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Madonna's Confessions II turns the sequel into a dancefloor argument she actually wins

By Editorial Team - July 3, 2026

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Madonna Confessions II collage card with mirrorball club-pop styling and teal lettering.

Summary

Madonna releases Confessions II, a Stuart Price-assisted dance record reviewed by Pitchfork and framed as her strongest album in two decades.

Key Facts

  • Madonna's Confessions II entered the July 3, 2026 review cycle.
  • The album reunites Madonna with producer Stuart Price.
  • The coverage frames the sequel around club-pop history, acid, French touch and 2-step.
  • Entities: Madonna, Confessions II, Stuart Price, Confessions on a Dance Floor, Sabrina Carpenter, Arca, Shygirl, Honey Dijon
  • Tags: madonna, confessions ii, stuart price, dance pop, club pop, pitchfork review, Dance Pop / Club Pop

Madonna's Confessions II is not indie in the narrow sense, but it is a 3 July music-cycle event too large, strange and club-facing to ignore. The sequel to 2005's Confessions on a Dance Floor reunites her with Stuart Price and arrives after a rollout involving Sabrina Carpenter, Times Square spectacle and avant-dance-pop names like Arca, Shygirl and Honey Dijon. Pitchfork calls it her best album in 20 years and a vital addition to her canon, while Stereogum frames it as the project many fans hoped for when Price first re-entered the picture. The interesting part is not only nostalgia. It is the attempt to make vintage club grammar feel personal again: acid, French touch, 2-step, Danceteria memory and pop memoir. Confessions II sounds like a sequel that knows the floor is not a museum. It is a place to confess while moving.

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