400_Kylie_2000-2010

THE ALBUMS: 2000-2010

 

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

THE ALBUMS: 2000-2010
Kylie Minogue
EMI Import

By Scott Harrah

With the exception of her smash-hit European 2000 pop magnum opus Light Years, four of the five CDs in this boxed set collection of superstar Kylie Minogue’s studio albums from 2000 to 2010 were actually released domestically in the United States.  However, in the last decade, most of us stopped buying CDs and opted instead for the more 21st century option of digital downloads through I-Tunes and other online music retailers.  So, for dedicated fans, The Albums 2000-2010 is certainly a collectors’ item because, after all, Kylie is a pop artist who has maintained a career that spans from the days of vinyl to the present digital age.  It would only be fair to analyze each album individually, because all are so different in both sound and concept.

 

lycover

LIGHT YEARS: One of Kylie’s best ever

 

 

LIGHT YEARS

It is truly a shame that Light Years was never released Stateside, because, musically, from the songs to the glossy production values by an exhausting list of UK studio wizards, it is a far superior album than 2002’s breakthrough for Kylie, Fever. The aforementioned album contained the song that put her back on top of the USA pop charts and radio airwaves, “Can’t Get You Out of My Head.”  However, Light Years was Kylie’s glorified return to pop, and it remains a complex yet marvelously giddy gem even a decade later.

In the United Kingdom, where Kylie was still trying to live down the tepid record sales of her ill-fated attempt at indie rock in 1997, the critically acclaimed  but poor-selling Impossible Princess (released, unfortunately, around the time of Princess Diana’s death), Kylie was at a crossroads in her career.  By 2000, already in her 30s, Kylie had already endured some of the worst moments in her career: vicious jabs from the British tabloids who christened her “The Singing Budgie,” and a rocky relationship with INXS rocker Michael Hutchence, who committed suicide in the late 1990s.  She was no longer the cutesy pop puppet of Stock Aitken Waterman, and many of her longtime fans had all but abandoned her.

Light Years changed all that.  In the video for “Spinning Around,” in which Kylie sported the now-infamous gold hot pants, it was the lyrics that really proclaimed a new decade and century for her.  “Threw away my old clothes, got myself a better wardrobe; I got something to say,” she sang, with just a tad of tongue-in-cheek irony. The song’s slow, hook-laden beat and her irresistible vocals helped “Spinning Around” shoot to the top of the pop charts across the world.

“On a Night Like This,” an adorable Europop dance ballad, with another gorgeous video, featured Kylie cavorting  in Monaco, dripping in jewels and couture gowns, cementing her status as a fashion icon. “You kiss me, I’m falling, it’s your name I’m calling,” she cooed in breathy, sexy vocals.  This was 2000, the year of the Sydney Olympics and Paralympics, and by the time Kylie performed this and other songs on international TV for the sports world, America could no longer ignore Kylie as a global force.

There are far too many near-perfect songs on Light Years to count, from the haunting “Disco Down” to the campy anthems “Your Disco Needs You” and “Loveboat” to the Latin-tinged “Please Stay” and her incredible cover of Barry White’s “Under the Influence Of Love.”

Her duet with Robbie Williams (the UK pop star already making a name for himself in America by 2000), “Kids,” was rock-sounding enough to appeal to even the non-pop crowd. And the futuristic title track “Light Years,” in which Kylie sang “take us to the pop stars on the moon,” signaled that, in the New Millennium, Kylie would very soon conquer America as she had the rest of the world.

 

FEVER: Put Kylie back on top in America with 'Can't Get You Out of My Head'.

FEVER: Put Kylie back on top in America with ‘Can’t Get You Out of My Head’.

FEVER

This was the album that finally put Kylie back on top in the USA. The first single, “Can’t Get You Out of My Head,” soared to the Top 5 of the Billboard USA pop charts with its infectious chorus of “la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la.” Truly, this was a song we really could not get out of our heads. It was followed by the singles “Come into My World,” “In Your Eyes,” and “Love at First Sight,” all of which were irresistible dance-pop that made America fall in love with Kylie all over again.

