Kylie Minogue albums discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 17 |
EPs | 9 |
Live albums | 9 |
Compilation albums | 13 |
Remix albums | 13 |
Box sets | 4 |
The albums discography of Australian singer Kylie Minogue consists of seventeen studio albums, nine live albums, thirteen compilation albums, nine extended plays (EP), thirteen remix albums and four box sets. She is recognised as the highest-selling Australian recording artist of all time by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), with an estimated career sales of over 80 million units worldwide.[1] Minogue has eight number-one albums on the ARIA Albums Chart, the most for any female Australian artist.[2][3] In the United Kingdom, she holds the record for being the first female artist to score a number one on the Official Albums Chart in five consecutive decades, from the 1980s to the 2020s.[4]
Minogue signed a recording contract with Mushroom Records in early 1987 and released her self-titled debut album the following year.[5] Written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, the album was distributed in the UK by Waterman's label, PWL Records.[6] The album spent six weeks at number one in the UK, eventually becoming the fifth highest-selling album of the decade.[7] It has sold over five million copies worldwide.[8][9] Her second album, Enjoy Yourself (1989) debuted at number one in the UK and became the sixth best-selling album of the year.[10] She subsequently released Rhythm of Love (1990) and Let's Get to It (1991), both of which reached the top twenty in Australia and the UK. Her final release under PWL Records, Greatest Hits (1992), was her third number-one album in the UK.
During her years under Deconstruction Records, Minogue released her self-titled album in 1994 and Impossible Princess in 1997. Both albums peaked inside the top ten in Australia and the UK.
After moving to Parlophone in 1999,[11] Minogue earned her first number-one album in her home country with Light Years (2000). She scored the best-selling album of her career with Fever (2001), which sold over six million copies worldwide as of May 2008.[12] It was the thirtieth best-selling album globally in 2002, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.[13] Her next releases under Parlophone were studio albums Body Language (2003) and X (2007), as well as the greatest hits album Ultimate Kylie (2004) — all reached platinum status in Australia and the UK. In 2010, Aphrodite debuted at number one in the UK, making her the first female artist to have number-one albums in four consecutive decades.[14][15] In 2012, she released the greatest hits album The Best of Kylie Minogue and the orchestral album The Abbey Road Sessions, to celebrate her twenty-five years in the music industry. Released during her short-term management contract with entertainment company Roc Nation, Kiss Me Once (2014) became her fourth number-one album in Australia.[16] In 2015, her final album under Parlophone — the Christmas album Kylie Christmas (2015) was released, with a re-release Kylie Christmas: Snow Queen Edition the following year.
In 2017, Minogue signed a global recording contract with BMG Rights Management and a joint deal with Mushroom Music Labels, under the sub-division label Liberator Music for a distribution deal in Australia and New Zealand.[17][18] Her subsequent releases under BMG and Liberator were studio albums Golden (2018), Disco (2020), Tension (2023) and Tension II (2024), as well as the compilation album Step Back in Time: The Definitive Collection (2019) — all debuted at number one in Australia and the UK. She is the only female artist to have a number-one album in five consecutive decades.[19]