Kim Wilde: 'I did get caught out with a few bad habits, especially with alcohol'

Kim Wilde plays in Ireland in April. Picture: Sean Vincent
Thrust into the limelight in her 20s as her debut single Kids In America stormed to number two in the UK singles chart, Kim Wilde was thrown into the temptations of the music industry at an early age.
But now at the age of 64, the Brit Award-winning pop star is proud of the way her younger self handled fame, even if she did allow herself a few indulgences.
The singer has recently released her 15th studio album, Closer, and is currently touring the UK to promote the record, which is inspired by her 1988 LP Close.
Closer sees Wilde present a collection of new wave-tinged pop, and includes the singles Trail Of Destruction and Midnight Train, as well as a collaboration with Ultravox singer Midge Ure called Sorrow Replaced.
Since her breakthrough single, she has even turned her hand to gardening, winning a gold award at the Chelsea Flower Show for her courtyard garden in 2005.
Speaking about her early days in the music business, Wilde, whose father is 1950s rock and roller Marty Wilde, says: āI became a pop star very young, and I was thrown into the heart of it, but most of that was wonderful.
āIt was meeting lots of great people, meeting all my idols, traveling all over the world, having a lot of success, and the opportunities that it brought, I mean they were all great gifts, and I recognise them for that," adds Wilde, who supported Michael Jackson in Cork in 1988.
āOf course, I did get caught out with a few bad habits, especially with alcohol, I think over those years, it was just a mainstay of most events after a gig, before a gig, at a party or anything. Thereās nothing wrong with that, itās just I took a decision after abstinence for a while.
āAnd noticing how well I felt during that abstinence, it was a Stoptober thing, just before I stopped alcohol, and I felt so alive and so healthy, and a lot of small health ailments seemed to disappear, and I thought, this is canāt be a coincidence.
āSo I thought Iāll just keep going and so nine years later, and Iām feeling very much better, I know, now, than had I not made that decision.
āBut I had a lot of fun during those days, I donāt regret much, Iām really proud I never got into drugs at all, ever, not remotely.
āI think that could have really destroyed me.ā
She credited the likes of The Pretendersā singer Chrissie Hynde, Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry and the late Kirsty MacColl for inspiring her when starting out, saying the latter had āa big influence on me as a songwriterā, adding that she knew the singer and liked her āvery muchā.
Wilde also praised modern artists such as ācleverā songwriter Taylor Swift, and drew similarities to her own career with that of Billie Eilish, who works with her brother Finneas OāConnell, having worked with her own brother, Ricky, and father on Kids In America.
The singer said there had always been strong women in music since she began, but said there needed to be more female representation in executive positions in the industry, saying the situation āhasnāt changed as much as it couldā.
She says of the issue of power between musicians and industry bosses: āYou do have to stand strong against executives, whether theyāre male or female, or male or female artists.
āPeople in positions of power sometimes donāt handle it very well, and you have to be very wary and stand your ground, because you have what they want, more than they have what you want.
āYouāve got the power, and you have to recognise that and really acknowledge it, and sit with it, and treasure it, and guard it completely.ā
Wilde has scored eight UK top 10 singles throughout her career, including Chequered Love, You Keep Me Hanginā On and You Came, and has also achieved two UK top 10 albums in her self-titled debut and Close.
She prompted hilarity when she teamed up with late Not The Nine Oā Clock News star Mel Smith to record a cover of Brenda Leeās festive track Rockinā Around The Christmas Tree in 1987, with the record reaching number three in the UK singles chart.

Fast-forwarding to the present day, the Chiswick-born star says she has been āamazedā by āoutstandingā reviews for her latest record.
She continues: āThat has been a really wonderful thing to have at this stage in my career, to be 64 and have an album thatās been received so positively and enjoyed, and the fact that we had so much joy making it ,and now performing it live.
āItās just been a phenomenal phase of my life, thatās kind of come out of quite a lot going on in my personal life in the last few years.
āAnd then to have something so positive come out of something, I wouldnāt say difficult, but there were some challenging things going on in my life in the last few years, and then to have this thing of beauty emerge out of it, itās phoenix-like.
āItās a wonderful thing, Iāve got a wonderful gift, Iām really looking forward to sharing it with everyone live, because thatās where itās really going to come together.
āIāve got this amazing band, and weāre just itching to get out there and present these new songs alongside the old ones, and all the old hits.ā Wilde says the new record and supporting tour is āmuch sweeterā having come off the back of a number of health issues for her.
She explains: āFirst thing that happened was I slipped a disc, and I was in a huge amount of pain, and that went on for several months, until I managed to recover via a whole variety of things, which did not include surgery.
āAnd after that, I started training to strengthen my core, to make sure that it might never happen again, which is ongoing.
āOf course, Iām still doing that, but in the last year or so, I also got affected by Covid quite badly, and that happened several times, and really knocked me out, and has lowered my immune system. I really battled to get on top of that.
āBut I feel like Iām back to full strength right now, but I have had a bit of a hammering with that.ā
- Wilde is currently touring the UK, and comes to Ireland on April 25 for a gig at 3Arena, Dublin, as part of 80's Orchestral