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I Rise (song)

"I Rise" is a song by American singer-songwriter Madonna from her fourteenth studio album Madame X (2019). The song was written by the singer herself, alongside Starrah and Jason Evigan, while produced by Madonna and Evigan. It was released on May 3, 2019, by Interscope Records, as the first promotional single from the album, and later sent to Italian radio on October 4, 2019, as the album's third single, by the aforementioned label. The song is a mid tempo pop track which lyrically deals about self-empowerment and draws attention to gun violence in the United States, and contains a sample from a speech by American activist X González.

"I Rise"

October 4, 2019 (2019-10-04)

3:44

  • Madonna
  • Jason Evigan

"I Rise" received generally positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its message and production. The song became Madonna's 49th chart-topping single on the US Hot Dance Club Songs chart, and reached the top 10 on the digital charts in Finland and Greece. An accompanying music video for the song was made in partnership with Time Studios, which was directed by Peter Matkiwsky and released on June 19, 2019. The video features footage of Stoneman Douglas High School shooting survivors, LGBTQ supporters, and women's rights protesters, among other social justice movements. The song was performed during Madonna's set at Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019, and as the final number of her 2019–20 Madame X Tour.

Critical reception[edit]

"I Rise" was met with generally positive reviews from music critics. Mark Kennedy from the Associated Press gave Madame X an overall negative review, but selected the track as one of the album's best songs.[13] Louise Bruton of The Irish Times opined that it was a "gimmick-free, uplifting ballad", and noted that "Madonna knows the power she wields, and as a long-time advocate for the LGBTQ+ community and people living with HIV, she plays that card very well" on the song.[14] For Nick Smith from musicOMH, "I Rise" was "powerful and introspective", and complimented the González's sample, calling it "emotional".[15] Wren Graves from Consequence of Sound wrote that the track was "rousing stuff",[16] while Hot Press' Paul Nolan called it "stirring".[17] Jamie Tabberer from Gay Star News classified the track as a "self-empowerment anthem" with "heartfelt lyrics" that sounded "autobiographical".[18] Samuel R. Murrian from Parade wrote that it was a "moving, triumphant ode to genuine strength" and also noted the "dreamy lyrics and ethereal production".[19] According to The Guardian's Ben Beaumont-Thomas, "I Rise" has "elegant, sinewy melodies that twine around you rather than jabbing you into submission".[20] Trey Alston from MTV called it "powerful and uplifting". He further wrote that the song was "as soft as war chants come, but there's power in this fragility".[10]


According to Victoria Segal from Q magazine, "I Rise" "keep[s] pace with a world out of joint",[21] while Michael Arceneaux of NBC News commented that it was one of the songs that "do deserve airplay".[22] Chuck Arnold of the New York Post thought the song was an "anthemic ballad" and that it "proves once more" as to why Madonna is "pop's ultimate survivor".[23] Metro Weekly's Sean Maunier felt that Madonna found "some redemption" on the song.[24] Daniel Megarry from Gay Times opined that while the track "isn't top tier" with other Madonna songs such as "Live To Tell" (1986) and "Take a Bow" (1994), "it's still a pleasant listen", and praised its lyrical message.[25] Mike Wass from Idolator thought the song was "well-intentioned, but it didn't need a children's choir to bludgeon the point home".[26] According to NME's El Hunt, the song's Sartre quote "can border on inspirational fridge magnet territory, too broad to establish real connection".[27] A more critical review came from Milenio's Ernesto Sanchez, who complimented the production, but was not impressed with the song's chorus and level of creativity, and said it sounded like an outtake from Rebel Heart.[28]


Slant Magazine placed "I Rise" at number 67 on their list of the 82 best Madonna singles. For the magazine, Sal Cinquemani wrote, "The track itself is less affecting than its message, with unnecessary Auto-Tune rendering Madonna's soaring rhetoric nearly robotic."[29] The Tracy Young remix of the song won the Best Remixed Recording award at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards. With this feat, Young became the first woman to win the award.[30] It also achieved a nomination at the 34th Annual International Dance Music Awards, in the category Best Remix.[31]

Commercial performance[edit]

In the United States, "I Rise" became Madonna's 65th entry on Billboard's Dance Club Songs chart.[32] The song ultimately reached the summit of the chart, becoming her 48th chart-topping single on it for the issue date of August 31, 2019.[33] On the year-end US Dance Club Songs chart, "I Rise" ranked at number 31.[34] The song debuted on its peak of number 37 on the US Dance/Mix Show Airplay chart for the issue dated July 13, 2019. This gave Madonna her 15th entry on the chart and her 1st since "Living for Love" (2014).[35] "I Rise" also peaked at number 95 in Croatia, on the week of May 20, 2019.[36] The song further peaked at numbers four and nine on Finland and Greece's digital songs charts, respectively.[37] In Hungary, it reached number 27 on the national chart, while the song peaked at number 45 on the Scottish Singles Chart for the week ending May 10, 2019.[38][39] "I Rise" reached number 40 on the UK Singles Downloads Chart.[40]

 – vocals, songwriter, production

Madonna

 – vocals

X González

 – songwriter, production

Jason Evigan

 – songwriter

Brittany Talia Hazzard

Credits adapted from Tidal.[7]

List of Billboard Dance Club Songs number ones of 2019

on YouTube

"Madonna – I Rise" (Audio)

Music video of "I Rise" by Time Studios