Kylie (album)

Kylie is the debut studio album by Australian recording artist Kylie Minogue, released on 4 July 1988 by Mushroom Records. Minogue had established herself as a child actress before signing to the record label in early 1987. The success of her debut single, "Locomotion", resulted in her working with Stock, Aitken and Waterman, who produced the album and wrote nine of its ten tracks. Their recording sessions, which started in September 1987 and took place in London and Melbourne, coincided with Minogue filming for the soap opera Neighbours.

Kylie
Studio album by
Released4 July 1988 (1988-07-04)
RecordedOctober 1987 – April 1988
Studio
Genre
Length35:22
Label
ProducerStock Aitken Waterman
Kylie Minogue chronology
Kylie
(1988)
Enjoy Yourself
(1989)
Singles from Kylie
  1. "I Should Be So Lucky"
    Released: 29 December 1987
  2. "Got to Be Certain"
    Released: 2 May 1988
  3. "The Loco-Motion"
    Released: 28 July 1988
  4. "Je ne sais pas pourquoi"
    Released: 10 October 1988
  5. "It's No Secret"
    Released: 15 December 1988
  6. "Turn It into Love"
    Released: 21 December 1988
Repackaged edition cover
The Kylie Collection artwork

Musically, Kylie is a bubblegum pop and dance-pop album. It received mixed reviews from contemporary music critics who criticized its dated production. It was a commercial success, peaking at number one in the United Kingdom for six weeks and becoming the best-selling album of 1988. It is her only number-one album in New Zealand, while peaking at number two in her native Australia. In the United States, it was certified gold for selling over 500,000 copies. Kylie was certified six times platinum in the United Kingdom and has sold over five million copies worldwide.

To promote Kylie, "I Should Be So Lucky" was released as the first single by the newly founded PWL Records in late December 1987. It reached number one in Australia and the United Kingdom, the first for any artist. The subsequent singles—"Got to Be Certain", the re-recorded "The Loco-Motion", and "Je ne sais pas pourquoi" all peaked in the top two on the UK Singles Chart. "It's No Secret" was her third top-forty single on the Billboard Hot 100, while "Turn It into Love" was released exclusively in Japan. Kylie was re-issued in 1988 as The Kylie Collection, and in 2015 when it returned to the UK Albums Chart.

Background

Kylie Ann Minogue was born in Melbourne in 1968, the eldest of three children.[1][2] She was a child actress from the age of eleven, appearing in cameo roles in The Sullivans (1979), Skyways (1980), and The Henderson Kids (1985).[2][3] In April 1986, Minogue played Charlene Mitchell, a schoolgirl turned garage mechanic, in the soap opera Neighbours.[4] Jason Donovan, whom Minogue began dating at the time, played her onscreen love interest as Scott Robinson.[3] Their romantic relationship culminated with a wedding in an episode that attracted an audience of 20 million British viewers in 1987.[3][5]

Minogue learned to play violin and piano at a very young age while taking singing and dancing lessons with her sister Dannii.[3] In 1985, Minogue used her earnings from The Henderson Kids to record three songs with producer Greg Petherick at Young Talent Time, a weekly Australian music programme which already featured Dannii as a regular performer.[3][6] During her time in Neighbours, Minogue joined a band along with cast members Guy Pearce, Peter O'Brien and Alan Dale, which Petherick arranged.[6][4] He later suggested Minogue cover the song "The Loco-Motion" with the band during a Fitzroy Football Club benefit concert at the Festival Hall in 1986, where she also sang a duet of "I Got You Babe".[4][7]

"I can understand some people are going to think, 'Oh yeah, a soapie star going into music'. But it wouldn't have happened if it didn't feel right for me. I felt it was time Kylie Minogue stood up to be counted."