Although Fever was not as intricately crafted as Light Years, to Americans, the lighthearted melodies of “More, More, More,” the title track “Fever,” and other songs were all enough to win her a new generation of fans on this side of the Atlantic. This was the official “comeback” for Kylie in the States because, after more than a decade, she finally had a U.S. domestic release and paying import prices was a thing of the past for her American fans, which Kylie recently described to The Washington Post  as “a secret society.”  Fever was pure, unmitigated Eurodisco that established Kylie as a musical force worldwide and the ever-elusive North American market, and she has never looked back since.

 

BODY LANGUAGE: Kylie channels Brigitte Bardot on cover

BODY LANGUAGE: Kylie channels Bardot on cover

BODY LANGUAGE

The follow-up to Fever was a more sophisticated sound for Kylie.  Only the electro-pop single “Slow” managed to make the U.S. pop charts (thanks, in part, to a super-sexy music video), but it never reached the popularity of “Can’t Get You Out of My Head.”

However, the jazzy, streamlined songs “Red Blooded Woman” and “Chocolate” represented some of the best, outside-the-box work Kylie had done since “Confide in Me” in 1994 and “Some Kind of Bliss” from Impossible Princess in 1997.

 

X: Sexy electronica album contained such dance faves as 'In My Arms.'

X: Sexy electronica album contained such dance faves as ‘In My Arms.’

 

X

This was the first album Kylie recorded after her much-publicized battle with breast cancer. Relying heavily on computerized “electronica,” X was a departure from the cotton-candy pop lite of Light Years and Fever. The rock anthem “2 Hearts,” with its staccato percussion and Kylie’s stylized vocals, almost sounded like vintage David Bowie. “Two hearts are beating together…I’m in love, ooohh,” she crooned. Even the cover for the single, featuring Kylie in glam-rock-style makeup, looked like something straight out of Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust era.

The techno songs “In My Arms” and “Like a Drug” were club hits, but the song “Wow” was the most mainstream, even being featured on TV commercials for ABC’s hit primetime soap, “Desperate Housewives.” X was not for everyone, but listen to it now and it is indeed noteworthy as it sounds like nothing else she has recorded in the New Millennium.

 

APHRODITE: Containing the hit title track, 'All the Lovers' & more

APHRODITE: Containing the hit title track, ‘All the Lovers’ & more

APHRODITE

Kylie’s 11th studio album was perhaps her biggest U.S. hit since Fever, and for good reason.  It is hard to resist the layered synth-pop of the first single, “All the Lovers,” and its message of universal love. The video, shot in downtown Los Angeles, showed Kylie writhing amongst a mass of people and being lifted by them, as many kissed and made out. (The publicity alone from the video managed to land Kylie interviews on many of the national morning American TV talk shows, including NBC’s “Today Show,” on which Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda chatted with the pop diva like she was a long-lost friend.)

The second single, “Get Outta My Way,” was another major hit, with its funky orchestration and lyrics that were an assertive declaration of independence for anyone moving on from a bad relationship, giving it mass appeal.  (Kylie promoted the song heavily, with appearances on numerous top-rated U.S. primetime TV shows such as “Dancing with the Stars” and “America’s Got Talent,” and the ultimate all-American holiday extravaganza, “The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.”)

“Better Than Today” actually made the American pop charts, but it was “Put Your Hands Up (If You Feel Love)” that really created a sensation when it landed in the U.S. Top 10 this summer with an incredible remix by Pete Hammond of Stock Aitken Waterman fame, featuring lush backtracks of percussion and textured layers of ethereal synth like something right out of the late 1980s. The song actually was the subject of a major featured in summer 2011 in New York’s weekly newspaper, The Village Voice.

