Ahead of this week's release of Confessions II, we run down Madonna's 2005 dance odyssey.
7/1/2026

Madonna performs to celebrate today's release of her new album "Confessions On A Dancefloor" at Koko Camden on November 15, 2005 in London, England. Dave Hogan/Getty Images
Released on November 9, 2005, Confessions on a Dance Floor found Madonna ready to party.
“When I wrote American Life,” the singer said, referencing her previous album in a 2005 interview with MTV, “I was very agitated by what was going on in the world around me. I was angry. I had a lot to get off my chest. I made a lot of political statements. But now, I feel that I just want to have fun; I want to dance; I want to feel buoyant. And I want to give other people the same feeling. There’s a lot of madness in the world around us, and I want people to be happy.”
21 years later, the sentiment still tracks. With a lot of madness in the world around us, Madonna is about to release Confessions II, a follow-up to the 2005 masterpiece that delivered the hits “Hung Up” and “Sorry” while it returned feathered hair and leotards to the zeitgeist. Confessions on a Dance Floor spent a week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and 13 weeks at No. 1 on Top Dance Albums, ultimately winning the Grammy for best dance/electronic album in 207. It has now registered 1.9 billion official on-demand streams globally and 315.1 million in the U.S., according to Luminate.
These statistics exist because the album was an instant classic that brought together the clubland influences of Madonna’s earlier work into a dozen songs centered in disco and dance pop, genres related to but different from the acid house explored on her 1998 essential Ray of Light. Created alongside producer Stuart Price (who Madonna is also working with on Confessions II), these inventive productions were elevated by lyrics both defiant and vulnerable, with Confessions on a Dance Floor altogether presenting hard-earned wisdom via music that’s still as fun now as Madonna designed it to be then.
Ahead of the release of Confessions II this Friday July 3, here’s a ranking of every song on its predecessor, Confessions on a Dance Floor.
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“Isaac”
Nodding to the study of Kabbalah that Madonna famously embarked upon in the late ’90s and early and mid-2000s, “Isaac” opens with Israeli-Yemenite singer Yitzhak Sinwani singing a traditional Hebrew chant. This mystic quality lends itself well to the string-laden song, which doesn’t necessarily feel like it has a lot to do with the rest of the more disco-centric album, but gallops along pleasingly nonetheless.
Listen here.
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“Like It or Not”
The final track on Confessions lands the album in a softer and less overtly club-focused place than its 11 high(er)-energy predecessors. But the themes of defiance that run through the album get their closing statement here as Madonna sings “This is who I am/ You can like it or not/ You can love me/ Or leave me/ ‘Cause I’m never gonna stop” over delicate acoustic guitar and a buzzy, low-simmer electro production that ties together the electronic threads running through the album.
Listen here.
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“Push”
Funky, if also a bit clunky, “Push” is Confessions‘ penultimate track, finding Madonna declaring her gratitude to the person who pushed her to achieve. The track feels a touch busy, incorporating a lot of hand percussion, twinkly bells, waves of synth and a sort of sing-song melody that in moments evokes Tom Tom Club’s “Genius Of Love.”
Listen here.
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“How High”
“It’s funny/ I spent my whole life/ Wanting to be talked about/ I did it/ Just about everything/ To see my name in lights,” Madonna recollects on “High High,” a disco-flecked contemplation in which she wonders “Will it matter when I’m gone?” Given the ultra-confidence that’s defined her career, it’s interesting to hear Madonna go vulnerable as she seems to question her legacy — with the punchy, percussion-forward production sitting in sharp contrast to the vulnerability of the lyrics, yet with its urgency also amplifying their message.
Listen here.
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“Jump”
Seared into the brains of a generation as the opening song in The Devil Wears Prada, “Jump” therefore arouses images of Anne Hathaway brushing her teeth in a steamed up bathroom mirror. But when decontextualized from the film, “Jump” is a slick bit of sinewy electronica that harkens back to Madonna’s own ’90s Bedtime Stories era and delivers all the lessons of resilience and courage she’s learned since.
Listen here.
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“Forbidden Love”
The second song of this name in the Madonna catalog, after her 1994 Babyface collab from Bedtime Stories, this “Forbidden Love” drips with ’80s synth and Moroder-style production, so influenced by the electronica being released when Madonna was coming up that it sounds like it could have actually been released in that era. Experimental in the same way as “Future Lovers,” this one grows into a swirling, pulsing production that twinkles with sparkly sonic flourishes, and plays like the soundtrack to watching the sunrise after a long night out.