—Minogue in a press release in 1987.[6]

Impressed by the performance, Petherick arranged for Minogue to record the former song, re-titled as "Locomotion", with producer Kaj Dahlstrom, who invested $10,000 to record it.[6] Petherick submitted the demo track to many record labels before reaching out to Michael Gudinski, head of Mushroom Records.[6][4] Gudinski was reluctant at first, calling the demo "a bit of a one-hit wonder".[6] During a trip to London several months after receiving the demo track, Gudinski decided to sign Minogue because of her popularity from Neighbours.[6][4] She signed with the label in early 1987.[8][9] The decision was made when not many established actors in television chose to make a record. The signing was met with polarised opinions from critics and employees of Mushroom Records; many thought it would be the end of the company and dubbed Minogue as "The Singing Budgie."[6][4]

In June 1987, Mushroom Records had Mike Duffy, an audio engineer for Stock Aitken Waterman producers, over for a three-month residency at Platinum Studios in South Yarra.[6][10] He was asked to remix the "Locomotion" demo track with the help of a synthesizer to make it sound more like Bananarama's cover of "Venus" (1986) .[4][11] It was the first time he had produced a record himself.[6] The song was released as Minogue's debut single on 27 July 1987, three weeks after Neighbours wedding episode premiered.[6][4] A week after its release, the single topped the Australian charts, remaining there for seven weeks[6][11] and becoming the best-selling single of the decade.[4][12] Around that time, Minogue was set up with Terry Blamey, who would be her manager for 25 years.[13][14]

Recording

Along with Matt Aitken and Mike Stock, Pete Waterman (pictured) wrote and produced Kylie

The success of "Locomotion" resulted in Minogue and Blamey travelling to London to work with Stock, Aitken and Waterman in September 1987.[6][15] Pete Waterman, the only member of the trio aware of Minogue's trip, was unavailable; he was busy making The Hit Man and Her and had not told Mike Stock she was in London.[16][17] Minogue and Blamey waited for ten days in their hotel without hearing from the producers.[15][16] They eventually turned up at the studio at the last minute.[15] The producers wrote "I Should Be So Lucky" in 40 minutes and Minogue recorded it quickly before she returned to Australia that afternoon to work on Neighbours.[11][16] Stock recalled the abrupt session: "Her ear is very tuned in so I sang her the tune and she sang it back at me and at that point I put the tapes aside and went on to other things ... We treated [Minogue] rather shabbily."[16] He wrote the lyrics in response to what he had learned about Minogue: although she was a successful soap star, he thought there had to be something wrong with her and figured she must be unlucky in love.[16] At the time, the producers did not take Minogue's career seriously because of time constraints and her obligations to Neighbours.[18][19] They did not even listen to the song until Waterman heard it played by a DJ at a Christmas party that year and said it was "really good".[18][11]

In February 1988, Stock travelled to Melbourne and apologised to Minogue for her previous recording session.[16] They went on to record "Got to Be Certain" and "Turn It into Love" with her.[20] Recording sessions with Stock and engineer Karen Hewitt took place at Allan Eaton Studios and RBX Studios in Melbourne for only a couple of hours at night, between filming her last episodes for Neighbours.[20][21][22] She frequently broke down emotionally due to pressure from work; Stock said she was "often tearful" at the studio during that time.[20][21] The album was recorded in snatches; Stock taught Minogue the songs and she would be recorded in an hour. "If you could get four hours with her, it was the most you could get... We were almost not able to even play her the songs!," Waterman recalled.[19] Despite the pressure, he found the sessions "wasn't stressful" because of their work ethic, saying "that's what we were used to. In fact, in hindsight, the truth is it was so enjoyable because we didn't have time to get stressed."[19] Minogue took a break from filming Neighbours to fly to London in March.[20] The producers had a copy of "Locomotion" produced by Duffy, which Waterman was not keen on.[4][23] They re-recorded it with Minogue at their studio in London and changed the name back to "The Loco-Motion".[4][24] Portions of the vocals from the demo track were kept in the new version.[16] For Kylie, Stock wanted to make an album full of single-potential tracks, similar to the form of greatest hits compilations.[25] Minogue stayed with her mother in Waterman's apartment during the recording sessions over Easter in 1988,[26] which took place at PWL Studios 1, 2 & 5 (London).[22][27]

