Madonnas Confessions II hailed as her strongest album in decades ahead of World Cup half-time show

Madonna’s *Confessions II* cements her reign as pop’s enduring innovator with the release of her fifteenth studio album on Friday, 3 July 2026, a spiritual sequel to her 2005 dance-floor classic *Confessions on a Dance Floor* that critics are calling her strongest work in decades. The album arrives ahead of her headline performance at the FIFA World Cup final half-time show on 19 July, where she will debut the new material before a global audience of over a billion viewers.
Reviewers across Europe have hailed *Confessions II* as a triumphant return to form. Belgian daily *La Libre* praised the collaboration with Belgian electro-pop star Stromae on the lead track *My Sins Are My Savior*, describing it as “a surprise-filled title” that reaffirms Madonna’s status as the “Queen of Pop” . French broadcaster France 24 echoed the sentiment, noting that the album marks a “return to form” for the 67-year-old icon, who last topped charts with *Confessions on a Dance Floor* over two decades ago .
Swedish newspaper *Svenska Dagbladet* framed the release as Madonna’s “revenge” against skeptics who doubted her relevance, arguing that the nostalgic yet fresh dance sound “suits her perfectly” . Dutch outlets were equally effusive: *NRC Handelsblad* declared *Confessions II* “her best album in decades,” while *De Volkskrant* urged listeners to “forget her previous albums” and focus on this “surprisingly coherent” work .
German critics highlighted the album’s spiritual and transcendent qualities. *Der Tagesspiegel* described *Confessions II* as a celebration of dance music as “a path to transcendence,” while *Die Presse* called it “her best album in more than 20 years,” noting that Madonna sounds “as fresh as ever” . French magazine *Courrier International* took a broader view, arguing that the album’s unapologetic celebration of freedom and dance exposes lingering societal discomfort with aging women, particularly female icons who defy conventional expectations .
Euronews Culture’s Mikhail Calvez, a longtime Madonna fan, reviewed the tracklist and concluded that the dance floor “is still alive in 2026,” praising the album’s ability to transport listeners to a retro-futuristic “Danceteria” . Dutch critic Anne-Sofie von Otter, meanwhile, lauded the record’s “unquenchable vitality,” singling out Rotterdam-based Naomi Sharon for crafting “a striking blend of smoldering syllables and cool electronics.”
With *Confessions II* already generating Oscar-level buzz, Madonna’s next act—her World Cup half-time performance—promises to amplify the album’s cultural impact, proving that at 67, the pop legend remains a force of both nostalgia and reinvention.
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