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Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect When Ray of Light dropped on Feb. 22, 1998, the world was already used to the idea of Madonna reinventing herself with each album.
In July 1, 1998, Madonna's electronic-oriented single "Ray of Light" was having its four week run at No. 1 on Billboard's Dance Clug Songs chart.
As “Ray of Light” boomed out of radios all year, with Madonna chanting her mantra – “And I feeeel! And I feeeel!” – she seemed to be feeling twice as hard as everyone else.
Madonna on set filming the video for Ray of Light, the title track of her multi-award-winning 1998 album (Credit: Getty Images) British singer-songwriter Mae Muller also drew from Ray of Light ...
Madonna, the Queen of pop, turns 68 today. While dominating the 1980s, 1990s, and present with infamous pop culture moments, ...
“Ray of Light” is often cited as being Madonna’s last great, or even good, album, and that’s absurd.
Madonna has finally announced plans to release her long-shelved Ray of Light remix album, Veronica Electronica, nearly 27 years after the companion LP was first sidelined.
Madonna: Ray Of LightMadonna's improbable career has been fascinating to witness: One of the most famous (and infamous) stars in the world, she put out a 50-dollar book of glossy sex photos, and ...
With “MDNA,” she’s made her best record since 1998’s “Ray of Light.” It’s a collection of club tracks and confessionals that drops white-hot disco bombs with laser-guided precision.
Entitled Veronica Electronica, it’s a collection of alternative versions and remixes of some of her best-known work – all originally released (in original form) as part of 1998's Ray of Light.