Two years ago, right as “Like a Prayer” was turning 25, we ranked the 68 singles Madonna has released since her 1982 debut. Since then, “Rebel Heart“ — the singer’s 13th studio album — brought that total to 71, while another headline-grabbing world tour extended the shelf life of some of Madonna’s classics. Now it’s time to update our rankings.
In instances where the Rebel Heart Tour prompted us to reevaluate
certain songs, we’ve noted significant changes that depart from the
previous list and linked to the performances that inspired them. A few
other tracks were slightly reshuffled because who doesn’t question their
judgment two years later? Otherwise, it’s the same drill as before.
Rubric:
• Billboard Hot 100 success (Many
songs made splashes on the Hot Dance Club Play chart and abroad,
including some that failed to chart on the Hot 100. For the sake of
these rankings, only the Hot 100 performance was considered.)
• Single’s longevity, or: Do people still know it? Is it still played on the radio and in other public arenas?
• How the song contributed to Madonna’s image and critical reception
• Author’s personal taste
What’s missing?
• Promotional singles don’t count (e.g. “Nobody Knows Me,” “Hey You”).
• Featured-artist credits don’t count (e.g. “Me Against the Music” with Britney Spears).
•
Any songs that were not released as singles in the United States don’t
count. Two exceptions: “Into the Groove” and “Fever,” neither of which
was technically released as a single. Both were hits in their own right
regardless, becoming some of Madonna’s most famous songs.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
Wherever you are, the opening pings of the organ in “Like a Prayer” are
like a call to action. If you’re in public when it begins on your iPod,
shove your hands in your pockets immediately to keep from undulating
like a member of the song’s gospel choir. If you’re in a karaoke bar,
someone better grab that microphone pronto, before another cross erupts
into flames as penance for your pop-music sins.
That’s because “Like a Prayer” is among the best pop songs of all time.
The hum of the choir at the start crescendos in a way that still demands
everyone leap from their seats. It’s just ‘80s enough to have
catapulted to ubiquity within weeks of its release, but it’s timeless
enough to remain a staple of contemporary-flashback radio.
It helps, too, that the song sparked a flame of controversy. Its video,
directed by frequent early-Madonna collaborator Mary Lambert, depicts
white supremacy, an interracial romance and Madonna crooning in front of
Ku Klux Klan-style burning crosses. It seems tame compared to Madge’s
later videos, but the religious controversy resulted in protests. The
American Family Association condemned it, and Pepsi, which used “Like a
Prayer” in a $5 million advertising deal with Madonna, dropped the
singer’s campaign.
Madonna shrugged off the contention, and rightfully so. Critics praised
the song, which spent three weeks at No. 1 and has since been listed on
Rolling Stone’s and Blender’s lists of the greatest songs of all time.
Today, pop stars are lucky to land a song that leads to even half the
longevity that “Like a Prayer” has seen. It’s what, more or less,
spawned critics’ declaration that Madonna was the high priestess of
reinvention. It’s amazing that a number about so many heavy things —
religious guilt compounded by one’s devotion to God, mixed with the
ideal of doing the right thing and, of course, the thrust of sexual
pleasure — doesn’t (and really never did) carry the burden of being an
Important Song. Instead, we love it for its dance mandate, its gospel
strain and the passion that Madonna’s vocals embody. “Like a Prayer” is
indeed a pop-music prayer, answered for the ages.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
Second perhaps only to “Like a Virgin” in defining Madonna’s career,
“Vogue” has etched a place in the dance-floor lexicon, where it remains
more than two decades later. It was the ultimate song of the times.
Inspired by ball culture,
1970s disco and downtown New York’s 1980s music scene, “Vogue” became
an escapism anthem. The lyrics are apt for the post-Reagan age: “When
all else fails and you long to be / Something better than you are today /
I know a place where you can get away / It’s called a dance floor, and
here’s what it’s for.” The jolted hand choreography is still fashionable
today, as evidenced by its use during the sleek opener of Madonna’s
2012 Super Bowl halftime show — 24 years after her MTV Video Music
Awards performance transformed the song into an astounding ode to Marie Antoinette-era France, 18 years after Robin Williams gave it a sendup in a memorable scene from “The Birdcage,” and eight years after it opened the “Devil Wears Prada” soundtrack.
