You Can DanceMadonna
Release Date: 11/17/1987
Original Release:
1987
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 122060_CD
UPC # 075992553520
Label: Sire Records (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Madonna
Engineer: Glenn Rosenstein Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: Producers include: Stephen Bray, Jellybean, Mark Kamins, Madonna, Patrick Leonard. Includes liner notes by Brian Chin. This is not a true greatest hits, but a collection of newly remixed (1987) versions of her hits. Madonna's meteoric rise to stardom had as its springboard the early '80s NY club scene; dance music has provided a home base for any of the musical journeys her widely varied career has seen her take. 1987's YOU CAN DANCE found the reigning queen of pop revisiting some of her more famous works, courtesy of the mixing skills of some of the friends she'd made along the way, notably NY DJ and mix artist Jellybean Benitez (a name which was inseparable from the dance music genre at the time). Producer of Madonna's breakthrough "Holiday," he returns here with two slick remixes of the track, highlighting some of its many catchy instrumental nuances. The quintessential Madonna dance track, "Into The Groove," which inspired the album's title, bears the mark of editor Shep Pettibone. Pettibone's reassembling of the track turns it into an all-new dance experience, with inspired breaks and gliding accompaniment. The romantic classic "Over And Over" reinvents the original, augmenting Nile Rodgers's tight production with extra percussion and keyboards.
Rolling Stone (4/11/02, p.108) - Ranked #50 in Rolling Stone's "50 Coolest Records" - "...Madonna's hits remixed by some of the Eighties' savviest DJs..."
Madonna is arguably the most popular female pop singer in American musical history. Although she began her career in the late 1970s as a dancer and as drummer for new wave group the Breakfast Club, Madonna has touched upon many different styles throughout her trend-setting career, and has acted in numerous movies as well. Although her image has shifted to include looks as disparate as raunchy temptress and New Age mother, the Material Girl has always maintained a fierce business sense and a remarkable knack for controversy. Few other artists--male or female--have had the phenomenal mass adulation or the staying power of this pop culture icon.
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