Disco (Kylie Minogue album)

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Disco
Kylie Minogue - Disco.png
Studio album by
Kylie Minogue
Released6 November 2020 (2020-11-06)
Recorded2019–2020
Studio
  • Bedfordshire, UK (Sky's Home Studio)
  • Brighton, UK (Biffco Studios)
  • Hastings, UK (360 Mastering)
  • London, UK (Fluff!, Infinite Disco, Metropolis Studios, Phrased Differently, SARM Studios, Spark Studio)
  • Los Angeles, California (Pulse Music)
  • Turku, Finland (Rabbit Villa)
Genre
Length41:29
Label
Producer
Kylie Minogue chronology
Step Back in Time: The Definitive Collection
(2019)
Disco
(2020)
Singles from Disco
  1. "Say Something"
    Released: 23 July 2020
  2. "Magic"
    Released: 24 September 2020
  3. "Real Groove"
    Released: 31 December 2020

Disco is the fifteenth studio album by Australian singer Kylie Minogue. It was released on 6 November 2020 by Darenote and BMG Rights Management. Following the completion of the Golden Tour and her performance at the Glastonbury Festival in 2019, Minogue sought to create a disco-influenced record and enlisted producers such as Sky Adams, Teemu Brunila and Biff Stannard. The album was predominantly recorded at the singer's home studio during the COVID-19 pandemic, with Minogue gaining engineering credits for vocals and synths.

Disco received positive reviews from music critics, many of whom praised its fusion of retro and modern production and cohesiveness. The album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart, selling 54,905 units becoming the second biggest opening week of the year. Minogue also became the first female artist to have a number-one album in five consecutive decades in the country. The album was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) one month after its release for sales of 100,000 units. It also reached the summit in her native Australia, and top 10 positions in eight countries including Austria, France, Germany, Spain and New Zealand.

"Say Something" was released as the lead single from Disco on 23 July 2020. The song was a critical success and peaked at number 56 on the UK Singles Chart. The second single, "Magic", was released on 24 September and peaked at number 53 on the UK Singles Chart. A promotional song, "I Love It", was released on 23 October, while "Real Groove" was announced as the third single on 5 December. On 31 December 2020, a remixed version of "Real Groove" with English singer Dua Lipa, subtitled "Studio 2054 Remix", was released onto digital platforms. In order to promote the album, Minogue took part in interviews and television performances, appeared in several magazines, and livestreamed a concert, Infinite Disco.

Background[]

Kylie Minogue released her fourteenth studio album, Golden in April 2018. The album was a country pop and dance-pop record and was commercially successful, debuting at number one in both the United Kingdom and Australia.[1][2] It was later certified gold in the former by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI).[3] Minogue then released her fourth major greatest hits album, Step Back in Time: The Definitive Collection in June 2019, which also debuted at number one in the United Kingdom and Australia.[4][5] Following her performance at Glastonbury Festival in the same year, the most watched in its history,[6] she stated that she would like to create a "pop-disco album" and return to recording new material.[7][8]

Production on Disco subsequently began in autumn 2019.[9] As with Golden, Minogue did not have a concept solidified when beginning work on the album.[10] However, she felt inspired musically following the Golden Tour (2018–19), which had a section influenced by Studio 54 in its setlist.[10] Discussions with her A&R took place and, following her first few studio sessions, Minogue felt her creative direction was "heading straight back to the dance floor" with a disco-influenced album.[10]

Work continued on the record during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, with Minogue using her home studio to record throughout lockdown.[11] Alistair Norbury, president of Minogue's record label BMG, announced to industry title Music Week that the singer was learning to record and engineer her own vocals using Logic Pro to complete Disco.[12] Ninety percent of the album was created via her home studio, with Minogue honing the album's theme of escapism during lockdown restrictions.[13] Each track on Disco was co-written by Minogue, notably similar to Impossible Princess (1997) and Golden,[14] but was the first time she had engineered her own work.[15]

In April 2021, Minogue revealed that she was planning a re-release of Disco for later that year.[16]

Singles[]

"Say Something" was released as the lead single from the album. It premiered on 23 July at 08:30 BST on BBC Radio 2 during The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show.[17] The song was acclaimed by music critics[18] and peaked at number 56 on the UK Singles Chart.[19] It also reached number nine on the UK Singles Downloads and Sales charts.[20][21] In the United States, it debuted at number three on Billboard's Dance/Electronic Digital Song Sales.[22] The music video for the song was directed by Sophie Muller[23] and filmed at the Black Island Studios in London, England, while adhering to social distancing measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It depicts the singer travelling through the universe mounted upon a golden horse sculpture, shooting lasers from her hands and flying on a hovercraft.[24][25]

"Magic" debuted on The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show on 24 September[26] and was released onto music services at 8am BST the same day, receiving positive reactions from music critics.[27][28] The song was released as a single edit,[29] while the album cut alongside "Say Something" appeared with the track on streaming services.[30][31] It peaked at number 53 on the UK Singles Chart and number 2 on the Scottish Singles Chart.[32] Also directed by Muller, the music video for "Magic" was filmed at Fabric, a nightclub in Farringdon, London.[33] It features Minogue dressed as a druid with a magic staff dancing in the club alongside several dancers and then sitting on a throne wearing a gold medallion dress reminiscent of Cleopatra. According to Minogue, although Fabric was closed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, she wanted "to give fans a moment of escapism to celebrate on a fantasy dance floor."[34]

"I Love It" was released as a promotional single on 23 October 2020.[35] On digital music platforms the track was released as an EP that also featured "Magic" and "Say Something".[36][37] Two remixes of "Magic" were also included.[36][37]

"Real Groove" was confirmed by Minogue on BBC Radio 2 as the third single on 5 December 2020.[38][39] The "Studio 2054 Remix" of the song featuring Dua Lipa was released to digital platforms on 31 December 2020.[40][41] The remix featured updated production, handled by Lipa's musical director William Bowerman, as well as an extended instrumental section in the middle of the song.[42]

"Dance Floor Darling" was added to BBC Radio 2's new music playlist for radio play from 24 April 2021.[43] This release to radio was coupled with Twitter promotion from Minogue, who thanked BBC Radio 2 for adding the song to their playlist.[44] The Official Charts Company later referred to the song as a single, though no explicit confirmation from Minogue was ever given.[45] In addition to Twitter promotion, the "Infinite Disco" performance of the song was re-aired as part of "Can't Cancel Pride" on 4 June 2021.[46] The song was further promoted in August 2021, with Minogue posting video clips containing the song to her social media accounts.[47]

Promotion[]

Minogue and BMG publicised Disco with an extensive marketing campaign ahead of and during the album's launch.[48] On 9 August 2020, Minogue did a promotional appearance on The Sound.[49] On 17 September, she performed "Say Something" remotely on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[50] On 16 October, she was interviewed on UOL and Papel Pop on the next day.[51] On 29 October, Minogue was interviewed on 7.30.[52] On 1 November, she returned to The Sound performing "Say Something".[53] On 2 November, she was interviewed by Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1.[54] To mark the release of the album, Minogue appeared on Sunrise, The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show, Good Morning America and The Graham Norton Show to discuss the album and perform songs on 6 November.[55][56][57][58] The next day, she livestreamed a special concert, 'Infinite Disco', featuring songs from the album as well as previously released songs spanning her career,[59] the latter reworked by Minogue's longtime contributors Richard Stannard and Steve Anderson.[60] The performance took place on 7 November 2020[59][61] and was co-directed by Rob Sinclair and Kate Moross,[60] with the numbers choreographed by Ashley Wallen.[60] A special also aired on Rage that same day.[62] On 10 November she gave an interview to Magic Radio's Breakfast Show, Reuters and made an appearance on The One Show.[63] On 11 November Minogue was interviewed on The Morning Show, ET Canada and performed "Magic" on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.[64][65][66] The next day, she appeared on BBC Breakfast and This Morning.[67][68] She was interviewed on Sunday Brunch on 15 November and on Lorraine on 17 November.[69][70] On 19 November she appeared on El Hormiguero and on Skavlan the next day.[71][72] On 27 November Minogue performed "Real Groove" and "Electricity" with Dua Lipa on her livestream concert Studio 2054.[73] On 1 December she was interviewed on Quotidien.[74] On 5 December Minogue was interviewed on Graham Norton's Saturday Morning Show on BBC Radio 2 and performed "Real Groove" on The Jonathan Ross Show.[38][39] She gave an interview to Les Enfants de la télé on 13 December.[75] On 25 December, Minogue appeared on Lorraine and smoothfm.[76][77] She gave an interview to Today on 29 December. On 31 December, she livestreamed 'Infinite Disco' again and performed "Magic" on NBC's New Year's Eve and New Year's Eve Live.[78]

Critical reception[]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.2/10[80]
Metacritic72/100[81]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic5/5 stars[82]
Clash8/10[83]
DIY3.5/5 stars[84]
The Guardian5/5 stars[85]
The Independent4/5 stars[86]
NME4/5 stars[87]
Pitchfork5.6/10[88]
Rolling Stone3.5/5 stars[89]
Slant Magazine3.5/5 stars[90]
The Times4/5 stars[91]

Disco received positive reviews from music critics.[92] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 72 based on 16 reviews, indicating "generally favourable reviews".[81]

In a positive review for NME, Nick Levine described the album as "a consistently uplifting set that feels like Minogue's best album since 2010's Aphrodite [...] Disco shimmers with a warm glittery glow that's just irresistible."[87] Robin Murray of music title Clash called Disco "sheer escapism from start to finish, an exit point from the darkness that has fallen over 2020", while also complimenting the album's fusion of vintage and modern styles.[83]

Describing the album as "pure fantasia", Will Hodgkinson of The Times said: "the best thing about Disco, coming at a time when hopefulness has been at a premium, is how optimistic it sounds."[91] Writing in The Guardian, Michael Cragg described Disco as being "saturated in Kylie's supernatural mix of high camp and total sincerity", while also praising the album for its "consistent sonic palette".[85] Elisa Bray of i News called the album "pure euphoria", praising the its production while describing its sound as "unabashedly retro [...] with a thoroughly modern sheen".[93] Bray described "Miss a Thing" as being reminiscent of the works of Moloko and Daft Punk, with "Last Chance" redolent of Abba's "Voulez-Vous" (1979).[93]

Neil Z. Yeung of AllMusic praised the album for reaching the same "highs" as her albums from the early 2000s and considered it a return to form following Golden.[82] Arts critic, Ben Neutze, writing for The Guardian on 17 November 2020, gave Disco a 4-out-of-5-star rating and commented: "It's a fitting album to rack up this milestone: a collection of songs exemplifying the cathartic joy that's been central to Kylie's brand since the beginning. It's music that makes you want to dance, and while the dance floors where many of her fans gather are currently off limits, it doesn't feel like a tease. Instead, it's a gift."[94]

Year-end lists[]

Critics' rankings for Disco
Publication Accolade Rank Ref.
Albumism The 100 Best Albums of 2020 7
AllMusic Best of 2020 N/A
Billboard The 10 Best Dance Albums of 2020 9
British GQ Best Albums of 2020 6
The Daily Telegraph The Best Albums of 2020 5
Gaffa The 20 Best Foreign Albums of 2020 18
Glamour The 30 Best Albums of 2020 N/A
The Guardian The 50 Best Albums of 2020 42
Houston Chronicle Best Albums of 2020 4
Idolator Top 70 Best Pop Albums of 2020
4
musicOMH musicOMH's Top 50 Albums of 2020
49
NME The 25 Best Australian Albums of 2020
18
The Quietus Quietus Albums of the Year 2020
36
Slant Magazine The 50 Best Albums of 2020 46
Variety The Best Albums of 2020
7
Wonderland The Best Albums of 2020 N/A

Awards[]

Award nominations for Disco
Ceremony Award Result Ref.
Billboard Music Awards 2021 Top Dance/Electronic Album Nominated [111]

Commercial performance[]

On 21 August 2020, the head of BMG, Alistair Norbury, gave an interview with Music Week about the marketing campaign for Disco. According to Norbury, Disco was outperforming her previous studio album Golden when compared with the same stage in its album campaign. This was according to key metrics such as streaming, Amazon pre-orders, D2C pre-orders and video views.[112]

In the UK, the album debuted at number one on the Official Albums Chart on November 13, 2020, with 54,905 chart sales – displacing Lady Gaga's Chromatica as biggest opening week release of 2020 so far.[113][114] The feat was later broken by AC/DC's Power Up, which sold 62,000 in its first week.[115] Disco debuted 5,000 units ahead of its closest competitor, Confetti by Little Mix, in what several outlets deemed to be a hotly contested chart battle.[113][116] Disco became Minogue's eighth number one album in the UK and in the process, Minogue broke the record as the first female artist to earn a number one album in five consecutive decades, following Kylie (1988), Enjoy Yourself (1989), Greatest Hits (1992), Fever (2001), Aphrodite (2010), Golden (2018) and Step Back In Time: The Definitive Collection (2019).[117] The album was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on 20 November 2020 and upgraded to Gold on 18 December 2020.

