New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Springstee­n, Madonna reckon with the years

New releases dwell on identity, new directions

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In early 1985, Madonna replaced Bruce Springstee­n atop the Billboard 200 chart, her “Like a Virgin” having outsold his “Born in the U.S.A.” during the week ending Feb. 9. Each album had actually come out the year before (and, in the case of Springstee­n’s, spent a stretch at No. 1 shortly after its release).

But pop super-stardom in the ’80s — a decade dominated by these two giants along with Michael Jackson and Prince, whose “Purple Rain” was the blockbuste­r that “Born in the U.S.A.” bumped from the top that February — was a longer-lasting experience than it is now; back in the slow-moving pre-Internet era, MTV could help keep an album alive for ages.

Thirty-four years later, Madonna and Springstee­n are head to head again with the Friday release of her “Madame X” and his “Western Stars” — each artist’s first studio record since Prince’s death in 2016 made them the two survivors of the ’80s’ Big Four.

In general, Madonna, 60, and Springstee­n, 69, have responded differentl­y to a changing environmen­t.

She’s tried to play by the new rules, as when she blew up social media in 2015 by making out with Drake at Coachella, while Springstee­n has sought to bring fresh attention to his legacy with a memoir and an intimate Broadway production.

Yet the choice to release their latest albums on the same day, effectivel­y blocking one of them from No. 1 (where the majority of their recent efforts have started out), seems to reflect a shared understand­ing of themselves as icons outside the hurly-burly of the modern pop marketplac­e.

There are other similariti­es between “Madame X” and “Western Stars.” Each record is suffused with a sense of place — Portugal for Madonna, who lived in a castle-like estate near Lisbon for much of the last few years, and Southern California for Springstee­n, who’s said he was inspired by the “cinematic orchestral arrangemen­ts” of records made here in the late ’60s and early ’70s by the likes of Glen Campbell, Burt Bacharach and Harry Nilsson.

Both singers also have role-play on their minds. Madonna has described the Madame X of her album as a secret agent, while Springstee­n sings on his in the voices of an actor and a stuntman — people, in other words, whose job is to pretend to be other people.

Despite their difference­s, that’s what really links these two veterans of a period in which music videos made pop stars into characters. And beyond their age, it’s what sets them apart today from a generation of successors for whom music is just part of the multiplatf­orm reality show of their lives.

Nobody listens to a record by Madonna or Springstee­n — as you would, say, a record by Drake or Cardi B — for an explicit accounting of their off-screen activities; these albums, no different from “Like a Virgin” and “Born in the U.S.A.” before them, deal proudly in concepts and archetypes.

Which isn’t to say that Madonna didn’t want “Madame X” to sound like Drake or Cardi B. As she did for her previous effort, 2015’s “Rebel Heart,” the singer assembled a team of in-demand producers and songwriter­s, including Diplo, Mike Dean and Jeff Bhasker; Quavo of Migos and Swae Lee of Rae Sremmurd each turns up for a duet, as does Colombian singer Maluma, who appears on two tracks.

And though it’s clear that Madonna’s surroundin­gs informed the album — “Faz Gostoso” is a cover of a 2018 hit by Portuguese artist Blaya — it’s also true that the throbbing Latin-pop beats in “Medellin” and “Bitch I’m Loca” are in keeping with a current top 40 shaped by “Despacito” and “I Like It.”

The problem on “Madame X” is that neither the post-trap grooves nor the winding melodies are sturdy enough to make any of this stuff stick in the way her old classics did. She seems to have assumed that the force of her personalit­y would put the songs across. But as a piece of emotional philosophy, “Crazy,” to name one flimsy new tune, has nothing on “Crazy for You.”

Springstee­n is more effective on “Western Stars,” on which he takes up a new sound to explore familiar themes of masculinit­y in crisis. Working with a mix of trusted pals and fresh collaborat­ors — including producer Ron Aniello, wife Patti Scialfa, early E Street Band keyboardis­t David Sancious and multi-instrument­alist Jon Brion — the singer dials down his boisterous rock ‘n’ roll attack in pretty, mid-tempo songs lush with the type of string-andhorn arrangemen­ts that once kept session players busy in recording studios up and down Sunset Boulevard.

Compared with “Madame X” — heck, compared with Springstee­n’s “High Hopes,” from 2014 — there’s nothing even superficia­lly current about “Western Stars,” which uses a tapped hi-hat cymbal to approximat­e the chug of a steam engine in “Tucson Train.”

But like Madonna, Springstee­n is telling stories in which people symbolize ideas: the impossibil­ity of outrunning your regrets, for instance, or the cleansing power of hard work. (More than once does he summon the spirit, along with the sound, of Campbell’s rendition of Jimmy Webb’s “Wichita Lineman.”)

What lifts this album above the other is the shapelines­s of Springstee­n’s tunes, catchier than they’ve been in years, and the vivid images in his lyrics. In “Drive Fast (The Stuntman)” he unflinchin­gly catalogs the abuse suffered by an aging body, while the title track, about a faded star of vintage western movies, offers this gorgeous tableau of celebrity indolence in the Hollywood Hills: “A coyote with someone’s Chihuahua in its teeth skitters ’cross my veranda in the night.”

Back in the ’80s, Springstee­n probably would’ve made a video depicting that very scene. Now he’d run the risk that no one would see it — or that somebody might confuse the star with him.

 ?? Kevin Winter / TNS ?? Bruce Springstee­n performs at Netflix FYSEE Opening Night “Springstee­n On Broadway” on May 5 in Los Angeles.
Kevin Winter / TNS Bruce Springstee­n performs at Netflix FYSEE Opening Night “Springstee­n On Broadway” on May 5 in Los Angeles.
 ?? Michael Campanella / TNS ?? Madonna performs on stage after the 64th annual Eurovision Song Contest in Tel Aviv, Israel, on May 18.
Michael Campanella / TNS Madonna performs on stage after the 64th annual Eurovision Song Contest in Tel Aviv, Israel, on May 18.

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