second was added in response to big public demand for tickets
-- bringing the total number of gigs to 56 since the tour kicked
off in Los Angeles in May. (source: AFP)