
Kylie Minogue forced to postpone run of European shows after contracting laryngitis
Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having 'succumbed to a viral infection' after completing the UK leg of her tour.
The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6.
On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box.
'Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour', she said.
'I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you.
'I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled.
'Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that.
'Thank you for understanding — you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx'.
In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart.
Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Man of Many
an hour ago
- Man of Many
Man of Many's Staff Favourites—14 June, 2025
By Dean Blake - News Published: 14 June 2025 |Last Updated: 13 June 2025 Share Copy Link Readtime: 8 min The Lowdown: No-Tell Motel | Image: The Raconteur Every product is carefully selected by our editors and experts. If you buy from a link, we may earn a commission. Learn more. For more information on how we test products, click here. We get the chance to test, review, and just toy around with a lot of cool stuff here at Man of Many, but not everything gets the full write-up treatment. Sometimes, we just find things we like and want to share with ya'll, and sometimes we get cool stuff recommended to us and want to talk about it somewhere. Here, in our weekly Staff Favourites, we get the chance to do just that. Put your feet up, preferably with a coffee or beer (depending on the weather), and check out the stuff we loved this week. No-Tell Motel | Image: The Raconteur No-Tell Motel by The Raconteur Nick Hall – Editor-in-Chief It isn't often that a fragrance really speaks to me. Like so many men, colognes, perfumes, and scents are often an afterthought, relegated to the same tier as the 'wallet, keys, phone pocket-pat'. Of course, I understand the necessity and intricacy involved in choosing the right scent, but I have never put too much thought into what that actually means. No-Tell Motel from Australian fine fragrance label The Raconteur may well have changed my view. A punchy scent that exudes a certain level of late-night sophistication, this fragrance embodies the kind of man I wish I was. Suave, elegant and charismatic by default, No-Tell Motel has a playful exuberance that bursts onto the senses. It hits like a counter-punch to the dull and dulcet tones of the established luxury houses, but with a subtle undertone that doesn't overstay its welcome. To me, this fragrance perfectly walks the powerful but not overpowering line, and it comes courtesy of one unique ingredient. As The Raconteur founder and perfumer Craig Andrade told me when we caught up last month, No-Tell Motel actually features an olive fruit absolute, which he described as a 'world-first'. 'It's an actual extract from olives, and I don't know of another scent in the world that's done this in fine fragrance, because you generally can't. No one has ever produced a scent note from actual olives,' Andrade told me. 'All of the olive notes you get in perfumery are always a construct or an accord created by perfumers to mimic the scent of an olive. This is extremely rare because it's got this insane olive fruit absolute, and I built the whole scent around that.' Adrade's new fragrance is an ode to urban nightlife, described as a 'Dirty Martini hooking up with a Spicy Margarita', and I couldn't agree more. There is an earthy undertone that flows through this fragrance, buoyed by the inclusion of Tasmanian mountain pepper, that I am entirely enamoured by. It's decadent, but not in an ostentacious way, but rather the allure of a well-kept secret. Mark my words, No-Tell Motel might just be the most remarkable fragrance I have come across in years. Favourite Article of the Week: Retro Revival: Why Longines is Banking on the Vintage Watch Trend Ultrahuman Ring Air Harry Parsons – Head of Branded Content I've uncovered a new obsession, and it's data. I never thought I would be saying that; however, when it relates to my health and wellbeing, it's a great way to uncover less-than-ideal habits that affect my day-to-day life, hiding behind the guise of unchecked routines. I have been trialling the Ultrahuman Ring Air for a couple of months now, and it has made a noticeable dent in my habits in the most positive way possible. Here are three things that have impressed me the most with this device: The design is fashion-forward. Gone are the days of tracking fitness and having to take it off for meetings, events, etc., to ensure you weren't looking like you were prepared to run a marathon. I've got the ring in Space Silver, and it looks like a completely normal ring, allowing me to wear it day in, day out: perfect for keeping all your health data tracked and not having gaps that affect your health insights. It's all about recovery. Many trackers I've worn in the past focus on the activity aspect as the core data points, burning calories, tracking fitness levels, etc. Whilst the Ring Air does all of this, its core data revolves around recovery, tracking my caffeine-permissible window to ensure I have substantial rest, advanced sleep data covering sleep cycles, HR drop, movement, body temperature, and even how groggy I felt waking up. All of these combine into a holistic view of how to better your rest and recovery, providing tips on how to improve aspects of your nightly routine across the board. What are Circadian Rhythms exactly? Prior to owning the Ring Air, I was not across the body's daily circ rhythms, so this has been an enjoyable learning curve. With each phase providing information on how my body responds to external factors such as exercise, food, and blue light/sunlight, I am able to structure my day to ensure that my rest does not suffer due to a late-night meal or scrolling on my phone too long. P.S. Ultrahuman also have blue-light glasses that block out 99 % of blue light and have a noticeable effect on setting up for sleep (wearing them for 30 min prior to sleep had