Pardon me if you've heard this one before, but this blast-from-the-past came on at Westside Market last night, then the DJ recounted how Stephen Bray -- aka Madonna's best collaborator -- had presented it to the Material Girl only to have her reject it. At the risk of having Boy Culture up my ass without lube, I must say that it's so Madonna-esque that it -- along with a few other things -- really has me doubting Madonna's contribution to her songwriting after all these years, a talent that has kept her in very high esteem with me when perhaps other things about her did not. When I heard what the original demo of "Open My Heart" sounded like -- versus the version she "cowrote" -- I was concerned. (They sounded exactly the same to me.) Then I remembered how surprised I was when I later realized how much "Like a Prayer" -- which I consider to be one of her other high points -- borrowed from the Staple Sisters' "I'll Take You There" and how "Vogue" was awfully similar to Malcolm McLaren's "Deep in Vogue." (And that one was sung by a woman named Lourdes!) But the clincher was a few weeks ago when I discovered "Ray of Light," the song I have always considered the pinnacle of her adult writing career, was actually (essentially) a cover of Curtiss Maldoon's "Sepheryn," from the duo's eponymous 1971 album. I argued with the queen who broke the news to me -- "'Ray of Light' is not a cover, it's Madonna's greatest triumph!" I argued -- but then I listened to the original and had my bubble burst. (How did I not know about this?) I've always heard superstars just get to tack their names on as cowriters of songs, but I always believed Madonna was different given the fact that her first album was credited nearly entirely to her. Have I been fooled all these years? Whatever the answer is this much is true: "Baby Love" is a finished Madonna song whether her writing credit appears on it or not, and that's got to raise the eyebrows of even her most ardent believers.
The answer, Kevin, is an astounding YES!
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