Today, “Vogue” remains a staple of Madonna’s setlists, and the video,
directed by a young David Fincher, is a black-and-white portrait of
1920s Hollywood with a postmodern slant. The song is often credited with
having helped to bring house music to the fore, so thank or curse
Madonna for that as you will. Either way, “Vogue” is a song that’s worth
striking a pose for.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
Another fixture of radio airwaves, supermarket speakers and dance
floors, “Express Yourself” has never not been relevant. Still, a little
song called “Born This Way” came along in 2011, and again the words
“Express Yourself” were on everyone’s lips. What resulted was a fierce
debate about whether Lady Gaga had appropriated the chord structure of
Madonna’s 1989 hit. Once again, another female pop artist seemed to, at
least, pay homage to Madge or, at most, have totally ripped her off. “As
far as Western music theory is concerned, that song was written by
Madonna,” Owen Pallett said of “Born This Way” in a Slate essay.
Whichever position you take in the great Madonna-Lady Gaga debate of
the 2010s, there’s no doubt that “Express Yourself” is an iconic song.
It serves as many things: a female-empowerment anthem, the antithesis of
the literalism interpreted in 1984’s “Material Girl” (pure satire, but
irony doesn’t always mesh with pop music), and the singer’s most
concerted effort to drift from the bubblegum stylings of her previous
work. The music video — Madonna’s first collaboration with David Fincher
and, with a $5 million budget, one of the most expensive ever made —
was in 2011 ranked among TIME’s 30 greatest of all time.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
UPDATE: No. 5 to No. 4, because seeing Madonna do a pure, eletro-pop rendition
of “Like a Virgin” — a song she religiously remixes for concerts —
while frolicking around the stage sans dancers or visual effects proved
she needs no accoutrements to dazzle.
PREVIOUSLY: “Like
a Virgin” is synonymous with Madonna. “Like a Virgin” is synonymous
with weddings. “Like a Virgin” is synonymous with teeny-bopper
lookalikes dressed in dangling beads and evening gloves. And, most
importantly, “Like a Virgin” is synonymous with the MTV Video Music
Awards, where, during its inaugural 1984 ceremony, Madonna famously
rolled around on the stage and instantly became a global superstar.
(Another twist of charisma, as no one even knew “Like a Virgin” when she
performed it that night. It wouldn’t be released as a single for
another two months.) Nineteen years later, “Like a Virgin” appeared on the VMA stage again,
this time sung by 2003’s reigning pop princesses, Christina Aguilera
and Britney Spears, who donned wedding gowns and locked lips with their
musical matron. The classic still felt as fresh as ever.
Much
of pop music is owed to both the song and the 1984 VMA performance it
inspired. Nile Rodgers, who produced the “Like a Virgin” album, famously
told Madonna at first that the track’s hook and lyrics weren’t catchy —
a critique for which he soon apologized. “Like a Virgin” introduced the
first major controversy of Madonna’s career, and once she’d had a
taste, she never let that reputation drift far from her namesake. No one
lambastes its sexual undertones anymore, but Madonna has maintained the
song’s association with controversy. On her acclaimed 1990 Blonde
Ambition Tour, she simulated masturbation on a red silk bed during a
Middle Eastern-themed arrangement. During 2008’s Sticky & Sweet
Tour, she dedicated it to the pope. And on 2012’s MDNA Tour, she
performed it as a piano ballad. So while you were making sure the DJ at
your wedding included it on the playlist (because what are a few naughty
lyrics when a song is this catchy?), Madonna was ensuring it remained
true to her original intentions: to grab your attention and stir up some
agitation, the way only a timeless pop standard can.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
Ah, “Justify My Love.” Where does one begin when describing a song that
is iconic for entirely different reasons than every other high-ranking
track on this list? It’s unlikely you’ll hear “Justify My Love” on the
radio today, and the same goes for the dance floor, the supermarket, on
television and, in all likelihood, on your iPod. Yet somehow it remains
one of the singer’s most epochal, and for that we must celebrate it.
