In 1990, Pope John Paul II described her Blond Ambition World Tour as “one of the most satanic shows in the history of humanity.” Soon after that, in an essay for The New Republic, the critic Lucy Sante observed how unbearably hard Madonna was working-and for what? Not to make good music, according to Sante, or even for the money, but “to conquer the unconscious, to become indelible . . . Read our reviews of notable new fiction and nonfiction, updated every Wednesday.īy the end of the eighties, Madonna was innovating the form she had invented: the female mainstream avant-pop performance-artist superstar. It was my own budding sensibilities, I understood then, that would require defending Madonna could take care of herself. That year, I delivered the “Madonna: Why She’s Hot” issue of Time to my father with the same air of triumph that swirled about him an hour later, as he quoted its comparison of her voice to “Minnie Mouse on helium,” a line he liked so much that he repeated it for decades. In regular living-room sessions, I twirled and stretched before the hi-fi altar, arching toward God knew what, flashing on how doing my best Madonna might resemble discovering a radical style of my own, the curious fission of moving in time. I prized the “Like a Virgin” LP I received for my birthday, the adults involved having apparently thought little of giving the record to a Catholic girl who was, if anything, overfamiliar with talk of virgins and of being like at least one of them. Something important seemed bound up in this vision, beaconlike but elusive, forever disappearing around a corner up ahead. I liked her best in motion: the jut of her chin as she spun to a stop, the drag of her foot through a grapevine step. Increasingly, we listened to music by watching it on TV, our dance parties often overseen by a strutting, tattered sprite who wore bangles like opera gloves and held the camera’s gaze with her entire being, as though locked in a dare she was not going to lose. The rest of us remained stuck catching Top Forty countdowns on AM radio, or playing, on our parents’ imperial turntables, the one or two LPs in our possession. In the summer of 1985, we all knew someone, usually an older sibling, who owned a portable, cassette-playing stereo. There seemed nothing “terrestrial” about twisting a radio knob to some eccentric decimal point, dialling static into song. It was a more physical world, though we thought it quite advanced.
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