Madonna started her latest tour last night, a week after turning 50, offering 40,000 fans in Cardiff two hours of her trademark high-energy disco, costume changes and controversy.
Her two-hour show at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium included a video interlude seen by some fans as an attack on John McCain, the U.S. Republican presidential candidate, whose image they noticed briefly flashed up alongside Adolf Hitler and Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe.
Madonna's show had 24 songs, 250 crew, eight costume changes and 16 support artists who break danced, pole danced and flamenco stepped in fetish and bondage outfits. Madonna first appeared through a haze of lasers on a black leather throne and launched into "Candy Shop" off her latest album "Hard Candy."
The set featured recent material alongside remixes of some old hits, which included "Borderline", "La Isla Bonita", "Like a Prayer" along with heavy bass and a techno beat.
The concert was split into four sections, Pimp, Old School, Gypsy, and Rave. She ended the show with "Give It To Me".
Her two-hour show at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium included a video interlude seen by some fans as an attack on John McCain, the U.S. Republican presidential candidate, whose image they noticed briefly flashed up alongside Adolf Hitler and Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe.
Madonna's show had 24 songs, 250 crew, eight costume changes and 16 support artists who break danced, pole danced and flamenco stepped in fetish and bondage outfits. Madonna first appeared through a haze of lasers on a black leather throne and launched into "Candy Shop" off her latest album "Hard Candy."
The set featured recent material alongside remixes of some old hits, which included "Borderline", "La Isla Bonita", "Like a Prayer" along with heavy bass and a techno beat.
The concert was split into four sections, Pimp, Old School, Gypsy, and Rave. She ended the show with "Give It To Me".
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