The song instantly conjures images of its grainy black-and-white video,
which featured Madonna slinking through the halls of a hotel while
engaging in cloistered acts of sexual passion, at times wearing nothing
but skimpy undergarments and donning a dominatrix mien. With androgyny
and fetishism as primary themes, the video earned the rare distinction
of being banned from MTV’s airwaves. To top it off, “Justify My Love,”
co-written by Lenny Kravitz and Ingrid Chavez, sounded like no song
Madonna had ever made. Most of its lyrics are spoken with breathy
cadence, enhancing the trip-hop ode’s carnal energy. “Justify My Love”
has striking psychedelic influences, and it ushered in the “Erotica”
period that would define the singer’s image throughout the first half of
the ‘90s. All that for a song that was banned from seeing the light of
day.
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Billboard peak: No. 5
By the time the “Ray of Light” album arrived in February 1998, the
world was well-adjusted to Madonna’s self-reinventions. This one offered
the steepest departure from her previous work. By the time she became a
mother in late 1996 and then won the Golden Globe for her celebrated
role as Eva Perón in “Evita,” Madonna converted to Kabbalah and found
spiritual enlightenment. The result was a stunning tour de force of
songwriting and William Orbit-produced electronic rock. The album’s
titular second single didn’t peak as high as some of her previous
Billboard hits, but no matter: It defined a more adult Madonna while
managing to be just as enduring as what had come before.
“Ray
of Light” is a rock anthem. It’s often noted for its dance vibe, but
what resounds is its use of electric guitar. It co-existed with the apex
of the 1990s’ female singer-songwriter evolution but joins the
proliferation of electronic music that emerged around the same period —
all while maintaining the psychedelic undertones offered on the
“Erotica” and “Bedtime Stories” albums. “Ray of Light” became the
comeback story Madonna didn’t even know she needed: a post-40 pop-rock
goddess returning to her throne, emboldened by a spiritual renaissance.
The album and its title track led to a huge night at the Grammys for
Madonna. She lost Album of the Year in a heated battle with Lauryn Hill
but nabbed Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Dance Recording. “Ray of Light”
is wonderful because it’s a brilliant song, but it’s important because,
15 years after her first single, it cemented Madonna’s longevity and
ushered in another several years of pop sovereignty.
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Billboard peak: No. 16
“Holiday” is further evidence of Madonna’s longevity. It was her first
hit, and it prevails as one of her defining fixtures, even though it
never cracked the Top 10. It’s certainly her most infectious song. Who
doesn’t want to imagine “Holiday” scoring their arrival at a Hawaiian
resort? Much in the way that “Like a Virgin” is defined by its wedding
association, the upbeat “Holiday” lyrics make it the world’s vacation
paean.
The song premiered to acclaim, but no one foresaw Madonna’s impending
rise to supremacy. “Holiday” came and went like any old one-off pop hit,
and yet it endures, having become a staple of the singer’s tours and an
epitomization of ‘80s bubblegum cheer. Plus, Madonna is credited for
the song’s cowbell.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
“Material Girl” holds an interesting place in Madonna’s oeuvre. Released
after “Like a Virgin,” it was a substantial hit that today is most
readily associated with the nickname it lent to the singer. Yet
“Material Girl” is the song Madonna has worked hardest to shed from her
image.
It was meant as satire, a parody of society’s one-note approach to
glamour and wealth. The music video’s “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes”
portrait of Marilyn Monroe is still iconic, even though her three most
recent tours haven’t included the song on their setlists. But first
impressions are everything, and there’s no diminishing the power any
follow-up to “Like a Virgin” could have wielded. If anything, the “Ray
of Light,” “Music” and “American Life” albums were rebuttals to
everything fans failed to appreciate in “Material Girl.” The song’s
intent may register more clearly today, but no one’s tending to that
while they slap the Material Girl moniker on Madonna’s shoulders at
every turn. (If you don’t want to dote to that addendum, that’s okay,
too — the song is still pure fun.)
