Ray Of Light – JB

Ray Of Light
Warner Brothers Records, 1998
Reviewed by JB
Published on Mar 3, 1998

Motherhood, vocal lessons and a uniquely talented
producer-collaborator (as opposed to a simply “hot”
producer-collaborator) has resulted in the crowning jewel of
Madonna’s formidably-experimented career.

This album uses electronica as its playground, done with the
help of sound engineer William Orbit who had previously elevated
the ass-dragging “Justify My Love” into a more cerebral and
sensuously textured remix. Although the themes are more diverse,
it’s not a huge departure from the freely experimenting spirit of
Erotica . But this time she hasn’t bitten off more than she
can chew.

The ready-to-explode club hit title track has some major
textures going on (and on and on) to make the sound eager to be
danced to, radioed and remixed. I can hardly type this with all the
dancing I’m doing to this song; it has an engineered sophistication
“Vogue”, in my (former) opinion her best dance track, regretfully
lacked. Divinely-textured “Sky Fits Heaven” might as well be a
b-side; both tracks are undoubtably electronica.

“Frozen” has an Enya-like quality with its moving strings and
Madonna exploiting a new exquisite vocal range. The lyrics aren’t
up to par with the rest of the album but such is the price for
bel canto; note that she’s compensating lyrics for music
when it was usually the other way around. Bjork would be proud of
“Skin”, an epic landscape of desire “Bedtime Stories” didn’t quite
grasp.

Her ballads have a new enhanced feel resulting in songs which
are Madonnally radio friendly without a hint of regurgitation. “The
Power Of Goodbye” and “Swim” are Sarah McLachlan in quality but
with that distinct melodic stamp of Madonna Ballads. “Little Star”,
a lulluby to her daughter, is exquisitely crafted in the tradition
of “This Used To Be My Playground” and “Rain”. Touched with a
little sythnthesizer magic, of course.

World music influences echos everywhere throughout
Ray Of Light, but it’s most obvious in the tracks “To Have
And Not To Hold” and “Shanti/Ashtangi” (the latter sung in
Sanskrit). The ambience is exotic but not devoid of Madonna and
Orbit’s efforts at bringing the melody into a level of purity
unheard of in a Madonna album until now (don’t even think about “La
Isla Bonita”).

What to make of the astonishing imagery of “Mer Girl”. I know I
should say something about it but I choose to leave this for you to
ponder over.

Austere, remarkably underproduced and without half the hooks
Bedtime Stories was artfully tailored to,
Ray Of Light shows obvious progress even for Madonna. Like
Erotica, every spin makes it better. My advice to those
Eurodance fans is to just keep playing it; because underneath all
that electric pizazz, the lady can still make a groove.

Rating: B+

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