Kylie performs during
her Anti Tour, March 2012. Photo:
Jason South
Dino Scatena, The Age, reports
It's been 25 years since Kylie Minogue made her first appearance
on the music charts and, rocky start aside, set a course for global stardom.
A quarter of a century ago, a sequence of symbiotic events altered the fabric of Australian popular culture and set in motion the transformation of a 19-year-old soap actor from Melbourne into an international pop icon.
A quarter of a century ago, a sequence of symbiotic events altered the fabric of Australian popular culture and set in motion the transformation of a 19-year-old soap actor from Melbourne into an international pop icon.
It was 25 years ago this week that the name Kylie Minogue appeared
on the music charts for the first time. The teenager's dinky electro-dance
remake of 1960s classic The
Loco-Motion made its debut at No.10 on the Australian Music Report
(pre-ARIA charts) and within two weeks nabbed the top spot, staying there for
seven weeks and becoming the biggest-selling single by an Australian artist in
the 1980s.
Who could have imagined this tiny, unsophisticated star of Neighbours, with the bad
'80s perm and questionable vocal ability, would go on to become Australia's
single most successful entertainer and a world-renowned style idol?
It was no great surprise to Amanda Pelman, the woman who guided the launch of Minogue's music career. ''I don't think she was ever professionally naive,'' says Pelman, who signed Minogue to Mushroom Records.
It was no great surprise to Amanda Pelman, the woman who guided the launch of Minogue's music career. ''I don't think she was ever professionally naive,'' says Pelman, who signed Minogue to Mushroom Records.
''She always knew where she wanted to end up. She had a total
vision. I'm not sure she knew how she was going to get there but she figured it
out.''
Pelman was tossed a demo cassette of Minogue singing The Loco-Motion by
Mushroom boss Michael Gudinski after every other label in the country had
passed on the chance to sign her.
Pelman knew nothing of Minogue's work on Neighbours or the fan base
it brought her. The idea of a TV star releasing a successful record was
virtually unheard of at the time, but not entirely unique - actor Mark Holden
had a string of minor hits in the late 1970s while starring on The Young Doctors.
Pelman decided to do some research on Minogue. She called Jan
Russ, the casting director from Neighbours.
''And she was falling over backwards with praise,'' Pelman says. ''She said,
'Oh look, she's much more talented than her sister [Dannii Minogue, star of Young Talent Time].'''
Pelman convinced Gudinski to sign her. Gudinski had already
received some encouraging support from his tween niece and nephew in Britain,
where Neighbours
was quickly becoming a phenomenon. ''I played them the song and told them it
was Kylie from Neighbours,''
Gudinski says. ''They said, 'There's no Kylie in Neighbours.' So I phoned Australia that night
to find out the name of her character and the next morning I told them, 'It's
Charlene,' and they went absolutely nuts: 'We love Charlene - she's our
favourite!'''
In Australia, Minogue's chart debut was the culmination of a month
of unprecedented media saturation focusing on the soap starlet.
On July 1, 1987, her character, Charlene, married her boyfriend,
Scott, played by Minogue's real-life beau, Jason Donovan. It was the
highest-rating episode ever of a local soap and landed the couple on the cover
of Time magazine
Australia. The following day, a shopping centre appearance in Sydney caused One
Direction-esque mass hysteria. On July 12, the eve of her single release,
Minogue was given the honour of hosting the final weekly episode of the ABC's
long-running Countdown
music show. A week later, she and Donovan were presenters at the last Countdown
Music Awards. It was at the event's after party that Minogue met her future
mentor and lover, INXS singer Michael Hutchence.
At first, Minogue's foray into music was met with widespread
derision from critics, the music establishment, her co-stars on Neighbours (many of whom
would go on to release singles of their own) and even employees of her record
label. ''There were people at the time saying, 'This is the end of Mushroom.
How can you be doing this?''' Gudinski says. ''It didn't faze me.''
The negativity quickly turned into revolt. Radio stations
proclaimed themselves Kylie-free zones; the media labelled her ''the Singing
Budgie''; one backyard entrepreneur in Melbourne turned a tidy profit printing
''I Hate Kylie'' T-shirts.
''I got really pissed off at times where people were trying to put
her down and call her a one-hit wonder. It was just ridiculous,'' says Ian
''Molly'' Meldrum, the former Countdown
guru and one of Minogue's most vocal supporters from the outset.
''It was hurtful for her, people knocking her all the time. But
she had such a strong, devoted fan base already in Australia that [she] just
got bigger and bigger, so it didn't matter what those people said.''
With a massive hit single on her hands but no manager, Minogue was
in need of someone to look after her affairs. Gudinski considered taking the
job but Pelman talked him out of it.
''Michael had said to me, 'Maybe we should do a management company
and manage her,' and I reminded him that he had vowed to his wife, Sue, that he
was never going to manage anyone ever again,'' Pelman says.
So Terry Blamey, who was running his Pace Entertainment
talent-booking agency out of the Mushroom offices in Melbourne, asked Gudinski
if he might offer himself as a potential manager.
Gudinski figured the clean-cut family man Blamey would appeal to
Minogue's accountant father, Ron, who remained dubious about anything to do
with the music business.
''I made the introduction between Terry and the parents,'' Pelman
says. ''And it was a beautiful marriage and still is. I have to say, as much as
I will always maintain that she is 99 per cent driving the car, he's remarkable
for what he's done. Every time I walk into [the Mushroom] building and look at
the bottom of that staircase, I can see Terry and I standing there and me
going, 'Yeah, sure, I'll give you the phone number.'''
Does Pelman regret passing on the opportunity to manage one of the
world's biggest stars?
''Absolutely not,'' she says. ''Not a day, not a moment. I don't
think we would ever have made a great team as an artist-management. And as much
as I loved our early days of working together and [I'm] proud of what we did
and what we created, it would never have worked.''
Pelman went on to executive-produce Minogue's next two hit singles,
I Should Be So Lucky
and Got to Be Certain,
along with her debut album, 1988's Kylie,
and its associated video clips, before going on to pursue a successful career
as an event producer and theatrical casting agent. To this day, Gudinski
handles Minogue's music publishing and Australian tours.
''She's reinvented, she's outlasted, she's shown more nous than
anyone,'' Gudinski says. ''I would never underestimate Kylie Minogue and
whatever she attempts. I think there are a lot more interesting things than just
music coming from Kylie in the near future. It's amazing how time flies but
it's certainly one of the most lasting careers in the Australian music industry
and you'd have to say she's one of the greatest ambassadors Australia has ever
had.''
Dino
Scatena is the author of Kylie:
An Unauthorised Biography (Penguin, 1997).
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