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YouTube
Billboard peak: N/A
“Into
the Groove” was a crossover hit from the “Desperately Seeking Susan”
soundtrack, yet it was never officially released as a single for fear it
would go head to head with “Angel,” her third outing from the “Like a
Virgin” album. It was a silly decision on Warner Bros.’ part, because no
one (including this ranking) cites “Angel” as one of Madonna’s more
memorable singles. But “Into the Groove” is. It follows the same tempo
as “Holiday” and in turn serves as Madonna’s finest pre-“Vogue”
dance-floor anthem. “Into the Groove” is the ultimate mid-‘80s call to
action.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
Madonna’s most recent No. 1 single, “Music” marked another resurgence
for the singer. Here came full-on Electronic Madonna, who imbued her
club-friendly grooves with mature sensibilities. The song’s opening
words — “Hey, Mr. DJ, put a record on / I wanna dance with my baby” —
also helped to introduce the DJ renaissance in which artists
name-checked record spinners in their music. Jennifer Lopez, Mariah Carey, Black Eyed Peas, Jet, Lil Wayne and Britney Spears are among the artists who followed suit.
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Billboard peak: No. 4
Madonna’s most ‘80s-sounding hit, “Lucky Star” spawned the bulk of the
copycat costumes still seen at Halloween parties far and wide. “Lucky
Star” made Madonna a fashion icon. It was her first Top 5 Billboard hit,
propelled by the seminal look first seen in the music video. Teen girls
everywhere emulated her black mesh top and bangles, the rosary worn as
jewelry and the unruly hair tied up in a ribbon.
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Billboard peak: No. 46
UPDATE: No.
7 to No. 12, because Madonna left this under-heralded sex hymn off the
Rebel Heart Tour lineup, instead performing a cabaret-themed “Music,” an electro-jazz update of “Material Girl“ (a song she’s notoriously said she loathes), flamenco-infused excerpts of “Into the Groove” and “Lucky Star,” and a party-crashing “Holiday“ encore.
PREVIOUSLY: Listening
to “Human Nature” might leave you scouring the liner notes for a Dr.
Dre credit. You won’t find it, but the song’s hip-hop influences are
undeniable. It wasn’t a huge Billboard hit, yet the bondage-inspired
video — in which Madonna trots around in cornrows and a skintight
leather suit while carrying a chihuahua in one hand and a whip in the
other — became iconic in its own right, and she’s since performed the
track on numerous world tours. Released months before “Evita” would
usher in a more harnessed iteration of her career, “Human Nature” marked
the cessation of Madonna’s hypersexual phase. The aggressive lyrics
(“I’m not your bitch, don’t hang your shit on me”) acted as a response
to the backlash “Erotica” and the “Sex” book received, because Madonna
is nothing if not self-aware. “Human Nature” is an R&B blitz that
remains one of Madonna’s most original songs, particularly as her
early-‘90s era has gained esteem in the years since it lit the country’s
moral compass on fire.
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Billboard peak: No. 10
UPDATE: No.
17 to 13, because frankly we must have been drunk two years ago.
We underestimated this song. It’s one of M’s all-time greats, as again proven during her one-night-only Tears of a Clown show in Australia.
PREVIOUSLY: “Borderline”
is credited with helping to cement Madonna’s signature ‘80s sound. It’s
all about those wailing vocals and the barrier-breaking video, which
depicted a rare interracial romance.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
“Frozen” preceded “Ray of Light,” and landed in a higher position on the
Billboard chart than that track, but it hasn’t secured the same
longevity. Still, critics extolled the song, hailing the haunting ballad
as a “breathtaking“ “masterpiece“ of ‘90s pop-rock. The drum beat is dazzling.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
The sweeping string arrangement that mounts “Papa Don’t Preach” is
still among pop music’s most engaging openings. It’s a song that made
everyone mad: Anti-abortion groups saw it as pro-choice; pro-choice
organizations thought it undermined birth control by promoting teen
pregnancy. As usual, none of that mattered in the end, as the song’s
popularity has only escalated over the years. In 2002, Kelly Osbourne
put it back on the Billboard chart with her cover.