me out like a light). Whilst the ring itself is a large component of the experience, the app and UX will sway a majority of buyers; after all, there is no screen, so you do find yourself checking the app's data regularly. It feels like every time I go to check my sleep or stress levels, there is a new feature being released. One in particular is tagging lifestyle factors, i.e., drinking coffee, and Ultrahuman's algorithm helps decipher how these affect you day and night. Overall, it's a wellbeing coach, guiding you in the right direction towards a well-rested and energetic self. Who wouldn't want that? If you would like to see more of the ring itself and app, check out our short review here: Favourite Article: 2026 Land Rover Defender Armed with New Tech and Revised Styling Uniqlo Men Ultra Light Padded Quilted Jacket John Guanzon – Head of Creative & Production Anyone else freezing in Sydney right now, or is it just me? No word of a lie, I've barely taken this jacket off. The quilted design makes it feel a little more elevated than your average puffer, but it's still super practical: lightweight, easy to throw on, and surprisingly super warm for something so minimal. I actually brought it with me to Geneva recently, and it got me through some properly cold days there. Since then, it's basically become part of my daily uniform. I wear it to the office, to the kids' soccer training, even just running around doing errands on weekends. It's one of those staple pieces you forget you're wearing until you realise you've been living in it. Favourite Article: Here's All the Best Stuff from Apple's 2025 WWDC Event Under Armour Unstoppable Utility Pants Alex Martinez – Media Sales and Brand Partnerships One of my friends recently described my fashion style as 'eshay grandpa', which was intended as criticism but received as a major compliment. I think the essence of his comment referred to me wearing comfortable and often loose-fitting streetwear. The Under Armour Utility Pant gives a toned back street-style I am going after and just in time for winter too. I'm pretty obsessed with them; they're super versatile (can wear to morning coffees, to work, nights out, and almost any occasion), and I'm all about anything with zippered pockets. Favourite Article: Nintendo Switch 2 Review: Fantastic, but Flawed Tony Touch DJ Set at 214 Mulberry Frank Arthur – Co-Founder Looking for music to play in the background? Hit play on Tony Touch's guest set for Aimé Leon Dore's 214 Mulberry series, for a soundtrack that keeps the energy high without hijacking your focus. Filmed in the label's secret New York Sound Room on Mulberry Street, the set sounds as good as it looks: with a backdrop themed to Aimé Leon Dore's iconic aesthetic, the dark timber panelling, shelves of wax and just-enough mood lighting make this video a visual treat. For an entire hour, the New York turntable icon glides from golden-era hip-hop to buttery soul, Latin and funk, all blended live on vinyl. It's familiar enough to nod along, eclectic enough to keep your ears pricked. Throw it on in the background and let Tony do what he does best.

The Age
7 hours ago
- The Age
He had run out of ideas and was running out of time. So he turned his problems into art
Stieg Persson had run out of ideas and was quickly running out of time. The accomplished Melbourne-based artist had been offered a show and as he sat, facing the possibility of blank walls and blank canvases, he decided to take his dilemma and flip it on its head. Persson has work held in most of our major galleries as well as the Auckland Art Gallery and Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. This month, his latest exhibition, Black Swans, opened at Anna Schwartz Gallery – and all of the works come from having absolutely no ideas, he says. 'I'd been out of the studio for a while ... and I'd just lost the rhythm,' he explains. 'For a couple of weeks I had literally no ideas... I just couldn't see it. And then I thought, why don't I make work about having no ideas – deal with the problem.' As he gazed at Post-it notes stuck on the wall – featuring scribbled lines from texts that resonated with him – he realised he was not the first to face this predicament. Having read about 'black swan events' recently, and having painted swans in the past, he decided to get to work and combine the two. Originally used to describe an impossible event – prior to 1697, no European knew black swans existed – the term now refers to a highly improbable event that once it occurs, seems inevitable. Coined in the context of financial markets by US-based former options trader Nassim Taleb in 2007, the term 'black swan event' now has a broader cultural meaning. Persson's series takes quotes from some of our greatest artistic minds and makes them spout from the mouths of black swans. Some of the lines are amusing, some are poignant; all of them ring true. 'Once it happened, it came together rather quickly,' he says. 'I had this one little painting which was an abstract I had done in the '90s, that became the background. I thought about that heraldic space where animals talk, those medieval balloons.' Though most of the paintings were well underway before the second election of Donald Trump, as every day brings new black swan events, the works feel particularly prescient.


The Advertiser
14 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Laryngitis forces Kylie to postpone run of tour
Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam. Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having "succumbed to a viral infection" after completing the UK leg of her tour. The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6. On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box. "Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour", she said. "I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you. "I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled. "Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that. "Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx". In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart. Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam.