The Post

Kylie’s country twang brings Golden results

- MARK KENNEDY

It was bound to happen eventually. Don’t even pretend to be surprised: Kylie Minogue, the pop goddess from Australia, has gone country. Hey, if Justin Timberlake and Steven Tyler can do it, why not the woman behind Locomotion?

Minogue hasn’t completely ditched her pop-dance roots on Golden, her 14th studio album, but it has a distinct twang. Not too much, not too little. Country diehards might object, but the rest of us will be simultaneo­usly throwing our arms into the air while line dancing.

Golden emerged after Minogue’s first trip to Nashville, Tennessee, last year.

It must have made a big impact: Lead single Dancing is positively Dolly Parton-ish, and Minogue goes on to sing about rodeos, drinking-too-much mates and even a muscle car (Shelby ‘68).

Minogue has a hand in writing every song and leaned on two songwriter­s who share her boundary-crossing – Steve McEwan, who has written for James Arthur and Kenny Chesney, and Amy Wadge, who has worked with Ed Sheeran and James Blunt.

The lyrics fit a woman who turns 50 this year – regret, bad love, hope and yearning.

She hopes she won’t make the same mistakes in Stop Me from Falling and tries to move on in Radio On, where ‘‘I roll the windows down and I just fade you out’’.

There’s a whiff of mortality on Dancing when Minogue, a cancer survivor, sings about ‘‘when the final curtain falls’’ and concludes, ‘‘When I go out/ I wanna go dancing.’’ Sincerely Yours has more than a hint of Taylor Swift, while fiddles and banjos fill up A Lifetime to Repair – did you ever think you’d hear those instrument­s on a Kylie Minogue record? Raining Glitter is what happens when fingerpick­ing and disco collide; there is really no way it should work, but it does.

Really the only time Minogue should have reined it in was when she embellishe­s the title track with the theme song from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly .Wegotit– you’re country now.

Well, not always. Live a Little and Sincerely Yours are pure pop tunes that could easily have appeared on Minogue’s other albums.

And her only duet – with English singer Jack Savoretti on Music’s Too Sad Without You, which closes the album – is pretty, but an odd choice. No one from Nashville was available?

Still, there’s no denying Minogue’s overall skill, as usual. She’s earned the right to dabble in anything she wants, and she does it very well here. We just need to find a way to get glitter out of our cowboy boots.

 ?? GETTY ?? Kylie Minogue sings about regret, bad love, hope and yearning.
GETTY Kylie Minogue sings about regret, bad love, hope and yearning.

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