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Billboard peak: No. 7
“Hung Up” sounds like a sendup to the club-friendly dance music Madonna
made in the ‘80s, its chugging beat serving as her catchiest since
“Vogue.” Come for the tune’s ticking-clock groove, stay for the video’s
acrobatic dance. You try doing either at 47.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Pay no attention to the fact that this searing “American Life” track
failed to chart. “Hollywood” is one of Madonna’s most layered lyrical
achievements, and it will never be far from her canon thanks to that infamous MTV Video Music Awards performance where she smooched Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera while singing this song.
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Billboard peak: No. 3
The seductive “Secret” hails from the same hip-hop influences that made
“Justify My Love” and “Human Nature” instant classics. In the weeks
leading up to its release, Madonna made what was then considered an unprecedented move: She unveiled a snippet of the song on the Internet along with the cover art for the then-unreleased “Bedtime Stories.”
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Billboard peak: No. 1
Co-written by Babyface, “Take a Bow” is Madonna’s most poetic ballad.
Much in the way that such hits as “Borderline” and “Into the Grove” act
as the fuselage of ‘80s pop, “Take a Bow” is a lost-love elegy that
squares nicely with the burgeoning female singer-songwriter movement of
the ‘90s. Don’t mistake its sleepy quality for stuffiness — this song is
Madonna at her loveliest.
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Billboard peak: No. 4
One of the standouts from the “Music” album, the country-inspired “Don’t
Tell Me” thrived because it was such an unlikely follow-up to the
electronic-infused title single. It saw a recent revival when Madonna joined Miley Cyrus to perform the song on “MTV Unplugged.”
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Billboard peak: No. 1
“Open
Your Heart” is among the songs that introduced the famous cone bra worn
on 1990’s Blonde Ambition Tour — the same one that in 2012 sold for $52,000.
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YouTube
Billboard peak: No. 84
Arguably
the defining song of the “Rebel Heart” era, this Diplo-produced banger
became Madonna’s 57th Hot 100 entry, bolstered by a flashy performance
that snaked through the halls of “Jimmy Fallon.” Upstaging her EDM
attempts from “MDNA,” the frivolous, infectious dance anthem called on
Nicki Minaj for a sizzling rap verse and recruited the likes of Beyoncé,
Miley Cryus and Katy Perry for its rowdy video. Even if Diplo once told HuffPost
that the song’s title is an empowerment message for all to enjoy, we
should appreciate “Bitch I’m Madonna” for what it is: a brazenly
self-aggrandizing showstopper that dares Madonna’s critics to say her
party days should be behind her.
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Billboard peak: No. 19
If the psychedelia embedded on “Erotica” was a piece of that album’s
hodgepodge pie, “Beautiful Stranger” is a pure sendup to the genre. The
silly “Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me” anthem isn’t likely to
appear on many future tour setlists, but it’s her most unabashedly fun
release to date.
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Billboard peak: No. 3
Released at the apex of Madonna’s sex appeal, “Erotica” and its
accompanying title album are remarkable as a period of innovation for
the singer. The song saw mixed reviews, but it’s still amazing to
realize that something with coital moans underscoring the lyrics charted
as high as it did in 1992. The stylized video — shot with Super 8 film
and featuring Naomi Campbell, Isabella Rossellini and Big Daddy Kane —
used scenes from the making of Madonna’s “Sex” book. MTV aired it only a
few times due to the graphic content.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
“Everybody” carries a clear directive: “C’mon, dance and sing.”
Madonna’s debut single, it ushered in what she would inspire us to do
for the next 32 years (and counting).
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Billboard peak: No. 8
“Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” is one of the most important songs to
Madonna’s career. The image of her serenading Buenos Aires with Andrew
Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s “Evita” aria serves as a stand-in for the
transition from Sexy Madonna to Adult Madonna. Plus, she won a Golden
Globe for her performance in the movie.
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Billboard peak: No. 3
UPDATE: No. 29 to No. 27, because you should watch Madonna turn this into a plucky ukulele ballad while cracking jokes about ex-hubby Sean Penn. It’s beautiful.
PREVIOUSLY: “True
Blue” is just as retro-catchy today as it was when it genuflected to
‘50s-style girl groups in 1986. Taken as anything other than homage,
it’s a silly, meandering tune. But heard as a could-be outtake from the
“Grease” soundtrack, “True Blue” is a song that’s still worthy of
singing into your hairbrush in the bathroom mirror.