Music and lyrics

Stock, Aitken, and Waterman composed and produced all the tracks on Kylie except "The Loco-Motion" written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King.[27] Critics described Kylie as a bubblegum pop and dance-pop album.[22][23] Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine described it as a collection of house tracks blended with "hi-NRG beats, Italo-disco synths and Motown melodies."[28] Joe Sweeney of PopMatters noted the musical similarities to other albums produced by PWL, with the lyrics about romantic relationships and positive mentality.[29] He commented that such themes would later infuse Minogue's post-millennial work.[29] Matthew Lindsay of Classic Pop, on the other hand, pointed out the main themes about heartbreak, betrayal and frustration.[30] In a 2019 interview, Minogue said that she "probably didn't realize at the time" about the dark tone in the lyrics—in the case of "I Should Be So Lucky", she stated "We all sing like it's really happy, but it's not. She wishes she was lucky in love."[31]

Kylie opens with "I Should Be So Lucky", a light dance-pop track that uses a drum machine, keyboards and bass by Stock.[15][17] It depicts a frustrated young woman who feels unlucky in romance[11][32] and has been compared to the work of Rick Astley.[29] For the album's version of "The Loco-Motion", the producers re-recorded the backing track from Duffy's demo, featuring railway sound effects and less spontaneous vocals.[17][6] The slow-tempo "Je ne sais pas pourquoi" and reggae-infused "It's No Secret" contain melodies that are reminiscent of Waterman's earlier work in the 1960s at the Mecca Dance Hall.[17] "It's No Secret" features cascading synth and an "effervescent" melody, whose chorus begins with the line "Our love was a lie".[29][30] Minogue sings "Got to Be Certain", a lovelorn Hi-NRG track, in an upbeat and carefree way.[17][30] It was first recorded by fellow PWL artist Mandy Smith for her debut album but abandoned;[21][33] both versions share the same musical backing.[17]

The sixth track, "Turn It Into Love", discusses unrequited love with a wistful-yet-optimistic approach.[29][34] Musically, the low-key Hi-NRG song gained comparison to the soundtrack of the 1983 romance film Flashdance.[29][33] The mid-tempo "I Miss You" and "I'll Still Be Loving You" resemble other late-80s pop tracks, particularly the work of Climie Fisher and Living in a Box.[17] Two final tracks, "Look My Way" and "Love at First Sight", were written for other PWL artists in the previous year before appearing on the album. Originally written for Heywoode, "Look My Way" draws musical inspiration from The Whispers' "Rock Steady" (1987), Madonna's "Into the Groove" (1984) and Debbie Gibson's "Shake Your Love" (1987).[17][30] "Love at First Sight", whose lyrics discusses a teenage love story, was an instrumental demo track for Sinitta and is unrelated to her 2002 song with the same title.[17]

Artwork and release

Minogue singing the album's fourth single, "Je ne sais pas pourquoi", during her 2019 summer tour

Kids and teenagers were the target audience for Kylie; Waterman adapted the idea and was fascinated by how teenagers reacted to Minogue's work.[25] It is reflected in the album's artwork, shot by photographer Lawrence Lawry,[26] which shows Minogue grinning and wearing a hat of hair with curls cascading out of the top.[26][35] Designer David Howells said the artwork shows Minogue in a girlie and carefree way that kids can relate to, instead of "some icon on a pedestal".[36][35] He was inspired by the way teenagers tear pictures out of magazines and stick them to walls, referring to it as the "magazine approach".[36] Other PWL artists posing with hats using the same strategy can be seen on the covers of Mandy Smith's Mandy (1988), Minogue's follow-up Enjoy Yourself (1989) and Sonia's Everybody Knows (1990).[35]

Kylie was first released in the UK on 4 July 1988,[27][34] and was released in Australia a fortnight later, on 18 July 1988.[37] Similar to other late 80s records, the record company took control of Kylie's running orders and pushed future singles to the front.[17] Gudinski stated the producers from PWL were not focused on promoting Kylie in the United States' market.[4] However, Blamey sent Minogue to look into releasing her material during her two-week break there.[38] David Geffen, founder of Geffen Records, agreed in distributing the album after watching several video clips of Minogue.[38]

