Hit Parade: How Madonna Made EDM Mainstream by Slate published on 2018-04-04T19:03:43Z Hit Parade is the music history podcast from Slate Magazine. Here's what you'll find in this episode: In 1998, Madonna was at a career crossroads. After dominating the 1980s with hits like “Like a Virgin” and “Open Your Heart,” she spent the first half of the ’90s wavering between roles as a provocateur (Erotica, Sex) and adult-contemporary balladeer (“I’ll Remember,” “Take a Bow”). That’s when she took a sharp left turn, working with producers and DJs in the burgeoning electronica scene. If it even was a scene: The very term electronica was a music-business confection, and by 1997, it was more hype than hit. But the result of Madonna’s experiment—her acclaimed ’98 album Ray of Light—was not only one of her biggest smashes. It also helped turn electronic music into viable pop. Slate Plus members: Get your ad-free podcast feed. Email: hitparade@slate.com Podcast production by Chris Berube. Genre Entertainment Comment by wil blake How many film soundtracks have Madonna songs? 2018-04-11T12:52:04Z Comment by Millsy Omg amazing my music life summed up in one podcast, it takes me back to many late nights in the clubs for over 25 years. Thank you for the retrospective of a time I can hardly remember but never forget. 2018-04-06T13:32:44Z