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Billboard peak: No. 93
“Nothing Really Matters,” or: The song where Madonna went all “Memoirs
of a Geisha” on us. It’s one of her weirdest videos and one of her most
underrated gems. The downtempo track rounded out the cadre of brilliant
singles released from “Ray of Light.”
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Billboard peak: No. 3
It sounds like a marching band is barreling through “4 Minutes,” as if
Madonna, alongside collaborators Justin Timberlake and Timbaland, is
embarking on one final hip-hop romp before the apocalypse. Their effort
to “save the world” results in an infectious dance anthem that should
have been a No. 1 hit.
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Billboard peak: N/A*
Madonna’s satiny “Fever” remake injects a techno groove into the song,
making an already seductive ditty even more sultry. Plus, there’s that
famous “Saturday Night Live” performance.
*“Fever”
was never officially released as a single, thereby making it ineligible
for the Hot 100. It was a dance smash, however, reaching No. 1 on the
Hot Dance Club Play chart, and its video received a sizeable TV
rotation, which is why this ranking makes an exception for the song.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
“Live to Tell” introduced Madonna’s first polished image, her inaugural
post-“Like a Virgin” makeover. It was praised for its lyrics and moody
atmosphere.
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Billboard peak: No. 5
Years before Madonna burned crosses and posed nude in a coffee table
book, “Dress You Up” faced the wrath of Tipper Gore’s Parents Music
Resource Center, which listed it among the 15 songs with the most
objectionable lyrics. In truth, this one’s quite mild and quite fun, as
evidenced in the popular 1999 Gap commercial that sampled it.
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Billboard peak: No. 7
“Deeper and Deeper” is about a boy coming to terms with his homosexuality. It’s Madonna’s finest disco flourish.
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Billboard peak: No. 4
UPDATE: No. 42 to No. 34, because Madison Square Garden’s energy during the Rebel Heart Tour swelled the most at the opening notes of “La Isla Bonita.”
PREVIOUSLY: Madonna
used “La Isla Bonita” as an ode to Latin music’s infusion in pop
standards. It’s long been one of the singer’s more well-received songs.
But you have to be in the right mood for this one — its middling tempo
can feel like a slog.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Widely
hailed as Madonna’s best single since “Hung Up,” this post-breakup
empowerment anthem channels the matador theme of “Take a Bow” and the
pumped-up bravado of “Express Yourself.” Thanks to a triumphant Grammy performance less than two months after “Rebel Heart” leaks forced Madonna to release some of the album early, “Living for Love” ushered in the singer’s biggest renaissance in a decade. Brit Awards tumble
be damned — the clever lyrics and piano-backed house rhythms make it a
Madonna essential, even if “Love” doesn’t find much staying power.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
“This Used to be My Playground” was written for “A League of Their Own,”
but it became a smash in its own right. What’s surprising is that the
heartfelt ballad’s release was sandwiched between “Justify My Love” and
“Erotica,” which corroborates the many checkered crowns that Madonna can
wear.
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Billboard peak: No. 36
The classiest cut on “Erotica” is “Bad Girl,” a sizzling ballad about
the desire for romance. The video stars Christopher Walken as Madonna’s
guardian angel.
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Billboard peak: No. 42
Björk co-wrote this ambient trance outing, which is Madonna’s most
hypnotic song. Mark Romanek directed the $5 million video before helming
such seminal ‘90s clips as Michael Jackson and Janet Jackson’s “Scream”
and Fiona Apple’s “Criminal.”
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Billboard peak: No. 58
Many critics called the “throbbing,” “catchy“ and “triumphant“ “Sorry” the best cut from “Confessions on a Dance Floor.”
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
UPDATE: No. 41 to No 40, because Madonna strapped on an electric guitar and embraced the bewitching inferno of this rock jam.
PREVIOUSLY: Somewhere
there’s a jazzercise class still breaking a sweat to this song, which
sounds like an outtake from the punk persona Madonna never fully
embraced.