There are many well-crafted songs that should be released as singles in the U.S., from the upbeat title track “Aphrodite” and the bouncy “Cupid Boy” to the aptly titled “Looking for an Angel,” a heavenly song with a delectable violin intro.  On Aphrodite, Kylie’s voice has never sounded better (distinct, polished, and one-of-a-kind), and every song is as painstakingly produced as Light Years, making it a glorious end to the first decade of the 21st century and the Australian superstar’s triumphant return to the American music scene. At age 43, she shows no signs of slowing down, with nonstop press coverage in all the American celebrity weeklies, and regular snarky comments about her fashion choices by Joan Rivers on E’s “Fashion Police.”  When Joan Rivers is dishing a celeb’s outfits, it is a sure sign that one has truly made it in the States. Long may Kylie reign on our shores.

Published August 18, 2011


 

KYLIE LIVE IN DUBLIN: Rare early recording for fans.

KYLIE MINOGUE LIVE IN DUBLIN: Rare early recording for fans.

 

 

 

KYLIE MINOGUE:
LIVE IN DUBLIN: LET’S GET TO IT TOUR, 1991
Recorded live at The Point
in Dublin, Ireland, November 8th, 1991
IMC Music Limited (Made in the EU)

By Scott Harrah

For diehard Kylie Minogue fans, particularly Americans who know little about her illustrious 1990s European career, this rare concert recording is more than merely pop nostalgia. Now nearly 20 years old, Kylie Minogue: Live in Dublin is primarily important because it marked a turning point in the singer’s career as she moved from her squeaky-clean image of Charlene from the Australian TV soap “Neighbours” and bubble gum teen pop sensation to show-biz legend.

To understand the scale of this album, one must first put Minogue into context as an artist.  By 1991, Minogue had enjoyed Top 40 success throughout the United States with her eponymous 1988 debut, Kylie, featuring the hits “The Loco-Motion” and “I Should Be So Lucky,” but her sophomore effort, Enjoy Yourself in 1989, the last American release for Minogue until Fever in 2002, went nowhere Stateside.  In addition, perhaps because her all-time biggest hit ever was never released in America: “Especially For You,”  a formulaic duet with fellow Aussie costar Jason Donovan from “Neighbours,” a mega-smash in the United Kingdom, where the two were seen on TV several times a day in the hit show and were sort of the Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber of that era).  However, in the U.S., “Neighbours” was rarely shown on the airwaves. Across the Atlantic and virtually everywhere else, however, Minogue was already a superstar, and her 1990 Stock Aitken Waterman-produced album Rhythm of Love was huge everywhere except North America.

This live album was recorded long before Britney Spears and the days of “autotune” and onstage lip-sync shenanigans, so what we hear is pure, raw Kylie, singing live with a band and backup singers.  Her pipes were still girlish and paper-thin two decades ago, but she already had her signature breathy vocals and that famous bubbly persona that has always overshadowed her flaws.  Even bona fide Kylie fans won’t argue that she has never had a spectacular voice; then again, neither did Madonna or many of the pop icons of yesteryear, but she was already a first-rate entertainer at the ripe old age of 23.

The majority of this concert recording contains Minogue’s early Stock Aitken Waterman hits, from “Step Back in Time” to “Got to Be Certain,” “Word is Out,” “What Do I Have to Do?” and “Let’s Get to It” to her duet with Keith Washington, “If You Were With Me Now.” Other than her smash U.S. hit “Loco-Motion,”a cover of Carole King’s 1960s classic that was a huge song for Little Eva and, in the 1970s, Grand Funk Railroad, she performs only one other cover, the O’Jays’ golden oldie “Love Train.”

She closes the concert with her signature song of the time period, “Better the Devil You Know,” the dance track that finally separated her from her goody-goody image and cemented her status as a sexy video vixen (and resulted in inevitable comparisons to Madonna by the tabloids in Britain).

As a classic concert recording, Kylie Minogue: Live in Dublin hardly represents Minogue’s best work, but it is required “Step Back in Time” listening for true Minogue aficionados.  Anyone who saw her recent “Aphrodite Live” tour in North America (which far surpassed the level of energy and seamless vocal ability than anything pop stars half her age are doing live right now) or “Les Folies” in Europe, Asia and Australia will appreciate just how far she has come as an artist over the years.

Published August 18, 2011