| In an interview with Reuters, Madonna also said 
				she was horrified by moves to restrict LGTBQ and women's rights, 
				namely in her native United States.
 "If you're talking about the far right and the rights that are 
				being taken away from, say the LGBTQ community or women's rights 
				... obviously I am traumatized and horrified," Madonna said.
 
 A longtime campaigner for the LGTBQ community and known for her 
				charity work in Malawi, Madonna, 60, said she would keep 
				fighting for those causes.
 
 "There's still an enormous amount of poverty in Malawi and the 
				rate of HIV has gone down considerably but it's not 
				disappeared," she said. "(There are) all the problems that are 
				recurring in America because of new legislation so I am going to 
				have to keep fighting for the same things."
 
 On her 14th studio album, Madonna addresses U.S. gun control 
				laws and uses a snippet of a speech by school shooting survivor 
				Emma Gonzalez in the rousing single "I Rise", a song she says 
				aims to give a voice to marginalized people.
 
 "Dark Ballet", a piano ballad infused with electronic pop, was 
				inspired by Joan of Arc and references a world "up in flames", 
				while in "Killers Who Are Partying" she sings about the poor, 
				exploited children as well as a woman raped.
 
 "It's pretty frightening, yes, it's pretty scary ... There is 
				stuff going on everywhere in the world," she said when asked how 
				she felt about the state of the world.
 
 "When you think about the amount of people who have died, been 
				killed, have been wounded, whose lives have been changed 
				irrevocably because of the lack of gun control in America, it's 
				such a huge, huge problem.
 
 "I care deeply about it so I couldn't not write about it," she 
				said.
 
 She also said she took issue with some U.S. states restricting 
				abortion rights.
 
 "These are crazy times because we fought really hard for a lot 
				of these freedoms and now it seems like they are all 
				systematically being taken away ...It doesn't make me feel 
				hopeless. It just makes me want to fight back."
 
 CHAMELEON
 
 Influenced by living in Lisbon, where Madonna joined local 
				musicians in so-called living room sessions, the Latin-infused 
				"Madame X" also takes listeners to street parties and the club 
				with a spate of catchy tracks.
 
 Madonna also sings in Spanish and Portuguese on the 15-track 
				album, released on Friday.
 
 She described "Madame X" as a "chameleon".
 
 "Every song is a reflection of Madame X. Sometimes she's a 
				freedom fighter, sometimes she's a cha cha instructor, sometimes 
				she's longing for love, sometimes she's feeling nostalgic," 
				Madonna said.
 
 "Sometimes she's thinking about all the people in the world who 
				are suffering, who don't have a voice and who need a voice and 
				feels a sense of responsibility for those people."
 
 Madonna, who shot to fame in the early 1980s with hits likes 
				"Holiday" and "Like a Virgin", has sold more than 300 million 
				records worldwide, making her the best-selling female recording 
				artist, according to Guinness World Records.
 
 Known for pushing boundaries and sometimes provocative imagery, 
				her work has influenced scores of artists.
 
 Asked how she felt about her career, she said: "I'm incredibly 
				grateful ...to have been able to be successful for so long and 
				to be able to be in a position that I am, to continue to create, 
				to have the freedom to speak my mind and to feel inspired and 
				creative."
 
 "I'll keep speaking my mind, hopefully in an as artistic a way 
				as possible because I do like to be political but I like to do 
				it in a poetic way."
 
 Her new Madame X alter ego is a reflection of the singer, who is 
				known for repeatedly reinventing herself.
 
 Madonna describes herself as "a curious person, constantly 
				searching for answers, for wisdom, for knowledge to understand 
				what life is all about."
 
 "All of my work is informed by the things that I learn, so 
				that's what provokes the reinvention."
 
 Asked about the #MeToo movement that has shaken Hollywood by 
				uncovering sexual misconduct and its relevance for the music 
				sector, Madonna said: "Of course it's long overdue, women are 
				treated very differently than men are in the music business.
 
 "But I don't know exactly how that's going to happen. I can't 
				speak up any more than I already am."
 
 (Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; editing by Jason Neely)
 
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