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Crazy For You: Behind The Classic Ballad That Reshaped Madonna’s Career
Everett Collection Inc / Alamy Stock Photo
In Depth

Crazy For You: Behind The Classic Ballad That Reshaped Madonna’s Career

The breakout hit from the ‘Vision Quest’ movie, Crazy For You set Madonna on a new path – and ushered her into Hollywood.

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Originally written for a film – with only the script for inspiration – Crazy For You would prove Madonna’s versatility at a crucial point in her career. Having made her name with upbeat dance-indebted tracks, this measured ballad may have initially seemed like a leftfield choice for the “Queen Of Pop”, but it would be immediately embraced by the public, and is still considered to be one of the best Madonna songs of all time.

Here is the full story of Crazy For You, the Vision Quest single that broadened Madonna’s scope.

Listen to the best of Madonna here.

Crazy For You has an unexpected link to Carpenters

US lyricist John Bettis met Karen and Richard Carpenter at college, and their work together led to classics such as Goodbye To Love, Top Of The World and Yesterday Once More in the early 70s. That partnership endured but, by the early 80s, Bettis was writing for other artists, including Michael Jackson (the phenomenal Human Nature) and The Pointer Sisters (Slow Hand).

Bettis was commissioned, with new songwriting partner Jon Lind, to create a ballad for an upcoming movie, Vision Quest, then in production. At first, he had no idea who the composition would be picked for: “I was on vacation, out in the desert,” he told Fred Bronson, author of The Billboard Book Of Number One Hits. “[I was told they] wanted to cut it with Madonna… Borderline was out at that time, and I said, ‘Excuse me? This is for Madonna? Really? Can she sing a song like this?’”

Crazy For You seemed like a surprise choice for Madonna

At first, it perhaps seemed as though Bettis had a point when he wondered about the “Queen Of Pop”’s ability to handle a MOR ballad which had been written to spec, with just the film’s script to work from. Madonna’s debut album had been an out-and-out dance record, and its follow-up, Like A Virgin, which did includer her cover of Rose Royce’s Love Don’t Live Here Anymore, wasn’t to reach the shops until the very end of 1984. So far as outsiders could tell, Crazy For You wasn’t necessarily the kind of song that would suit the up-and-coming star.

In the event, however, she had the right team to turn it into her first classic ballad. John “Jellybean” Benitez had reshaped a lot of Madonna’s self-titled debut, remixing tracks such as Lucky Star, and had produced her first Top 40 hit, Holiday. Yet Jellybean himself realised Crazy For You would be a challenge, as he had never helmed a live session before.

“I was tense because I had never done a record like this,” he would later admit. Jellybean’s decision to draft in arranger and composer Rob Mounsey would prove to be the masterstroke that would take Crazy For You to new heights. Mounsey created a new arrangement for the song, including Into The Groove co-writer Stephen Bray on drums, and beefed up the backing vocals to create the classic single that we all know today. The oboes that feature so prominently on the finished record were actually Madonna’s idea.

‘Vision Quest’ would be Madonna’s first mainstream movie role

Phil Ramone was the musical director for Vision Quest, which tells the story of a high-school wrestling star. As well as assembling the soundtrack, which would be issued on Geffen Records, he had a lot of involvement in the overall direction of the film and decided to cast Madonna in 1983, at a point when she had yet to really hit big.

Crazy For You had been written with a scene in a nightclub in mind, and Madonna was hired to play the club’s performer, singing two songs (Crazy For You and Gambler, which was also later issued as a single in Europe). A third track, Warning Signs, was also recorded but has never been released – fans continue to hope it will see the light of day. Shots from the film were used in Crazy For You’s eventual promo video.

Madonna risked battling herself in the charts

Vision Quest was finally released in US cinemas in February 1985. It did moderate business, but most eyes were focused on the soundtrack, which included the two new Madonna songs alongside tracks by The Style Council and Journey. Madonna was now a sensation stateside and had just enjoyed the first of her record-breaking run of No.1 singles, with Like A Virgin, and her album of the same name was also topping the charts.

With the Vision Quest soundtrack being released on Geffen, Madonna and the executives at her label, Warner Bros, were concerned that either Crazy For You or Gambler might be issued to radio; no one wanted them to get in the way of her recent single, Material Girl. In the end, a compromise was reached, and Crazy For You was released on 2 March 1985, just as Material Girl entered the Billboard Top 20.

Crazy For You knocked We Are The World off No.1

Madonna’s first hit ballad made sharp progress up the Billboard Hot 100, entering the listings at No.55 on the back of huge radio interest, and reaching the Top 10 just five weeks later (as Material Girl peaked at No.2). The charity record We Are The World was a surefire chart-topper and held the No.1 spot for four weeks until Crazy For You finally overtook it in the week ending May 11.

“[It] lets you know how hot the song and how hot the artist were,” John Bettis said. In the UK, Crazy For You gave Madonna her greatest chart success to date, making No.2, and was still in the Top 20 that August, alongside a reissued Holiday and her first British No.1, Into The Groove. “Madonna mania”, as the tabloids dubbed it, had become an international phenomenon.

It became a UK hit all over again in 1991

The “Queen Of Pop”’s first hits compilation, The Immaculate Collection, became a major success on release at the end of 1990 and sparked fresh interest in Madonna’s back catalogue, despite it then stretching back less than a decade. In the UK and continental Europe, where physical sales of vinyl, cassettes and, increasingly, CDs drove the singles chart, Crazy For You was reissued as a single in a lightly remixed form (The Immaculate Collection had been remastered using a then cutting-edge technology called QSound). The reissue matched previous chart glories by peaking at UK No.2 in March 1991, and it remains Madonna’s third highest selling single in that country to date. In 2023, listeners of the UK’s BBC Radio 2 voted Crazy For You the seventh greatest song of her career.

Crazy For You remains a live favourite

It’s no surprise that Crazy For You featured in setlists for Madonna’s first stateside dates in early 1985, but international fans would have to wait almost 20 years before she played it on 2004’s Re-Invention Tour, with a dedication to those in the audience that had stood by her all that time. On her career-spanning Celebration Tour of 2023-2024, Madonna performed it briefly, segueing out of Human Nature.

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