Listen here.
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“Let It Will Be”
Madonna gets contemplative at the album’s midpoint, referencing her own success by singing that “now I can tell you about success about fame” as a string section sample creates a mood of urgency that counters the message to “Just let it be.” A more brooding DNA cousin to “Hung Up,” the song then takes a turn, going into more synth-pop Pet Shop Boys-style terrain and, as such, nodding to another realm and era of the dance world Confessions draws from.
Listen here.
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“I Love New York”
Combining electronica, big-ass drums and flecks of power chord guitar, “I Love New York” pays homage to the city where Madonna became a star, melding NYC’s grit, cool and toughness into a tight four and a half minutes. While not all the lyrics totally land (“I don’t like cities, but I like New York/ Other places make me feel like a dork”), the burly production — as brash and confident as New Yorkers themselves — more than makes up for it.
Listen here.
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“Sorry”
Where “Hung Up” leaves off, “Sorry” begins, with Madonna and Price delivering another driving, tightly constructed disco-pop peaktime anthem. Centered by an insistent kickdrum, the track finds Madonna apologizing in French, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Hebrew, Hindi, Polish and Dutch before delivering characteristically defiant lyrics in plain old English, commanding, “Don’t explain yourself ’cause talk is cheap/there’s more important things than hearing you speak.” Listen underneath the vocals, you’ll hear the huge, rolling bassline that functions as the song’s spine. All in, nothing to apologize for here.
Listen here.
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“Get Together”
The second song on Confessions pivots the album from the tight disco pop of “Hung Up” to the headier and more synth-driven eletro-pop contemplation of “Get Together.” Alluding to The S.O.S. Band’s 1980 disco-funk anthem “Take Your Time (Do It Right)” in Madonna’s “Baby we can do it/ Take your time/ Do it right” lyrics, the song contains all the warmth and sensuality of an ecstasy high, growing in lushness and intensity as Madonna declares, “Do you believe in love at first sight?/ It’s an illusion/ I don’t care.” It’s a vibe anyone who’s ever fallen in love on the dancefloor — if only for the night — can likely relate to.
Listen here.
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“Future Lovers”
The fourth track on Confessions starts with an enticing declaration: “I’m gonna tell you about love,” Madonna states. “Let’s forget your life/ Forget your problems/ Administration, bills and loads/ Come with me.” Then as the beat rises, she extends an invitation: “In the demonstration of this evidence/ Some have called it religion/ This is not a coincidence/ Would you like to try?”
The religion in question here is that of the dancefloor, a concept that can sound cliché — until you experience it for yourself. The trick in “Future Lovers” is that it not only references this spiritual power but functions as a portal through which to experience it, with the insistent production paired with increasingly layered vocals and waves of synth altogether fostering a state of hypnosis, intoxication and ultimately, bliss.
A sample of Donna Summer’s “I Feel Love” (which Billboard last year named the No. 1 dance song of all time) helps the track achieve this elevated state, as do the song’s slight nods to The Beatles’ own ode to pure consciousness “Tomorrow Never Knows.” While “Future Lovers” sits a bit left of center of dance-pop, it effectively functions as the Confessions thesis statement of why the dancefloor matters so much to so many.
Listen here.
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“Hung Up”
Obviously! Released in October of 2005, “Hung Up” is the album’s lead single, opening track and aesthetic and spiritual cornerstone. Built around a keyboard sample from ABBA’s 1979 “Gimme Gimme Gimme (A Man After Midnight),” the song re-introduced the Swedish disco titans to the dance and pop worlds long before dropping ABBA in sets became a dance scene trend. Production from Price marries this disco foundation with a beat that sounds like it arrives from underwater, and a driving, muscular bassline that does significant heavy lifting in elevating the song to club banger status.
The song’s video, meanwhile, debuted Madonna’s signature look for the Confessions era, with her feathered blonde hair and pink leotard (with heels!) not only becoming shorthand for the album, but a key contribution to her ongoing style reinventions. But while the look was new, some of the material was not, with Madonna referencing herself by taking the “Time goes by so slowly for those who wait/ And those who run/ Seem to have all the fun” lyrics from “Love Song” (her Prince collab from 1989’s Like a Prayer) and making them the philosophical centerpiece of “Hung Up.” Here, however, the idea becomes more urgent via a much higher BPM and the ticking clock sample that opens the song — a signal that time waits for no man and that with “Hung Up,” Madonna’s time had come again.
Listen here.

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