Madonna: Confessions II review – nostalgic dancefloor trip sparks her most vital album in two decades

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- Madonna released Confessions II, a sequel to 2005's Confessions on a Dance Floor, arriving 21 years after the original and inspired by her 2023 Celebration tour
- Every Madonna album since Confessions on a Dance Floor has sold roughly half what its predecessor did — 2019's Madame X shifted 500,000 copies compared to the original Confessions' 10 million, framing this release as an attempt to win back deserters
- The album features collaborations with Sabrina Carpenter (Bring Your Love), daughter Lourdes (The Test), and Belgian rapper Stromae, with production from Stuart Price plus Andrew Watt and Cirkut on Danceteria
- Sonically, Confessions II draws on old-school house (Lil Louis, Inner City, Mr Fingers), trip-hop, 90s Mo' Wax atmospherics, and an Erik Satie interpolation on Betrayal — explicitly eschewing cutting-edge dance trends
- The album runs nearly 10 minutes longer than the 2005 original and lacks a definitive pop banger on the scale of Hung Up, though reviewers call it her strongest work since Confessions on a Dance Floor
Why it matters: Madonna's post-2005 commercial slide — each album selling roughly half the previous one's count, with Madame X at 500,000 versus Confessions on a Dance Floor's 10 million — frames Confessions II as a deliberate pivot back to her dancefloor roots. For longtime fans alienated during that decline, the album's house, trip-hop, and 90s Mo' Wax influences function less as nostalgia bait than as a return to the sound where her commercial authority was last unquestioned.



