* Japanese Hyper Edition released in 2003.
Contains a bonus disc with 10 tracks.

Genre: Pop
Label Number: TOCP-66130·31
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
☠: Selected by Lass
© 2001-2003 ParlophoneAllmusic Review by Chris True
Fame can be a fleeting mistress, and nowhere more so
than in the land of dance-pop divas. Many are lucky enough to have a
hit album, much less two or three. What usually takes a one-hit wonder
from the singles charts to career diva lies less in catchy hooks than in
a combination of talent and the choice of collaborators. Obviously, the
master of this technique is Madonna,
whose talent and eye for talent in others has made her not only a
worldwide pop sensation, but a worldwide icon. Arguably, running a close
second is Kylie Minogue. Starting off as not much more than a female voice for the massively successful Stock, Aitken & Waterman
hit factory, she moved on to work with some of the most prominent dance
producers of the early '90s, making her one of the most visible pop
stars outside of the United States. By 1997, she moved on to working
with writers outside the genre. While this may have translated into poor
record sales, her motives were in the right place. With 2001's Fever, Minogue combines the disco-diva comeback of the previous year's Light Years
with the trend of simple dance rhythms which was prevalent in the teen
dance-pop craze of the years surrounding the album's release. While on
the surface that might seem like an old dog trying to learn new tricks, Minogue
pulls it off with surprising ease. The first single, "Cant Get You Out
of My Head," is a sparse, mid-tempo dance number that pulses and grooves
like no other she's recorded, and nothing on Light Years
was as funky as the pure disco closer of "Burning Up." And while it's
hard not to notice her tipping her hat to the teen pop sound (in fact,
on this record she works with Cathy Dennis, former dance-pop star and writer/producer for Brit-teen pop group S Club 7)
on songs like "Give It to Me" and "Love at First Sight," her maturity
helps transcend this limiting tag, making this a very stylish
Euro-flavored dance-pop record that will appeal to all ages. Not one
weak track, not one misplaced syrupy ballad to ruin the groove. The
winning streak continues. [The U.S. version, released in early March of
2002, included the hidden tracks "Boy" and "Butterfly" -- a B-side and Light Years album track, respectively.]
tags: kylie minogue, fever, special edition, 2001, flac, japan,
Hi i think the link is not the "fever" album, please check, thank you!
ReplyDeleteHow embarrassing I don't know how I screwed that up:( The links have been fixed :) Thank you for reporting it. Enjoy.
DeleteThank you Lass. much better. :-)
DeleteGracias!
ReplyDeleteBoth links are dead
ReplyDelete- Please read: https://www.mediasurfer.ch/2021/02/were-back-almost-2262021.html
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