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By the late 1990's, and after 20 million copies had been sold, the Guinness Book of World Records declared ''The Immaculate Collection'' to be the biggest selling "greatest hits" album by a female artist and was placed in several "albums of the millennium" lists. {{RS500|278}} In July 2006 the album was confirmed by the [[British Phonographic Industry]] to be the biggest selling album by a female artist in British history, the fifth biggest selling album of all time in the UK by any artist and to be the biggest selling compilation album by any artist in Britain.<small>[http://www.bpi.co.uk/stats/content_file_126.shtml]</small>The album has sold an estimated 25-26 million copies worldwide.
By the late 1990's, and after 20 million copies had been sold, the Guinness Book of World Records declared ''The Immaculate Collection'' to be the biggest selling "greatest hits" album by a female artist and was placed in several "albums of the millennium" lists. {{RS500|278}} In July 2006 the album was confirmed by the [[British Phonographic Industry]] to be the biggest selling album by a female artist in British history, the fifth biggest selling album of all time in the UK by any artist and to be the biggest selling compilation album by any artist in Britain.<small>[http://www.bpi.co.uk/stats/content_file_126.shtml]</small>The album has sold an estimated 25-26 million copies worldwide.

On [[March 12]], [[2006]] the album re-entered the UK charts more than 15 years after its release at #38. <ref>http://www.madonnatribe.com</ref>

The album has shattered a record in [[Ireland]]; as of 2006, the album returned to Ireland's Top 100 Albums chart. The album entered at #68, higher than Madonna's current album, [[Confessions on a Dancefloor]], which now rests at #95. The reason for the unexpected surge of album sales is unknown and has never happened in the Irish charts before.


== Track listing ==
== Track listing ==
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== Chart performance ==
== Chart performance ==
''The Immaculate Collection'' was included in the [[list of BMG Music Club's top selling albums in the United States]]. On [[March 12]], [[2006]] the album re-entered the UK charts more than 15 years after its release at #38. <ref>http://www.madonnatribe.com</ref> Madonna's ''[[Confessions on a Dancefloor]]'' was also in the top 20 at #13. The album broke a record in [[Ireland]]; in 2006, the album returned to Ireland's Top 100 Albums chart, entering at #68, charting higher than ''Confessions on a Dancefloor'', which was at #95.

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!align="left" | Chart (1990)
!align="left" | Chart (1990)
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== Album trivia ==
*The original title for ''The Immaculate Collection'' was ''Ultra''. While still known as ''Ultra'', Jeri and John Heiden, who designed the artwork for the album, came up with the initial idea for the cover to look like packaging for pantyhose.

*The "Pope" reference in the dedication of this album is actually rumoured to be Madonna's brother, Christopher Ciccone; this is a nick-name for him.

*The album re-entered the UK Official Album Chart on [[12 March]] [[2006]] at #38 (''[[Confessions on a Dancefloor]]'' was also in the top 20 at #13.)

*"Get Over" was a third new song recorded as a demo for possible inclusion on the album. Ultimately, it was unused until it was given to singer Nick Scotti for his 1992 album. Madonna provided backing vocals on his version. The Madonna-only version remains unreleased.


== References ==
== References ==
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* "Madonna Tribe News: Pier Pinto's Charts Updates". Madonna Tribe News. [http://www.madonnatribe.com/news/modules.php?name=News&new_topic=7 link] - last accessed on [[December 12]], [[2005]].
* "Madonna Tribe News: Pier Pinto's Charts Updates". Madonna Tribe News. [http://www.madonnatribe.com/news/modules.php?name=News&new_topic=7 link] - last accessed on [[December 12]], [[2005]].
<references/>
<references/>

==See also==
*[[List of BMG Music Club's top selling albums in the United States]]


==External link==
==External link==

*{{MusicBrainz album|id=1b1684df-62c4-4efe-a0f0-59049e1f747a|name=The Immaculate Collection}}
*{{MusicBrainz album|id=1b1684df-62c4-4efe-a0f0-59049e1f747a|name=The Immaculate Collection}}



Revision as of 21:01, 23 August 2006

Untitled

The Immaculate Collection is Madonna's first 'Greatest Hits' album and eighth recording, released on November 13 1990. It contained two new tracks, "Justify My Love" and "Rescue Me", and was later certified diamond (for selling 10 million copies) in the USA. It is also Madonna's second biggest-selling album in the US, only behind Like a Virgin.