Additional releases

Kylie was repackaged as The Kylie Collection in Australia on 5 December 1988,[39] featuring bonus mixes and music videos of the singles.[40][41][42] Ian Gormely of Exclaim! called it a compilation of "unremarkable and cheesy clips that present the singer as a clean-cut teen".[3] PWL re-released Kylie in Japan in 2012 with bonus mixes.[43] In October 2014, Cherry Red Records and PWL announced to re-released Kylie along with her studio albums Enjoy Yourself, Rhythm of Love (1990), and Let's Get to It (1991).[44][45] The release date was later postponed to 9 February 2015.[44][46] The albums have been digitally remastered from the original studio tapes. They were available on vinyl, CD, and DVD. This is the first time these albums have been released in the United Kingdom since their original release.[46][45]

Minogue's debut VHS release, The Videos, which was distributed by Mushroom Records in 1988 in Australia, contains the music videos for "The Loco-Motion" and "I Should Be So Lucky", as well as the behind the scenes footage.[47] That same year, a follow-up VHS titled Kylie: The Videos was released in Japan, France, and the United Kingdom. It included an interview with Minogue, as well as music videos for "Got to Be Certain" and "Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi".[48][49][50] Kylie's Remixes, a nine-track remix compilation of seven songs from Kylie, was released in 1988 in Japan.[51] It peaked at number 13 on the Oricon Albums Chart and sold 84,000 copies, as of 2006.[52][53] It was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of Japan in April 1989.[54] The compilation was later released in Australia in 1993.[55]

Promotion

After filming her last scenes for Neighbours in June and July 1988, Minogue was able to relocate to London to concentrate on the promotional work for Kylie.[23][56] This included her performances on Terry Wogan's television talk show and the opening for a new ride at Alton Towers amusement park.[56] Waterman also spent a large amount of money on TV advertising for the album.[23] In September, Minogue did a three-month promotional trip in the United States, Japan, Melbourne and the United Kingdom. The singer had to cut it short due to emotional exhaustion.[9][57] In October 1989, more than a year after the album was released, Minogue launched her first concert tour, Disco in Dream performing several songs from both Kylie and Enjoy Yourself.[58] It began in Japan, where she performed in front of 38,000 fans at the Tokyo Dome.[59][60] She later joined other artists from the PWL label on a ten-date theatre tour in the United Kingdom, which attracted 170,000 fans.[61][62] Its run in the United Kingdom was sponsored by local radio stations and was re-titled The Hitman Roadshow.[60][62] ALFA International and Video Collection International released the video album On the Go: Live in Japan in April 1990 in Japan and the United Kingdom.[63][64] It contained footage shot during the Disco in Dream concert tour and was available in VHS and Laserdisc formats.[63][64] A video from the concert tour with backstage footage and various clips of Kylie around Japan was shown on a Christmas special on ITV called Kylie On The Go in 1990.[65]

Singles

Minogue performing a medley of album singles "I Should Be So Lucky" and "Got to Be Certain" during her Kiss Me Once Tour in Manchester in August 2014

Despite the buzz surrounding "Locomotion" in 1987, Waterman could not get a major label interested in "I Should Be So Lucky". He decided to issue it on his own PWL Records imprint instead.[21][66][67] "I Should Be So Lucky" was released as the first single from Kylie in late December 1987[21] and topped the charts in the United Kingdom and Australia, the first time this had been achieved by any artist.[21][68] It remained at number-one on the UK Singles Chart for five consecutive weeks, her longest chart-topper,[69] and on Australia's Kent Music Report for another sixth consecutive weeks.[70] The song was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry on 1 March 1988.[71] It peaked at number twenty-eight on the Billboard Hot 100[72] and topped the charts in Switzerland,[73] and Germany.[74] Two music videos were made for the single: one with Minogue singing in a bubble-filled bath,[75] and another where she hangs out of a convertible BMW driving through Sydney.[76]

