Martin Solveig on that notorious track leak
Thursday, 01 December 2011
When Madonna took to social media earlier this month to beg fans to stop posting a leaked track from her upcoming album, no one was more troubled than French producer Martin Solveig.
'We had a terrible leak...and everyone is very upset about what happened,' said Solveig, who is one of an elite few producers working on the massive Madonna 2012 release.
The flap unfolded two weeks ago when a demo version of the Solveig-Madonna track 'Give Me All Your Love' hit the blogosphere, much to Madge’s chagrin.
The Material Girl tweeted that 'real fans' wouldn’t have leaked her music before it was finished. The dance-pop track allegedly also will feature M.I.A. and Nicki Minaj, but Solveig, who plays Royale on Friday in his first-ever Boston show, said he can’t talk about the track.
But he did say working with Madonna is a dream come true.
'I would have considered this as impossible,' he told the Herald from a tour stop in Miami. 'People ask who you would dream to work with. To me working with Madonna was not really something I could do. When I got the call, first I thought it was a joke. And then when I realized it wasn’t, I was real-ly overwhelmed. The collaboration has been an enormous joy and an enormous surprise.'
Solveig, 35, is the latest Euro-pean DJ to cross over into the U.S. pop world, joining the likes of David Guetta, Afrojack, Avicii and other top dance-music artists. In addition to his work with Madonna, Solveig (born Martin Picandet) had a hit last year with 'Hello,' one of three tracks with indie darlings Dragonette on his latest full-length release 'Smash.' The disc first dropped this summer in Europe.
While Solveig has benefited handsomely from the blogosphere and the press over the Madonna leak, at the end of the day, he says dance music is all about the live performance.
'The interesting part is, always to come to the show because there’s surprises,' he said. 'And there’s dancing, which is something you don’t have on the Internet.'
'We had a terrible leak...and everyone is very upset about what happened,' said Solveig, who is one of an elite few producers working on the massive Madonna 2012 release.
The flap unfolded two weeks ago when a demo version of the Solveig-Madonna track 'Give Me All Your Love' hit the blogosphere, much to Madge’s chagrin.
The Material Girl tweeted that 'real fans' wouldn’t have leaked her music before it was finished. The dance-pop track allegedly also will feature M.I.A. and Nicki Minaj, but Solveig, who plays Royale on Friday in his first-ever Boston show, said he can’t talk about the track.
But he did say working with Madonna is a dream come true.
'I would have considered this as impossible,' he told the Herald from a tour stop in Miami. 'People ask who you would dream to work with. To me working with Madonna was not really something I could do. When I got the call, first I thought it was a joke. And then when I realized it wasn’t, I was real-ly overwhelmed. The collaboration has been an enormous joy and an enormous surprise.'
Solveig, 35, is the latest Euro-pean DJ to cross over into the U.S. pop world, joining the likes of David Guetta, Afrojack, Avicii and other top dance-music artists. In addition to his work with Madonna, Solveig (born Martin Picandet) had a hit last year with 'Hello,' one of three tracks with indie darlings Dragonette on his latest full-length release 'Smash.' The disc first dropped this summer in Europe.
While Solveig has benefited handsomely from the blogosphere and the press over the Madonna leak, at the end of the day, he says dance music is all about the live performance.
'The interesting part is, always to come to the show because there’s surprises,' he said. 'And there’s dancing, which is something you don’t have on the Internet.'