In Australia, Disco debuted at number one becoming her 7th chart topping on the ARIA Charts,[118] whilst in New Zealand, the album opened at number 9 on their regional chart, Minogue's first top-ten entry since Fever in 2001.[119]

In the United States, Disco debuted at number 26 on the Billboard 200 with 19,000 album-equivalent units, 15,000 of which were pure sales, becoming her third highest-charting album in the country after Fever in 2002 and Aphrodite in 2010.[120][121] It also debuted at number 2 on the Billboard Top Albums Sales chart[122][123] and atop the Dance/Electronic Albums chart, making it her first number-one on the chart.[124]

Track listing[]

Disco standard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Magic"
PhD4:10
2."Miss a Thing"
  • Minogue
  • Brunila
  • Nico Stadi
  • Ally Ahern
  • Brunila
  • Stadi
3:56
3."Real Groove"
  • Minogue
  • Brunila
  • Stadi
  • Alida Gaprestad
  • Brunila
  • Stadi
3:15
4."Monday Blues"
Adams3:09
5."Supernova"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Cottone
Adams3:17
6."Say Something"
  • Green
  • Stannard
  • Duck Blackwell[a]
  • Minogue[b]
3:32
7."Last Chance"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Cottone
Adams3:03
8."I Love It"
  • Minogue
  • Stannard
  • Blackwell
  • Stannard
  • Blackwell
  • Minogue[b]
3:50
9."Where Does the DJ Go?"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Shah
  • Kiris Houston
  • Adams
  • Houston
3:01
10."Dance Floor Darling"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Cottone
  • Campbell
Adams3:12
11."Unstoppable"
Miller3:34
12."Celebrate You"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Shah
  • Cottone
Adams3:41
Total length:41:29
Disco deluxe edition bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
13."Till You Love Somebody"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Brunila
  • Campbell
  • Adams
  • Campbell
3:02
14."Fine Wine"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Cottone
Adams2:44
15."Hey Lonely"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Cottone
Adams3:28
16."Spotlight"
  • Minogue
  • Adams
  • Shah
  • Houston
  • Adams
  • Houston
2:44
Total length:53:25
Disco Japanese release bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
17."Say Something" (F9 remix)
  • Minogue
  • Green
  • Howes
  • Stannard
  • Green
  • Stannard
  • Blackwell[a]
  • F9[c]
3:38
18."Say Something" (Syn Cole remix)
  • Minogue
  • Green
  • Howes
  • Stannard
3:00
Total length:60:26
Disco digital super deluxe edition bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
17."Say Something" (Basement Jaxx remix)
  • Minogue
  • Green
  • Howes
  • Stannard
  • Green
  • Stannard
  • Blackwell[a]
  • Basement Jaxx[c]
5:30
18."Say Something" (Syn Cole remix)
  • Minogue
  • Green
  • Howes
  • Stannard
  • Green
  • Stannard
  • Blackwell[a]
  • Syn Cole[c]
3:00
19."Magic" (Purple Disco Machine remix)
  • Minogue
  • Brunila
  • Davidsen
  • Wallevik
  • Buzz
  • PhD
  • Purple Disco Machine [c]
3:36
20."Magic" (Nick Reach Up remix)
  • Minogue
  • Brunila
  • Davidsen
  • Wallevik
  • Buzz
  • PhD
  • Nick Reach Up [c]
3:11
Total length:68:42

Notes[]

  • ^a signifies an additional producer.
  • ^b signifies a vocal producer.
  • ^c signifies a remixer.

