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TRIBUTE: 50 Greatest Live Albums of All Time: Kylie Minogue’s ‘Intimate and Live’ (1998)

May 13, 2018 / Quentin Harrison

 

Minogue_Kylie_IntimateAndLive_MainImage.jpg

 

KYLIE MINOGUE | Intimate and Live

BMG/Mushroom/Warner Vision (1998)

Selected by Quentin Harrison

 

Australian songbird Kylie Minogue's first live album—Intimate and Live—was an aural time capsule for her fifth tour of the same name. Prior to this concert, Minogue's past live shows had stopped at charming and competent. The intention with the “Intimate and Live” performances was to put the emphasis on Minogue as a live vocalist and performer—she exceeded any and all expectations.

 

The ambitious double-album companion became a living record of history, capturing an engaged and empowered Minogue at a career crossroads. At the time, she had just come off of her most artistically enterprising stretch of albums—Kylie Minogue (1994) and Impossible Princess (1997)—for the deConstruction and Mushroom labels.

 

A considerable portion of the material present on Intimate and Live is collected from these two sets, but Minogue makes room for her earlier Stock-Aitken-Waterman hits too. All of the music is vividly reimagined in this live environment—courtesy of the concert's music director Steve Anderson, also one-half of Brothers and Rhythm—in a wealth of genre flavors from punk to disco.

 

Of course, all of this lands successfully due to Minogue's own confidence as a singer; she had grown by leaps and bounds in that part of her craft. Intimate and Live caps off Minogue's rewarding deConstruction epoch on a high and points to lessons learned and later applied in the next phase of an already incredible recording journey.

(Source: Tribute)

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I did not buy this album until a few years after its release and it was the album that sold Kylie as a competent live singer to me. I am fully aware Kylie is not the strongest singer in the world of pop but she is far greater than many give her credit for.
  • 4 years later...
I think Intimate and Live was a real turning point for Kylie on many levels and it probably did help people take more notice of her as a live performer.
  • 2 months later...

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