"Got to Be Certain", the second single, was released on 2 May 1988.[77] It was Minogue's third number-one single in Australia.[78] In the United Kingdom, it reached number two for three weeks,[79] while peaking within the top ten in Germany and Switzerland.[77] Its music video shows Minogue doing a fashion photo shoot, singing on top of the KPMG Tower and alongside the Yarra River.[76] "The Loco-Motion" was released in Europe and the United States on 25 July 1988 as the third single.[80][24] It debuted on the UK Singles Chart at number two, setting the record for the highest entry by a female artist.[26][80] It also peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot 100,[72] and number five on the RPM Canadian Top Singles chart.[81] The music video for "The Loco-Motion" was re-edited from footage of the original Australian release, which was shot at Essendon Airport and the ABC Studios in Melbourne.[80][82] In the video, Minogue is seen dancing against a backdrop of graffiti and singing in a studio, while her brother Brendan appeared as a cameo at the end of the clip.[6][83]

Originally planned as a double A-side with new track "Made in Heaven", "Je ne sais pas pourquoi" was released as the fourth single on 17 October 1988.[84][26] It was re-titled as "I Still Love You (Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi)" in Australia and the United States.[84] It was Kylie's fifth top two single on the UK Singles Chart—[79] Minogue's strongest run of singles from an album.[69] It also reached the top ten in Norway and New Zealand.[85][86] Its music video features Minogue dancing and speaking French.[76] The fifth single "It's No Secret" was released in North America, Japan and New Zealand on 7 February 1989.[26][87] It peaked at number 37 on the Billboard Hot 100, Minogue's third consecutive top forty single in the United States.[72][87] A still from the music video, which shows Minogue walking through to the beach and to a pool at the Mirage Resort, was used as the front cover of the Australian single release.[76] "Turn It into Love" was released exclusively in Japan as the fifth single, peaking at number 34. It had sold 46,320 copies in the country as of 2006.[88][89]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[22]
Digital Spy[34]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[90]
Number One[91]
Record Mirror[92]
Smash Hits[93]

Kylie received mixed reviews from music critics.[94] Giving the album two-and-a-half out of five stars, Chris True from AllMusic said that although the production values "are dated at best" and the melodies "are nothing but standard", her upbeat personality makes them "bearable".[22] Tim Nicholson of Record Mirror wrote that besides the "awful" cover of "The Loco-Motion", the album is full of "rattling, Hi-NRG based perfect pop [songs]" that has hit-single potential, similar to "I Should be So Lucky".[92] Donovan, writing a review of Kylie for Number One, felt that it would "brighten your day up", but suggested Minogue's vocal "sounds a bit too much like Minnie Mouse after a while."[91]

In another mixed review, Nick Levine of Digital Spy also panned the dated production saying the record was "as loaded with variety as a loaf of bread". He felt her personality and the "quintessentially '80s charm" compensated for its weaknesses, while calling "I Should Be So Lucky" the stand out "classic" track.[34] Chris Heath of Smash Hits praised the "simple, deliriously wonderful disco" tracks,[93] while Rolling Stone suggested they sound like "delightful trifles" and are as "cheesily and identically redolent of the late 80s' as a pair of stone-washed jean shorts".[95] In the Recommended section, the writers of Billboard applauded the cover of "The Loco-Motion" but found the "mechanical production and assembly-line writing... may lack the warm necessary for a U.S. breakthrough".[96]

Ian Peel of Classic Pop commended the hooks saying they are "simple ... but never really leave you," adding the songs "sound pretty much the same".[17] From the same publication, Mark Elliot praised the Hi-NRG pop tunes that "set the benchmark for her spectacular career," and ranked it as the third-best Stock Aitken Waterman album.[67] In a review for the 2015 reissue of Kylie, Sweeney found it "soulless" but the production flaws was made up by the "well-crafted melodies".[29] In 2018, Cinquemani ranked Kylie as Minogue's worst studio album, criticizing her vocals which sound "like she was forced to suck down a lungful of helium". He concluded that the album was "as lightweight and unsatisfying as cotton candy—and goes down just as easy".[28] In the Encyclopedia of Popular Music (2011), British writer Colin Larkin gave the album three out of five stars, classifying it as "recommended" and "highly listenable".[90]