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Billboard peak: No. 11
You hardly notice the clinking noises underneath this song’s
orchestration, and that’s supreme praise. The “Frozen” cousin’s
production is stunning amid Madonna’s serene vocals, resulting in a
sleek meditation on dismissed love.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
UPDATE: No. 52 to No. 42, because Madonna included “Who’s That Girl” — an acoustic update, to be exact — on the Rebel Heart Tour for the first time in 28 years.
PREVIOUSLY: This
Spanish-influenced song from the film of the same title earned Grammy
and Golden Globe nominations but may be Madonna’s least-remembered No. 1
hit.
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YouTube
Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
The
purity of the production on “Ghosttown” recalls the “Ray of Light”
album. As one of — perhaps the — best “Rebel Heart” track, this
post-apocalyptic love ballad would rank higher had Madonna included it
in the official Rebel Heart Tour setlist. (She did perform it during a
weeklong residency on “Ellen” and at a few of the tour’s stops.) Critics
lauded the sophistication of “Ghosttown,” which took the No. 16 slot on
Rolling Stone’s list of 2015’s best songs.
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Billboard peak: No. 14
The penultimate single from “Erotica,” “Rain” was a departure from the
carnal outings that came before it. It’s not terribly distinctive from
the other ballads Madonna released in the early ‘90s, but then there’s
that great video and the sultry chorus with the uplifting lilt “Here
comes the sun.”
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
“Love Profusion” is a lovely folk song for the electronic era.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Madonna didn’t lose her enlightenment with the final chords of “Ray of
Light.” If it seems like the singer traded in substance for
synthesizers after “American Life,” this catchy tune begs to differ. “Do
you believe that we can change the future?” she croons.
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Billboard peak: No. 1
The song that bumped “We Are the World” from its Billboard perch, “Crazy
for You” at the time featured Madonna’s strongest vocals and may still
be her greatest love ballad. It’s dull by today’s standards, however,
and “Crazy for You” has fallen off despite having been a
Grammy-nominated hit.
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Billboard peak: No. 37
This song landed Madonna on GQ’s list of the 25 worst rappers of all
time and its pro-materialism reverses much of what she tried to jettison
in her post-“Material Girl” efforts, but that shouldn’t convince you
“American Life” isn’t an underrated single. That rap solo (“I drive my
Mini Cooper / And I’m feeling super-duper / Yo, they tell I’m a trooper /
And you know I’m satisfied”) rightfully raises eyebrows — okay, fine,
it’s terrible — but the video’s controversial political violence once
again put the singer in the hot seat. Good thing the song’s so
memorable.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
The delicate chug of “I’ll Remember” is still most apt as the opening
credits of a ‘90s dramedy. Fitting, as it’s the theme from the 1994
movie “With Honors.” On the heels of ferocious criticism from the
aftermath of “Sex” and “Erotica,” the song helped to soften Madonna’s
image.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
“Causing a Commotion” sounds cheerful, but Madonna told Rolling Stone in
1987 that it was inspired by her abusive relationship with Sean Penn.
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Billboard peak: No. 23
A perplexing choice for a single, “What It Feels Like for a Girl” is
nonetheless a meaningful lyrical accomplishment. The violent video,
directed by Guy Ritchie, was banned from MTV and VH1.
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Billboard peak: No. 2
Even though it’s the most cloying of the songs often listed as Madonna’s
biggest hits, “Cherish” holds a special place in her repertoire. It was
released on the heels of “Like a Prayer” and “Express Yourself,” again
reminding the world that her statements on race and feminism could
coexist with bubblegum-dance sensibilities.
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YouTube
Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Madonna’s
glassy low register makes “Jump” the grittier sequel to “Vogue.” The
Pet Shop Boys should be pleased, as the song is an homage to “West End
Girls.”
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
“Girl Gone Wild” is Madonna trying a little too hard to emulate a song
that Britney Spears could have recorded. The lyrics are clichéd and the
pulsating beat overwrought, but you try listening to the song once
without singing it back to yourself all day. Plus, it provides Madonna’s
best video since “Frozen.”
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Billboard peak: No. 10
The innuendo-laden “Hanky Panky” is pure fun, ‘50s swing style. The
lyrics are sillier than they ought to be, but the fabulous beat refuses
to let your dancing shoes collect dust.
