DiscoverHit Parade | Music History and Music TriviaMaterial Girl in an Imperial World Edition Part 1
Material Girl in an Imperial World Edition Part 1

Material Girl in an Imperial World Edition Part 1

Update: 2025-02-14
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In the late 1980s, the English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys dominated the U.K. pop charts and staged an invasion of the American charts. Years later, founding member Neil Tennant dubbed this streak of creative and commercial supremacy the group’s “imperial phase”—a term that eventually caught on among music critics and pop fans.


So, what does it take for an artist to achieve imperial dominance? Why might Fleetwood Mac in the 1970s or The Weeknd in the 2010s qualify, while Cher or Lizzo don’t quite fit the bill? Are there rules for imperial phases?


Hit Parade’s Chris Molanphy says yes—he’s got chart rules for determining when an artist is at peak imperiality. And he says Madonna’s late ’80s streak of hits might be the ultimate imperial phase.


Join Chris as he dissects the most regal artists across the decades, defining what makes them imperial—and he walks hit by hit through Madonna’s biggest phase, which may remain unmatched.


Podcast production by Kevin Bendis.

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Material Girl in an Imperial World Edition Part 1

Material Girl in an Imperial World Edition Part 1

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