A look back on the dance album fans are still hung up on.
11/5/2025

Madonna performs at the first London concert of her "Confessions" world tour at Wembley Arena August 1, 2006 in London, England. Dave Hogan/Getty Images
“[American Life was] the worst-selling album of my career, but one of my favorite records ever,” Madonna told CBS’s Harry Smith on The Early Show in late 2005. “But what I’m grateful for is the ability to just keep — keep doing what I do. And … OK, people weren’t, you know, people didn’t accept that. Fine. Pick my crown up off the floor, put it back on my head and keep going. It’s alright.”
Her follow-up album, Confessions on a Dance Floor, released 20 years ago on Nov. 9, 2005, put her right back on top. American Life was hardly a flop (it topped the Billboard 200 and housed the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hit “Die Another Day”), but Confessions was exactly what fans and critics were hungry for. American Life spent 14 weeks on the Billboard 200 in total, while Confessions—another Billboard 200 No. 1–remained on the chart for 37 weeks. Lead single “Hung Up” reached No. 7 on the Hot 100 and remains one of her best-loved songs, and Madonna’s tour the following year set an all-time record.
In the U.S., Confessions ranked as the second-biggest dance album of the 2000s, just behind Gorillaz’s Demon Days, per Luminate. Madonna won the Grammy for best electronic/dance album in 2007, while the Guinness Book of World Records recognized her as the oldest artist ever to simultaneously top the U.K. singles and albums charts with “Hung Up” and Confessions, respectively. Does that qualify as reverse ageism?
For the album’s 20th anniversary, here are nine things you might not know about Confessions on a Dance Floor.
Giulio Mazzoleni is the author of Madonna Songbook, a luxury coffee-table book chronicling Madonna’s entire musical career, with in-depth analysis of over 500 released and unreleased titles written, produced and sung by Madonna. The book is available for import in the U.S. through Fishpond, AbeBooks, or directly from the original publisher, Edizioni Antiga. You can find him on Instagram @MadonnaSongbook.
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Some of the Songs Were Born Out of Projects That Didn’t Come to Fruition
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Madonna had been working on a stage musical titled Hello Suckers!, for which she wrote several songs. Around that time, director Luc Besson approached her with another musical concept — a film about a woman traveling through time, stopping in different eras of the twentieth century. Madonna collaborated with Stuart Price on new songs for the idea, but after reading the script, she realized it wasn’t for her. “I’d gone through so much music with various songwriters and I felt really disappointed that all of my creativity didn’t have an outlet,” she told Attitude in a 2005 cover story. She was especially drawn to the tracks that captured the energy of the ‘70s disco era, some of which became the foundation of Confessions on a Dance Floor.
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Aside From Madonna, the Album Was Crafted by an Entirely European Team
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Madonna initially planned to create the album with French electro producer Mirwais, her collaborator on Music and American Life. The two had developed several promising tracks, but Mirwais eventually withdrew from the project due to personal reasons. Seeking a fresh creative partner, Madonna turned to Stuart Price, a rising British DJ and producer who had served as the musical director for her recent tours. Madonna further expanded the team by bringing in two Swedish production duos: Bloodshy & Avant — best known for Britney Spears’ “Toxic” — and Bagge & Peer, who had worked on Janet Jackson’s “All Nite (Don’t Stop).”
Madonna and Price co-produced most of the album. The result was a record steeped in disco rhythms yet infused with avant-garde Swedish pop, French house and British electro-disco — with subtle nods to Pet Shop Boys, Depeche Mode and Daft Punk. The sound was unmistakably European, yet smartly tailored to appeal to an American audience.
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“Hung Up” Came Together Quickly
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One late night, as Stuart Price drove from Liverpool to London after a DJ set, ABBA’s “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)” came on the radio and immediately caught his attention. He thought it could make a great sample. At his next set, Price experimented by looping the main riff, running it through a filter and layering in the sound of a ticking clock.