Album information

Many of the songs on The Immaculate Collection were remixed and edited down from their original studio versions in order to decrease the overall running time. Notably, "Like A Prayer" and "Express Yourself" feature completely different music backing Madonna's vocals from their original album release. It was decided that a mixture of ballads and pop-dance hits would be included, although there wasn't space for every Madonna single released; the following hit singles are absent: "Everybody", "Burning Up", "Angel", "Dress You Up", "True Blue", "Who's That Girl", "Causing a Commotion", "Oh Father", "Keep It Together" and "Hanky Panky".

"Justify My Love" became the first single to promote the album, and after a furor over the R-Rated video and the controversy as to who wrote it (poet Ingrid Chavez claimed she wrote part of the lyrics, alongside credited lyricist Lenny Kravitz), it shot to #1 in the USA and No. 2 in the UK. A second release, "Rescue Me", was released in early 1991, but failed to reach the heights of its predecessor.

Many fans were quick to point out the shortcomings of the album, particularly the missing hits, so Warner Brothers released an EP in Europe entitled The Holiday Collection which had the same design as The Immaculate Collection. The full-length version of "Holiday" was included alongside "True Blue", "Who's That Girl" (which had both reached number one in the UK) and the Silver Screen Single mix of "Causing a Commotion". The re-released "Holiday" eventually went to number two in the charts, as did a re-release of the ballad "Crazy for You".

By the late 1990's, and after 20 million copies had been sold, the Guinness Book of World Records declared The Immaculate Collection to be the biggest selling "greatest hits" album by a female artist and was placed in several "albums of the millennium" lists. Template:RS500 In July 2006 the album was confirmed by the British Phonographic Industry to be the biggest selling album by a female artist in British history, the fifth biggest selling album of all time in the UK by any artist and to be the biggest selling compilation album by any artist in Britain.[1]The album has sold an estimated 25-26 million copies worldwide.

Track listing

  1. "Holiday"
  2. "Lucky Star"
  3. "Borderline"
  4. "Like a Virgin"
  5. "Material Girl"
  6. "Crazy for You"
  7. "Into the Groove"
  8. "Live to Tell"
  9. "Papa Don't Preach"
  10. "Open Your Heart"
  11. "La Isla Bonita"
  12. "Like a Prayer"
  13. "Express Yourself"
  14. "Cherish"
  15. "Vogue"
  16. "Justify My Love"
  17. "Rescue Me"

Chart performance

The Immaculate Collection was included in the list of BMG Music Club's top selling albums in the United States. On March 12, 2006 the album re-entered the UK charts more than 15 years after its release at #38. [1] Madonna's Confessions on a Dancefloor was also in the top 20 at #13. The album broke a record in Ireland; in 2006, the album returned to Ireland's Top 100 Albums chart, entering at #68, charting higher than Confessions on a Dancefloor, which was at #95.

Chart (1990) Peak
Position
Australia albums chart 1 (7 wks)
Austria albums chart 6
Canada albums chart 1 (9 wks)
France albums chart 2 (2 wks)
Germany albums chart 10
Ireland (Éire) albums chart 1 (1 wks)
Mexico albums chart 1
Norway albums chart 14 (2 wks)
Portugal albums chart 2
Spain albums chart 5 (2 wks)
Switzerland albums chart 3
UK albums chart 1 (9 wks)
USA Billboard Top 200 2 (2 wks)

Certifications

Country Certification
Australia 11x Platinum
Austria Platinum
Belgium 3x Platinum
Brazil Diamond
Canada 7x Platinum
France Diamond
Germany Platinum
Ireland 2x Platinum
Italy 5x Platinum
Mexico Diamond
Nederlands 3x Platinum
Poland 2x Platinum
Singapore 8x Platinum
South Africa Platinum
Spain 3x Platinum
Switzerland Platinum
UK 12x Platinum
USA 10x Platinum (Diamond)

References

For charts and certifications:

  • "Chart Performance of Madonna Records - A Compiled History". MLVC.ORG - Charts. link - last accessed on December 12, 2005.
  • "Madonna Tribe News: Pier Pinto's Charts Updates". Madonna Tribe News. link - last accessed on December 12, 2005.