Personnel[]

Credits taken from Tidal.[125]

Musicians[]

  • Kylie Minogue – lead vocals (all tracks), backing vocals (tracks 1, 6, 11), synthesizer (track 5)
  • Felicity Adams – backing vocals (tracks 4, 9, 16)
  • Sky Adams – backing vocals (tracks 4–5, 9, 12, 16), guitar (tracks 4–5, 7, 9–10, 12, 14–15), synthesizer (tracks 4–5, 7, 9–10, 12–16), drums (tracks 4–5, 7, 9–10, 12–13, 16), drum programming (tracks 4, 7, 10, 12), programming (tracks 4–5, 7, 9–10, 12, 15), keyboards (tracks 13–15), bass (track 15)
  • Adetoun Anibi – backing vocals (track 6)
  • Fiona Bevan – backing vocals (track 11)
  • Duck Blackwell – keyboards (track 6, 8), bass (track 8), drums (track 8), percussion (track 8), programming (track 8)
  • Teemu Brunila – guitar (tracks 2–3), drum programming (tracks 2–3), keyboards (track 13)
  • Cherokee Campbell – synthesizer (track 5)
  • Linslee Campbell – bass (tracks 4, 7, 12–15), guitar (track 13)
  • Maegan Cottone – backing vocals (tracks 4, 7, 10, 12, 14–15)
  • Daniel Davidsen – guitar (track 1), drum programming (track 1)
  • Jon Green – backing vocals (track 6), keyboards (track 6)
  • Kiris Houston – bass (tracks 9, 16), guitar (track 9), strings (track 9), synthesizer (track 9), backing vocals (track 16), keyboards (track 16), synthesizer (track 16)
  • Ash Howes – programming (track 6)
  • Louis Lion – programming (track 6)
  • Troy Miller – backing vocals (track 11), bass guitar (track 11), clavinet (track 11), guitar (track 11), percussion (track 11), drums (track 11), programming (track 11), Rhodes piano (track 11), synthesizer (track 11)
  • PhD – programming (track 1)
  • Johny Saarde – drum programming (track 1)
  • Danny Shah – backing vocals (tracks 12, 16)
  • Nico Stadi – guitar (tracks 2–3), bass (tracks 2–3), keyboards (tracks 2–3), strings (tracks 2–3), string arranger (tracks 2–3), drum programming (tracks 2–3)
  • Biff Stannard – backing vocals (track 6), keyboards (track 6), drums (track 8)
  • Thomas Totten – guitar (tracks 4, 10, 14–15)
  • Peter Wallevik – rhythm guitar (track 1), keyboards (track 1), drum programming (track 1)

Technical[]

  • Kylie Minogue – vocal engineer (all tracks excluding 1 & 6)
  • Sky Adams – engineer (tracks 4–5, 7, 9–10, 13–16)
  • Dick Beetham – engineer (tracks 1–15)
  • Duck Blackwell – engineer (track 8)
  • PhD – engineer (track 1)
  • Teemu Brunila – engineer (tracks 2–3)
  • Daniel Davidsen – engineer (track 1)
  • Guy Massey – engineer (tracks 4, 7, 9–15)
  • Troy Miller – engineer (track 11)
  • Alex Robinson – engineer (track 1)
  • Nico Stadi – engineer (tracks 2–3)
  • Biff Stannard – engineer (track 8)
  • Peter Wallevik – engineer (track 1)

Recording studios[]

  • 360 Mastering; Hastings, UK (all songs)
  • Biffco Studios; Brighton (track 6, 8)
  • Fluff!; London, UK (4)
  • Infinite Disco; London, UK (track 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13–15)
  • Metropolis Studios; London, UK (track 1)
  • Phrased Differently; London, UK (track 9, 12, 16)
  • Pulse Music; Los Angeles, California (track 2, 3)
  • Rabbit Villa; Turku, Finland (track 2, 3, 13)
  • SARM Studios; London, UK (track 14, 15)
  • Spark Studio; London, UK (track 11)
  • Sky's Home Studio; Bedfordshire, UK (track 4, 5, 7, 10, 13)

Charts[]

Certifications[]

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Japan 2,980[158]
United Kingdom (BPI)[160] Gold 121,715[159]

Release history[]

Release dates and formats for Disco
Region Date Format Editions Label Ref.
Various 6 November 2020
  • Standard
  • deluxe
[161]
12 November 2020 Digital download Super deluxe [161]
Japan 25 November 2020 CD Japanese edition [162]
Brazil 5 December 2020 Standard [163]

See also[]

References[]

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