A few days later, Madonna approached Price to create new disco material, describing the sound she wanted as “ABBA on drugs,” according to Lucy O’Brien’s book Madonna: Like an Icon. Price played her what he’d been working on. Madonna instantly recognized the melodic potential. She wrote the verses in about 10 minutes, and quickly recorded a demo. That first take became the version that made it onto the record.
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The Songs Were Tested at Clubs Around the World While Still Works in Progress
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During the making of the album, Price was also performing DJ sets across the globe — from Ibiza to Australia. He secretly tested the tracks he and Madonna were creating by slipping instrumental dubs into his sets. From his booth, Price would film the crowd’s reaction and later send the footage to Madonna. Back in London, the two would review the clips together, discussing what worked and what didn’t. Imagine those unsuspecting club-goers dancing to “Hung Up,” “Jump” or” Sorry” months before the songs were even released.
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Two Versions of the Album Were Released
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While finishing the album, Madonna had the idea of joining all the songs into a “non-stop mix” — a seamless party playlist — reminiscent of her groundbreaking 1987 dance remix collection You Can Dance. That decision required adding a few bars and overdubs to ensure continuity. The continuous mix was released on CD (and a recent Argentinian vinyl edition) as well as on iTunes as a 56-minute, one-track download; in the streaming era, the version with separated mixes has become the go-to for digital streaming platforms, however.
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The Outtakes Were as Good as the Album Tracks
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Madonna completed four additional songs—”Triggering,” “Super Pop,” “Fighting Spirit” and “History”—that didn’t make the final cut but could easily have fit alongside the main track list. “Triggering” has been leaked online but remains officially unreleased. “Super Pop,” inspired by the party game If I Were, was exclusively released to members of Madonna’s Official Fan Club. “Fighting Spirit” appeared as a bonus track on the limited special edition of the album, while “History” served as the B-side to the final single, “Jump” — and is the only one of the four currently available on Spotify.
One more track leaked online in rough demo form from the Mirwais sessions, “Keep the Trance.” Madonna’s 2007 single “Hey You” seemingly reworked some of those lyrics into a new composition. Mirwais, as part of the duo Y.A.S., reimagined some of the song’s elements as “Get It Right” for the group’s 2009 album Arabology.
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Half of the Album’s Songs Were Remixed and Promoted to Clubs
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“Hung Up,” “Sorry,” “Get Together,” “I Love New York,” “Future Lovers” and “Jump” were all remixed and promoted to clubs worldwide (as was “History,” the B-side to “Jump”). A particularly prized release was a triple-vinyl limited edition featuring remixes by Jacques Lu Cont, Thin White Duke, Man With Guitar and Paper Faces — all pseudonyms used by Stuart Price to distinguish his different mixing styles. Pet Shop Boys, Paul Oakenfold, Tracy Young, Chus & Ceballos, Axwell, Junior Sanchez, Bill Hamel, Archigram, Danny Howells and Dick Trevor, Tiefschwarz and James Holden also worked on Confessions remixes.
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Harking Back to Her Roots, Madonna Performed the Songs in Small Clubs
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Reconnecting with the club scene where her career first took off, Madonna promoted the album through a series of intimate showcase performances. The first was a streamed event from London’s Koko (formerly Camden Palace), the same venue where she had performed her debut U.K. gig back in 1983. She also appeared at the legendary G-A-Y night at London’s Astoria and performed at Tokyo’s Studio Coast, marking her first visit to Japan in 12 years at the time. The final of these exclusive events was a surprise appearance at Coachella 2006, deliberately staged for a small audience under the dance tent.
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The Tour Set an All-Time Record
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When Madonna took Confessions on a Dance Floor on tour, she invested heavily in cutting-edge sound technology and production design. The Confessions Tour, which Billboard hailed as her best-ever in 2024, earned $194 million from 1.2 million attendees, according to Billboard Boxscore. When it wrapped in 2006, it was, for the time, the highest-grossing tour from a female artist ever.

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