Blond Ambition World Tour Live is a video album by American singer-songwriter Madonna released exclusively on Laserdisc by Pioneer Artists on December 13, 1990. It contained the Blond Ambition World Tour's final show, filmed at the Stade Charles-Ehrmann in Nice, France on August 5, 1990. The concert had previously been broadcast on American network HBO as Live! Madonna: Blond Ambition World Tour 90, and became one of its highest rated specials. The decision to release it exclusively on Laserdisc grew when Pioneer Artists signed up to sponsor the tour; the company also wanted to use Madonna to reach a new demographic and increase Laserdisc sales. It received positive reviews, with some critics saying it captured the concert better than the documentary Madonna: Truth or Dare (1991) and the HBO broadcast. At the 34th Annual Grammy Awards, it won for Best Music Video-Long Form, becoming the first Grammy award Madonna received in her career. With over 100,000 copies sold, Blond Ambition World Tour Live was one of the highest selling laserdiscs of its time.
The Blond Ambition World Tour was Madonna's third concert tour. It supported her fourth studio album Like a Prayer and the Dick Tracy soundtrack I'm Breathless. Contemporary critics praised its fashion and theatricals and it grossed over US$62.7 million ($130.05 million in 2021 dollars[1]) from 57 concerts.[2][3] It was subject to controversy due to its sexual and Catholic imagery. In Italy, a private association of Roman Catholics called for a boycott of the shows in Rome and Turin; Pope John Paul II urged the general public and the Christian community not to attend the tour.[4][5] During the first show in Toronto, on May 27, local police threatened to arrest Madonna for "lewd and indecent display", specifically the masturbation scene during the performance of "Like a Virgin" (1984).[6]
In May 1990, Jonathan Takiff from The Pittsburgh Press reported that the first Japanese shows from the tour were recorded and set to be released on Laserdisc by Pioneer Artists, one of the tour's main sponsors.[7] Takiff also reported that the final show on Nice, France would be broadcast on MTV.[7] Two months later, HBO confirmed they had signed on Madonna and would broadcast the tour's final show in what would be her first television special.[8] HBO spokesperson Betty Bitterman stated that "it's a very hot item that attracted all major players. We're not concerned about any negative feedback. We decided to do the show and that was that".[8] When asked if the network would edit or censor the singer's "lewd" behavior, Bitterman responded that "if she's doing it, the audience will see it. We're not editing anything out. [...] We want it to feel live - as if you were there".[9] During the concert Madonna told the cameras: "You know what I have to say to America? Get a fucking sense of humor, okay?".[10]
It was not a pay-per-view special, as the channel wanted to distinguish itself from its pay-TV rival, Showtime, and it was predicted to be HBO's highest rated special since Mike Tyson and Frank Bruno's heavyweight fight, which aired in February 1989.[11][8] Advertised as "America's No.1 female pop star in a live-by-satellite performance of one of the summer's biggest pop music events", Live! Madonna: Blond Ambition World Tour 90 aired on Sunday August 5, 1990 at 9p.m. and gave HBO a record for the highest ratings ever for an entertainment special at the time; around 4.5 million people tuned in.[10]
Release and reception
The special was released exclusively on Laserdisc under the title Blond Ambition World Tour Live on December 13, 1990. Steven Galloway, president of Pioneer Artists, said that the idea of an exclusive came about when the company signed up to sponsor the tour; they also wanted to use the singer to increase Laserdisc sales and reach a demographic of 18–35 year olds.[12]Billboard called this "the marketing coup of the year".[13] Laserdisc sales were reported to have increased 285%; due to the overwhelmingly strong sales, the concert was not released on VHS until the end of 1991.[14][15] Although Madonna's then manager Caresse Henry said in 2002 that a DVD was on the works, no release date was ever given.[16] In addition to HBO, other concerts from the tour were also recorded and broadcast; one of the Yokohama dates was recorded and released exclusively in Japan under the title Blond Ambition - Japan Tour 90.[17] Spanish broadcaster TVE aired the Barcelona concert in 30 countries.[18] One of the shows at London's Wembley Stadium was broadcast on BBC Radio 1, which led to controversy over the profanity Madonna used live on air.[19]
The Los Angeles Times gave the original broadcast a negative review, saying that the show didn't work as a television experience because it was "less a concert than an unfolding passion play" that was "rendered ponderous by distracting camera angles".[20]Ty Burr, from Entertainment Weekly, gave the release an A and felt that it captured the Blond Ambition show better than Madonna: Truth or Dare, "because it's a laserdisc with digital sound, the music is re-created with startling fidelity. You get this two-hour spectacle as it was meant to be: uninterrupted and over the top".[21] Burr also praised the "gymnastic dance productions" of numbers such as "Where's the Party" and "Like a Prayer".[21]Los Angeles Times' Robert Willburn felt that "the new, edited laser version offers much more of the vitality and charm of the show itself than the HBO special".[12] Allmusic gave a rating of three out of five stars.[22]Blond Ambition World Tour Live earned Madonna her first Grammy win for Best Long Form Music Video at the 34th ceremony.[23] Of this win, Galloway said that "we couldn't be more thrilled [...] Hopefully it will bring an even higher level of awareness and attention to the laserdisc format, and music videos in particular on laserdisc".[24]
Blond Ambition World Tour Live debuted on the fourth position of the Top Videodisc Sales chart the week of January 9, 1991, eventually peaking at number two three weeks later.[25][26][27] In April 1991, Pioneer applied for an RIAA gold certification, indicating that the release had sold, at least, 25,000 units.[28] By May 1992, it was the top selling laserdisc release up at the time, with 60,000 copies sold.[29] Two years later, sales exceeded 100,000 units and it was awarded a "five-star" designation by the Laserdisc Association.[30] In the United Kingdom, the laserdisc sold 1,000 copies by 1992,[31] and nearly 10,000 units as of 1993.[32]
Shister, Gail (July 2, 1990). "HBO signs on Madonna!". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Knight Ridder. Archived from the original on September 25, 2022. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
Moca, Diane Joy (August 5, 1990). "It's that Blond on HBO". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 25 September 2022. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
"Top Videodisc Sales"(PDF). Billboard. 103 (3): 60. January 9, 1991. ISSN0006-2510. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
"Top Videodisc Sales"(PDF). Billboard. 103 (5): 60. February 2, 1991. ISSN0006-2510. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2020-08-11. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
McGowan, Chris (May 2, 1992). "The Laserdisc Factor"(PDF). Billboard. 104 (18): 56. ISSN0006-2510. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2020-10-29. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
McGowan, Chris (October 8, 1994). "Laser Scans"(PDF). Billboard. 106 (41): 89. ISSN0006-2510. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2020-10-26. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
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