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Kylie Minogue stated she refused to slow down amid her current ‘wave’ of comeback success during an interview with Billboard.
The 55-year-old singer is back on the global music scene after the breakout hit Padam Padam from her sixteenth studio album Tension.
The performer – who recently duetted with Madonna – told the show that while she was happy with the warm reception to her new projects, she didn’t want to end up in a position where there would be ‘no hope’ for her career.
Minogue stated that while she was ‘wildly inspired’ creatively, she was also ‘at a point in my life where I know it’s not forever’.
‘I just want to maximize this brilliant wave. If you’re not out paddling when that wave comes, you have no hope,” she added.
Kylie Minogue stated that she refused to ‘snooze’ amid her current ‘wave’ of success during an interview with Billboard; seen earlier this month
The performer won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Dance Recording last month, and her Las Vegas residency, titled More Than Just a Residency, has become a favorite among Sin City visitors.
Minogue, who described her recent success in the US as ‘a great gain for longevity’, then commented on how American listeners had lost and lost interest in her over the years.
“I’ve had this kind of back and forth with America. I was the “Loco-Motion” girl for a long time, then I was the “la-la-la” girl, and now I’m “Padam,” she noted.
She then added that with the advent of ‘streaming, the algorithms will take you to discover more of my music.’
The Can’t Get You Outta My Head singer then told Billboard that she taught herself various production tools during the COVID-19 lockdown.
The performer admitted that she found the experience of taking control in the studio particularly ‘liberating’.
She said: ‘I’ve had a lot of uncomfortable moments (in the studio). No one would have known because I just pretended to go through with it. But having my own microphone and doing it on my own time? It is fantastic. I could go on for hours.’
Minogue went on to express that she had ‘matured’ both as an individual and as a performer, which she described as ‘so enjoyable’.
The performer – who recently duetted with Madonna – told the outlet that while she was happy with the warm reception to her new projects, she didn’t want to end up in a position where there would be ‘no hope’ for her career; seen earlier this month
The performer won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Dance Recording last month, and her Las Vegas residency, titled More Than Just a Residency, has become a favorite among visitors to Sin City; seen in 2000
Describing her recent success in the US as ‘a great gain for longevity’, Minogue then commented on how American listeners had lost interest in her over the years; seen in 1990
The performer admitted that she found the experience of taking control in the studio particularly ‘liberating’; seen in 2023
The hitmaker also noted that her creative process is ‘becoming more vacuum sealed’ as she spent more time in the studio.
The love at first sight singer then stated that she had learned to love her singing voice after years of doubting her abilities.
‘To accept that I don’t have that big of a voice, but to be proud that I have my voice and really own it? It has again taken a long time, she said.
Minogue added: ‘But I can adapt and be many voices, like my (visual) presentation I’m chameleon-like. This is who I am.’