Produced by Rob Davis (producer and songwriter) and Cathy Dennis (pop singer from the '80s), "Can't get you out of my head" recorded in 2001 by Kylie Minogue became the best-selling single worldwide for the Australian singer, reaching number one in the charts of many countries.

The song is a return to Pop for Kylie, who after the album "Light years" in 2000, resurfaced after years of silence, seeking a more catchy path, with sounds more dance, house, electro than ever; "Can't get you out of my head" also uses a trick used for Kylie's very first single way back in 1987 "I should be so lucky": repeat a word endlessly and the job is done. La la la, lala la lala, la la la, la la la lala is sung throughout the 3 minutes of the song following a fitting, hypnotic, very hot rhythm.

Hot is also the music video for the song in which Kylie, about 35 years old at the time, dances in a white outfit complete with hood on her head among many dancers in a robotic and energetic choreography.

"Can't get you out of my head" was the first single from what is Kylie Minogue's best-known album, "Fever" from 2001, which made the singer from Sydney the true princess of pop, the only one able to compete in songs with Madonna.

The song became an anthem in discos, clubs, and venues around the world and even today (2013) remains one of the most beautiful songs of the decade 2000-2010.

Among the many artists who have covered it are remembered Coldplay (during a night at the Glastonbury Festival 2005), Tori Amos (in a more acoustic version), our Carmen Consoli (who included it in her greatest hits), and Scialpi (in one of his recent albums).

The best-known remix in the world remains the bootleg with New Order in "Can't get blue monday out of my head".

In short, 2001 was the year of Kylie and her lalalala..............

An interesting fact, the single was released in Europe on September 11, 2001, the year of the 9/11 attacks; in music, it was a real bomb.

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By minogue 666

 Look at them there, all busy pinning their refined listening choices to their lapels. Poor souls!

 You will be served sixth digestion pop, vomitable cutting-edge r&b, tunz tunz music, and to add a bit of variety, some good fifth-hand Italian rap with childish texts.