Kylie Minogue (album)

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See Impossible Princess for the 1998 album released in the UK as Kylie Minogue
Kylie Minogue
Kylie Minogue cover
Studio album by Kylie Minogue
Released September 1994
May 2003 (UK re-release)
September 2003 (Australian re-release)
Recorded 1993-1994
Genre Popdance
Length 54:70 (Regular edition)
63:28 (Japanese edition)
60:23 (Canadian edition)
Label Deconstruction Records
Mushroom Records
Producer(s) Steve Anderson
Dave Seaman
M People
Pete Heller
Terry Farley
Jimmy Harry
Professional reviews
Kylie Minogue chronology
Greatest Remix Hits 2
(1993)
Kylie Minogue
(1994)
Impossible Princess
(1998)


Meant as a statement of her new direction, Kylie Minogue's fifth album no longer featured the Stock-Aitken-Waterman production gloss and found the diminutive singer working with hip dance producers like David Seaman. From the first notes of the opener Confide in Me, you know this is not teen pop queen of old. Kylie Minogue (also note the use of her last name on the cover) wanted to sound grown-up, and she pulls it off with ease. While it is still dance-pop, there is atmosphere and style in the songs that wasn't there on Let's Get To It.

Contents

[edit] Album information

Kylie Minogue was released on the Deconstruction label in the United Kingdom and Mushroom in Australia. It reached #4 on the UK Charts, and was certified gold for sales of 100,000. "Confide in Me" was the first and most successful single released from the album, reaching number two on the UK charts and spending four weeks at number one in her native Australia. The album hit number three in Australia.

Kylie Minogue was Minogue's first release outside of the production team of Stock Aitken Waterman. In an attempt to broaden her fan base and extend herself as an artist, she took an active role in planning the album and sought out a diverse group of artists to collaborate with, including Brothers in Rhythm and the Pet Shop Boys. Music critics generally praised Minogue for her objective, however most reviews described the end result as disjointed and disappointing.

On the album cover, Minogue attempted to present herself as a serious artist, rather than the vampish sex kitten she had begun to personify. While the accompanying videos were among her sexiest and most overt, the album cover featured black and white photography of Minogue wearing horn rimmed glasses and a conservative trouser and jacket suit. Such a combination from someone who had so strenuously promoted herself as a fashion icon was seen by many critics to be an odd choice.

In May 2003 the album was remastered, complete with a bonus disc filled mostly with remixes. To date, the album has sold over 2,500,000 copies worldwide.

[edit] Falling

The final version of the Pet Shop Boys track ("Falling") that appears on the album is radically different to the demo the band submitted to Minogue, which was much more in the style of her earlier work with PWL. The basis of the demo track was an eventually abandoned Pet Shop Boys remix of their 1993 cover version of The Village People song "Go West". Ironically, the later Minogue song "Your Disco Needs You" bears stong similarities to traditional anthemic Pet Shop Boys songs such as "Go West" and "A Red Letter Day". However, such songs were not in vogue in 1994 with the mature clubbing audience that Minogue and Deconstruction were trying to target at the time. The original Pet Shop Boys demo of "Falling" (with Neil Tennant on vocals) was later made available as part of the 2001 2-disc rerelease of the Pet Shop Boys album Very. The Pet Shop Boys would later directly collaborate with Minogue for their album Nightlife, on which she sang the duet "In Denial" with Tennant.

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Confide in Me" – 5:51 (Steve Anderson/Dave Seaman/O. Barton)
  2. "Surrender" – 4:26 (G. DeVeaux/C. Mole)
  3. "If I Was Your Lover" – 4:45 (J. Harry)
  4. "Where Is the Feeling?" – 7:00 (W. Smarties/J. Hannah)
  5. "Put Yourself in My Place" – 4:54 (J. Harry)
  6. "Dangerous Game" – 5:31 (S. Anderson/D. Seaman)
  7. "Automatic Love" – 4:46 (G. Mallozzi/M. Sabiu/K. Minogue/I. Humpe)
  8. "Where Has the Love Gone?" – 7:46 (A. Palmer/J. Stapleton)
  9. "Falling" – 6:44 (Neil Tennant/Chris Lowe)
  10. "Time Will Pass You By" – 5:27 (J. Whys/D. Fekaris/N. Zesses)

[edit] Bonus tracks

All bonus tracks appear on the Japanese and Canadian editons of Kylie Minogue.

  1. "Love Is Waiting" (Album version) – 4:52 (M. Percy/T. Lever/T. Ackerman)
  2. "Nothing Can Stop Us" (7" version) – 4:06 (B. Stanley/P. Wiggs)
  3. "Confide in Me" (Franglais version) – 5:53 (S. Anderson/D. Seaman/O. Barton)

[edit] Re-release bonus tracks

All bonus tracks appear on the re-release edition of Kylie Minogue.

  1. "Dangerous Game" (Dangerous Overture) – 1:20 (S. Anderson/D. Seaman)
  2. "Confide in Me" (Justin Warfield mix) – 5:27
  3. "Put Yourself in My Place" (Dan’s Old School mix) – 4:31
  4. "Where Is the Feeling?" (Acoustic version) – 4:51
  5. "Nothing Can Stop Us" (7" version) – 4:06
  6. "Love Is Waiting" (New version) – 4:48
  7. "Time Will Pass You By" (Paul Masterson mix) – 7:34
  8. "Where Is the Feeling?" (West End TKO mix) – 8:11
  9. "Falling" (Alternative mix) – 8:40
  10. "Confide in Me" (Big Brothers mix) – 10:27
  11. "Surrender" (Talking Soul mix) – 4:26
  12. "Put Yourself in My Place" (Acoustic version) – 4:46
  13. "If You Don’t Love Me" (Acoustic version) – 2:10
  14. "Confide in Me" (Franglais version) – 5:53

[edit] Singles

"Confide in Me", the lead single from the album, became one of Minogue's most successful single releases, reaching number one for four weeks in Australia and number two in the United Kingdom. The slow tempo dance track, written and produced by Brothers in Rhythm, featured Minogue's vocals over layers of strings and drumbeats. It also reached number one in Israel.

The second single "Put Yourself in My Place" reached number eleven in both Australia and the UK. The song featured a popular music video directed by Kier McFarlane. Minogue recreated the opening sequence of the classic Jane Fonda film, "Barbarella" (1968) in the video, performing a slow strip tease.

"Where Is the Feeling?" became the third release and reached number 16 in the UK and number 31 in Australia. Fans have remained divided as to whether the single remix of "Where Is The Feeling" was an improvement on the original album version, or whether the remix in fact detracted from the single's potential for success.

[edit] Canadian cover

North America was a moderate market: her albums were continuously released in the States, but more so in Canada. "Fie-toi à Moi", the Franglais version of "Confide in Me", was released as a part of a special Canadian release that had different cover artwork.

[edit] Charts

Chart (1989) Peak
position
Australian albums chart 3
U.K. albums chart 4
Swiss albums chart 33
Swedish albums chart 39
Japanese Oricon albums chart 54

[edit] Sales

Country Certification Shipments Sales
Australia 3x Platinum 210,000+
Japan
23,440
Spain Gold 50,000+
U.K. Platinum 300,000+ 315,000

[edit] External links

In other languages