Heart Beats: The Summer of Kylie Minogue and “Padam Padam"
Just ten days later, Kylie celebrated her 55th birthday, and took to her social media to thank her followers for the messages, “the ‘Padam’ reaction and the love; it’s been an incredible week,” Kylie said. Incredible indeed, the song went viral on Instagram, and on Tik Tok, #padampadam would eventually garner 10 million hits in early June. This is the first of two significant moments, for it confirmed the speedy reach, and the immense impact, of “Padam Padam” in a relatively short amount of time.
The video montage, designed to heighten the hype, met its goal; when Kylie’s name was announced and she ascended on the stage-lift, the audience erupted in excitement, easily heard in the following video:
For those not entirely familiar with Kylie, easily one of the most successful singers of the last 40 years, “Padam Padam” hopefully serves as the gateway single to discovering her previous, now-legendary, work in pop (the essential-to-own Light Years and Fever albums), dance (the dazzling 2020 album, Disco, which helped sustain many through a dark pandemic), indie-pop (1997’s experimental Impossible Princess), even torch/jazz (“Stay This Way”; “If You Don’t Love Me”; “Try Your Wings”; 2012’s The Abbey Road Sessions album), and that’s just scratching the surface as a recording artist. As a live-concert performer, they don’t call her “the Showgirl” for nothing (two tours entitled, Showgirl [2005, 2006]; XTour2008; Aphrodite Les Folies [2011] are vital viewing). Fittingly, her Vegas residency will solidify her as the consummate showgirl once again.
As summer 2023 comes to a close, it was one full of bright, sunny moments for Kylie Minogue, with “Padam Padam” representing the start to yet another era in her phenomenal career, one that shows no signs of going dim or, to keep with the heart theme, flatlining. The track also signifies a renewed faith in the power of music to bring people together for a very catchy common good. (Note: As this article is being finalized, Kylie has announced the second single, “Tension” will be released on August 31, 2023.)
Better with Age: Kylie Minogue Reimagines “Hand On Your Heart”
In 2012, to commemorate her 25th anniversary in the music business, Kylie Minogue released The Abbey Road Sessions, a 16-track album of remixes, not the expected dance remixes of her pop songs, but rather ones that were reimagined and recorded with her Aphrodite touring band and a full orchestra at London’s legendary Abbey Road Studios. Let’s focus on one track in particular, “Hand On Your Heart,” originally appeared on her 1989 album, Enjoy Yourself. Written by Stock, Aitken & Waterman (S.A.W.), the Ford, Carnegie & Rockefeller of “hit factory” Brit-pop music of the ‘80s, the song initially sounded sunny and matter of fact, a carefree account of its main character asking her guy to “Put your hand on your heart and tell me/that we’re through.”
The Abbey Road Sessions’ version dons a mature feel. It embraces a soothing arrangement, complete with a delicate sweeping brush beat and mesmerizing acoustic-guitar sequence. It sounds as if the main character is retelling the same account, but from a different point of view and place in her life. The once nonchalant teenager is now a more serious, vulnerable woman, confident that even if this guy is not around, she’ll survive. Kylie’s delivery as a balladeer is sweet and sensitive with a somber lower register, especially at the resounding lyric: “that we’re through.”
By offering a quieter version of the originally upbeat, head-in-the-clouds track, it allows the S.A.W. lyrics to be honored, proving that although seemingly factory-like, pumping out shiny product off the line, their operation did in fact produce enduring gems. The Sessions also applies a similar treatment toward two other S.A.W. songs: the unrequited infatuation with a fantasy lover on “I Should Be So Lucky”; the devoted desperation on “Never Too Late.” The release is yet another example that disproves the many who thought Kylie was an Edsel of the ‘80s, confirming instead that after all these decades she’s always been a Bentley of pop.