Madonna Releases Sabrina Carpenter Video for Bring Your Love
Madonna released the full promotional video for sabrina carpenter collaboration Bring Your Love, and the clip pushes her album rollout forward with a second visual tied to the same project. The release arrives after a prior promo video that featured 6 tunes from Confessions on a Dance Floor II.
Bring Your Love and Sabrina Carpenter
The video places Madonna and Carpenter inside a stadium performance packed with partygoers, with actor Julia Garner also appearing in the clip. It ends on a door poster reading Welcome to the Club of Love, a tidy visual cue for a campaign built around dance-floor spectacle rather than a single standalone release.
Madonna also put out a remix of the song from producer Stuart Price, keeping the track in circulation across both video and audio formats. That move matters because it extends the song beyond one upload and gives the album campaign another asset to sell while the record is still unreleased.
Times Square and Grindr
Madonna shared the video from her surprise Times Square performance tied to dating app Grindr, then used the set to preview more of the album’s material. She performed I Feel So Free, Bring Your Love and debuted Love Sensation, before moving into Get Together, I Love New York and Hung Up from the original Confessions on a Dance Floor.
That Times Square sequence matters because it shows the rollout is not just built around one collaboration. Madonna is linking the new video to live promotion, older catalog material and unreleased tracks at once, which keeps the album campaign centered on quantity as much as on one featured duet.
Martin Garrix then played the previously unheard track Bizarre at his Brooklyn show, and fans recognized Madonna’s voice on it. Bizarre also appears on the new album, giving the campaign another unreleased title to track before Confessions on a Dance Floor II arrives on 3 July.
Confessions on a Dance Floor II
The album is out on 3 July, and the current rollout suggests Madonna is still stacking attention across video, remix and live performance rather than treating any one release as the endpoint. Carpenter’s presence widens the record’s reach, but the deeper business play is the same one driving the rest of the campaign: keep new material visible until the album lands.