Kylie Minogue is back on tour. And she gears up for life on the road by carefully packing a few home comforts. She’s taking her own bed linen this time, and a few DVDs, although she does like to make the most of any peace and quiet if she can get it. 

Being on tour creates a “bubble“, she admits, insulating her and the rest of the crew from the outside world. The build-up can be a confusing time, because she has one foot in her real life, the other in tour-mode.

“It’s a bit odd, but when we’re fully on the road, you can’t really think about anything else, and the crew becomes family. If someone needs a hand or is having an off day, everyone else just rallies around to pick up the slack and helps out where they can. It’s an incredible thing.“

The forthcoming tour will be the first time she’s taken songs from Kiss Me Once, the album she released in March this year, out on the road. 

There’ll be six songs from Kiss Me Once, a further 18 from the remainder of her career, including a medley or two (“I do love a medley“), a couple of unexpected covers and, perhaps most exciting for pop fans, a full section of her ‘80s hits.

“We’ve got access to the actual PWL sounds,“ Kylie reveals, referring to – for those not up on their ‘80s pop –Pete Waterman Ltd, home to artists in the Stock, Aitken and Waterman songwriting and production stable.

Kylie was among their first breakthrough names, followed by the likes of Rick Astley, Jason Donovan, Sinitta, Bananarama and 2 Unlimited. During the late-’80s and early-’90s, the charts were dominated by PWL acts, with the claim made on Waterman’s website that he’s Britain’s most successful producer-songwriter ever, with worldwide single sales of 500 million.

“We’ve worked closely with them to get the recordings, and it’s just brilliant,“ says Kylie. “You’re going to hear sounds that you haven’t heard since the ‘80s. They’re not all in the same key, though,“ she adds, noting that she can’t quite hit the high notes of I Should Be So Lucky any more.

“Better The Devil You Know comes down a semitone, too. If I was doing it once, it’d be fine, but night after night, it’s a lot of strain to get up there. To almost all ears, they will sound the same.“
It’s interesting to see her fully embracing her past. During the ‘90s, she went to great lengths to distance herself from the created image of soap star-turned-pop puppet. There was, of course, the duet with Nick Cave, Where The Wild Roses Grow, taken from his 1996 album Murder Ballads. It’s often cited among Kylie’s career-best moments, and gave her a much-needed credibility boost with ’serious’ music fans who may have written her off beforehand.

 

Music video by Kylie Minogue performing Better The Devil You Know. (C) 1990 Mushroom Records, a unit of Warner Bros. Records

 


The album that followed that unlikely about-face, Impossible Princess, further cemented her position as a versatile artist, and saw collaborations with the likes of Manic Street Preachers’ James Dean Bradfield, and dabbled with techno, indie and jazz. There was also the subject matter, which is among the most personal the famously secretive singer has written.

She promises the tour will feature songs from every era of her career, although it’s highly likely most will be post-2000, the year she returned and completely reinvented herself once again, with her Light Years album and Spinning Around single.

She says Fever, her eighth studio album released in 2001 – shortly after her worldwide hit single Can’t Get You Out Of My Head – was when she really felt she’d hit her stride, and began to feel properly confident.

“It takes time,“ Kylie reflects. “I still worry about a lot of things, and my anxiety levels can go through the roof, especially on tour, although I don’t think they’re as bad as they used to be. I trust my team, and new people are brought in because they bring something fresh and a new energy.

“Some things feel different this time around, with this tour,“ she adds. “It’s hard to put my finger on what, but there is a different energy. I’ve got I-don’t-know-how-many tours under my belt now, but the excitement doesn’t diminish at all.“

Even after all these years, she says the hardest thing about touring is adjusting to life afterwards.
“It can be tough,“ she says, “and I believe there’s a recognised condition of post-tour depression. When you’ve been away on a tour like this, or any sort of tour where your adrenalin is going every day, it can happen.

Whenever I get off tour, I make sure I see all my friends to find out what they’ve been doing. It’s like, ’Enough about me, what have you been doing?’ It’s very easy to get out of the loop, so it’s great catching up.“

Kylie is at The O2,  Peninsula Square, SE10, on September 29, 30 and October 1. Details: 020 8463 2000, www.theo2.co.uk