Madonna shows she’s no lady (Gaga)
Pop superstar Madonna kicked off a new world
tour on Thursday wishing peace on the Middle East, even as she showcased
grim dance routines depicting violence and bloody gunmen among her more
colourful numbers.
Madonna, 53, mixed hit songs over
three decades in music with tunes from her recent album, MDNA, before a
packed audience, and she took a sly dig at younger diva, Lady Gaga.
“She’s not me!” Madonna belted out
at the end of Express Yourself, which she had reworked to include a
sampling of Lady Gaga’s recent Born This Way.
That song from Lady Gaga,
who emerged on the pop music scene about four years ago and has enjoyed a
huge following, was noted by many fans and critics as being very
similar to Madonna’s late 1980s dance club smash.
Since Lady Gaga, 26, released Born
This Way, there has been speculation that a generational challenge was
in the works and comedians have poked fun at any imagined rivalry
between the two women.
Despite occasional
light-hearted touches such as a baton-twirling routine in cheerleader
formation and a psychedelic homage to Indian philosophy, the dominant
mood at Thursday’s concert in Tel Aviv seemed more grim, with a stage
shrouded in black and red and costumes that often appeared ominous.
Like a
Virgin, a dance tune that helped propel Madonna to stardom as risqué pop
ingénue in the 1980s, was performed as a mournful cabaret with violin
accompaniment. At one point, the singer was trussed up and hoisted into
the air by four male dancers, then lowered on to a platform as though
into a volcano – a virgin sacrifice.
For Gang Bang, Madonna
wrestled with armed intruders whom she then dispatched with a pistol –
their “blood” spattering across an enormous video backdrop. In a routine
for Revolver, she wielded a Kalashnikov rifle, used by many modern-day
insurgents, while one of her dancers favoured an Israeli Uzi.
The exertions never sapped
her confident singing, though she did become somewhat breathless during
remarks to the audience at Ramat Gan stadium on Tel Aviv’s outskirts. “I
chose to start my world tour in Israel for a very specific and
important reason. As you know, the Middle East and all the conflicts
that have been occurring here for thousands of years – they have to
stop,” she said to cheers.
A devotee of Jewish mysticism,
Madonna had dubbed the first leg of her 28-country MDNA tour the “Peace
Concert” and distributed free tickets to some of the Palestinians who
attended from the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem.
Among them was a woman named
Yasmine, who declined to give her last name in light of Palestinian
calls to boycott the Madonna concert and other cultural events in
Israel. She offered a mixed assessment of the show. “I wasn’t a fan of
the intro. It was too aggressive and massacre-like,” Yasmine said. “Her
(Madonna’s) speech about peace and the mention of Palestine was
heartfelt, though.”
Avihay Asseraf, an Israeli who dedicated a Facebook page to Madonna’s visit, was more sanguine about the darker displays.
“That’s
how she chose to express herself this time,” he said. “Ultimately this
is a show, a spectacle, and it’s all for fun.” – Reuters
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