At the ARIA Music Awards of 1988, Minogue won the Highest Selling Single for "Locomotion".[97] At the following ceremony, she received nominations for Breakthrough Artist – Album, Highest Selling Album, and Best Female Artist for Kylie, winning the second time for Highest Selling Single for "I Should Be So Lucky" and receiving the Special Achievement Award.[98] The single also earned Minogue a Japan Gold Disc Award for Single of the Year in 1989.[99] It was added to the National Film and Sound Archive's Sounds of Australia registry in 2011.[100]

Commercial performance

Minogue performing "The Loco-Motion" on her Golden Tour (2018−19). It reached the first position of the Kent Music Report singles chart and remained there for seven weeks

Kylie debuted at number two on the UK Albums Chart on 16 July 1988.[101] In its seventh week, it peaked at number one and stayed there for four consecutive weeks.[102][79] Minogue became the youngest artist to have a number-one album at the age of 20—she held that record until Canadian recording artist Avril Lavigne's Let Go reached the top of the chart in 2002, when she was 18.[3][103] Kylie topped the chart for two additional weeks in November, for a total of six weeks in the number-one position,[79] her longest-running number-one album on this chart.[69] It was the best-selling album of 1988 in the UK,[104][105] with sales of 1.29 million copies over the course of six months.[69][26] On 5 January 1989, it was certified six times platinum by British Phonographic Industry.[106] Kylie went on to be the fifth highest-selling album of the decade—the highest by a female solo artist—in the UK,[107][108] and was the first album by a female solo artist to exceed sales of two million.[109] Kylie returned to the UK Albums Chart in 2015, when the reissue peaked at number eighty-five on 15 February.[110] As of 2006, it has sold 2,105,698 copies in the UK.[111]

In Minogue's native Australia, Kylie entered at number two, where it remained for three consecutive weeks. It stayed in the top fifty for a total of twenty-eight weeks.[112] It was certified four times platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association.[113] In New Zealand, it debuted at number ten, and eventually topped the chart for six weeks. It is her only number-one album in the region and stayed on the charts for a total of fifty-three weeks.[114] In November 1989, it was certified platinum by Recorded Music NZ.[115] The album reached the top ten in Germany,[116] Norway,[117] and Switzerland.[118] In the United States, it debuted and peaked at number fifty-three on the Billboard 200. This was Minogue's only charting album in the United States, until her 2001 album Fever hit the charts in 2002.[119] In 1989, the album was certified gold in the United States, selling over 500,000 copies.[120] Kylie was certified platinum in Hong Kong by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry for selling over 15,000 units.[121] In Japan, it peaked at number 30 and sold 102,000 copies as of 2006.[122][53] Kylie has sold over five million copies worldwide.[105][94]

Track listing

All songs written, produced and arranged by Mike Stock, Matt Aitken and Pete Waterman, except where noted.