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Billboard peak: No. 9
Madonna speaks throughout much of “Rescue Me,” but it’s hardly as
effective a technique here as it is on “Justify My Love,” which preceded
it as a single. The chorus, however, in which Madonna digs deep into
her low register to belt out the words “rescue me,” is a marvel.
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Billboard peak: No. 8
As a song, “Die Another Day” packs melodrama where it should find a
hook. But as a Bond anthem, it’s the perfect way to introduce the action
series to the 21st century.
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Billboard peak: No. 57
The Neptunes produced “Give It 2 Me,” which features Pharrell Williams
on backing vocals. It’s a throbbing empowerment anthem that contains one
of Madonna’s more clever references to her own career: “Give me a
record and I’ll break it.”
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Billboard peak: No. 10
“Give Me All Your Luvin’” contains Madonna’s most vacuous lyrics, which
includes M.I.A. and Nicki Minaj chanting “L.U.V. Madonna!” It’s proof
“MDNA” needed the singer to graduate from vapid sentiments like “Don’t
play the stupid game / ‘Cause I’m a different kind of girl.” Still, its
new-wave influences help to make it a rousing ditty, and Minaj’s brief
rap verse is great.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
“Nothing Fails” was too mature to be a hit, so Maverick released a
remixed version that doesn’t quite work. With its acoustic guitar and
gospel choir, the original is folksy and reflective of the underrated quality of “American Life.”
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Billboard peak: No. 5
Following the succession of “Holiday,” “Lucky Star,” “Borderline,” “Like
a Virgin,” “Material Girl” and “Crazy for You,” “Angel” comes off as a
subpar single.
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Billboard peak: No. 20
The
autobiographical “Oh Father” has a lush string arrangement, but it was a
bit too theatrical then and it’s still a bit too theatrical today.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Madonna should have skipped “Revolver” as a single choice in favor of
the similar but much better “MDNA” installment “I’m Addicted.” Still,
the angry track features Lil Wayne and could have been a big hit for
Rihanna.
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Billboard peak: No. 18
Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote “You Must Love Me” for “Evita,”
and it went on to win the Oscar for Best Original Song. The vocal
training Madonna endured for the movie pays off in this soprano
serenade, but the song doesn’t do much outside of the film.
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Billboard peak: No. 71
“Celebration” is another dance invitation, but it lacks the originality of “Vogue” or the appeal of “Jump.”
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Billboard peak: No. 8
Sly and the Family Stone influenced “Keep It Together,” a devotion to
the importance of family. The beat is too busy to be very memorable, but
the song marked the finale to Madonna’s more innocent ‘80s, arriving
right before “Vogue” and “Justify My Love” inaugurated her most
provocative chapter.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
“Miles Away” is reminiscent of Justin Timberlake’s “What Goes Around...
Comes Around,” likely because JT — along with Timbaland and Danja —
co-wrote it. It’s a good track that would have been better had Madonna
skipped the computerized effects and instead drawn from its folk
foundation.
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Billboard peak: No. 78
Madonna included her remake of Rose Royce’s “Love Don’t Live Here
Anymore” on the “Like a Virgin” album, but she released a remix in
conjunction with the 1995 ballads album “Something to Remember.” Her
impassioned croons don’t work as a sultry R&B jitter.
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Billboard peak: Didn’t chart
Madonna looks impeccable in the video for “Turn Up the Radio,” which
offers refreshing production values that employ her electronic
infatuation without becoming too wired. Sadly, the lyrics are just plain
awful.
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Billboard peak: No. 6
“You’ll See” was the first single released after “Bedtime Stories,” so
it could be credited as a curtsy to Madonna’s impending “Evita”/“Ray of
Light” comeback. Unfortunately, it also sounds like a dull displacement
from a compilation of yearning ‘80s ballads.
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Billboard peak: No. 29
Madonna’s cover of the 1976 Don McLean classic “American Pie” was
largely panned, but McLean himself praised it, calling the remake “sensual and mystical.” It’s a fluffy, unnecessary dance-pop approach to one of rock’s greatest anthems.
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