Kylie Standard version[22]
No.TitleLength
1."I Should Be So Lucky"3:24
2."The Loco-Motion" (writers: Gerry Goffin, Carole King)3:13
3."Je ne sais pas pourquoi"4:01
4."It's No Secret"3:57
5."Got to Be Certain"3:18
6."Turn It into Love"3:36
7."I Miss You"3:15
8."I'll Still Be Loving You"3:49
9."Look My Way"3:36
10."Love at First Sight"3:10
Total length:35:22
The Kylie Collection Side C[40]
No.TitleLength
1."I Should Be So Lucky" (Extended mix)6:03
2."The Loco-Motion" (Kohaku Mix)5:55
The Kylie Collection Side D[40]
No.TitleLength
1."I Still Love You (Je ne sais pas pourquoi)" (Moi Non Plus Mix)5:51
2."Got to Be Certain" (Extended)6:34
3."Made in Heaven" (Maid in Australia Mix)6:16
The Kylie Collection VHS version[42]
No.TitleLength
1."I Should Be So Lucky" (Music video)3:35
2."Got to Be Certain" (Music video)3:17
3."The Loco-Motion" (Music video)3:17
4."Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi" (Music video)4:25
5."It's No Secret" (Music video)4:58
6."Made in Heaven" (Music video)3:40
Kylie 2012 Japanese reissue bonus tracks[43]
No.TitleLength
11."Made in Heaven"3:33
12."Getting Closer" (Extended OZ Mix)4:10
13."I Should Be So Lucky" (The Bicentennial Mix)6:11
14."Got to Be Certain" (Extended)6:35
15."The Loco-Motion" (The Kohaku Mix)5:59
16."It's No Secret" (Alternative Extended Version)5:47
17."Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi" (The Revolutionary Mix)7:14
Kylie 2015 reissue deluxe version (Disc 1)[46]
No.TitleLength
11."Made in Heaven"3:33
12."Locomotion"3:16
13."I Should Be So Lucky" (Extended Version)6:06
14."Got to Be Certain" (Extended)6:35
15."The Loco-Motion" (The Kohaku Mix)5:59
16."Je ne sais pas pourquoi" (Moi Non Plus Mix)5:53
17."It's No Secret" (Extended)5:47
18."Made in Heaven" (Maid in England Mix)6:17
Kylie 2015 reissue deluxe version (Disc 2)[46]
No.TitleLength
1."Locomotion" (Chugga Motion Mix)7:37
2."Getting Closer" (Extended Oz Mix)4:11
3."I Should Be So Lucky" (The Bicentennial Mix)6:11
4."Got to Be Certain" (Extra Beat Boys Remix)6:51
5."The Loco-Motion" (The Sankie Remix)6:37
6."Je ne sais pas pourquoi" (The Revolutionary Mix)7:15
7."Made in Heaven" (Original 12" Mix)7:10
8."I Should Be So Lucky" (12" Remix)5:31
9."The Loco-Motion" (12" Master)9:12
10."Glad to Be Alive" (writers: Claude Carranza, Craig Harnath)3:41
11."Getting Closer" (UK Mix)4:02
12."Made in Heaven" (Heaven Scent Mix)4:45
13."The Loco-Motion" (The Oz Tour Mix)5:40
Kylie 2015 reissue deluxe version (Disc 3)[46]
No.TitleLength
1."I Should Be So Lucky" (Music video) 
2."Got to Be Certain" (Music video) 
3."The Loco-Motion" (Music video) 
4."Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi" (Music video) 
5."It's No Secret" (Music video) 
6."Made in Heaven" (Music video) 
7."Locomotion" (Australian version, part of the bonus footage section) 
8."I Should Be So Lucky" (Alternative version, part of the bonus footage section) 
9."Got to Be Certain" (Original version, part of the bonus footage section) 
10."Got to Be Certain" (Location-only, part of the bonus footage section) 
11."Interviews & Behind the Scenes" (Part of the bonus footage section) 
12."The Loco-Motion" (Live on Top of the Pops) 
13."Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi" (Live on Top of the Pops) 

Personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[123]

Charts

Certifications and sales

Certifications and sales for Kylie
Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[140] 4× Platinum 280,000^
France (SNEP)[141] Platinum 316,300[142]
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[143] Gold 25,000[143]
Germany (BVMI)[144] Gold 250,000^
Hong Kong (IFPI Hong Kong)[121] Platinum 20,000*
Japan 102,000[53]
New Zealand (RMNZ)[115] Platinum 15,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[145] Platinum 50,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[106] 6× Platinum 2,105,698[111]
United States (RIAA)[120] Gold 500,000^

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for Kylie
Region Date Format(s) Distributor(s) Ref(s).
United Kingdom 4 July 1988 PWL [146]
Various [147]
Japan Alfa [148]
Australia 18 July 1988 Mushroom [37]
United States 1988 Geffen [149]
Australia 5 December 1988
  • LP
  • cassette
  • VHS
Mushroom [39][40][41]
Japan 7 November 2012
  • CD
  • DVD
  • LP
PWL [43]
United Kingdom 9 February 2015 [46][45]
Japan 10 February 2015 [150]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. Smith 2014, p. 11
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