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About S Club 7
The British teen-pop band S Club 7 was created in 1999 by pop impresario Simon Fuller, who chose the group's seven members -- Rachel Stevens, Hannah Spearritt, Bradley McIntosh, Paul Cattermole, Jon Lee, Jo O'Meara and Tina Barrett -- from nearly 10,000 hopefuls. S Club 7 then recorded their debut album S Club and began work on a BBC series, Miami 7, which featured the band as an aspiring group living in Florida; it became the top-rated kids' program in the U.K. around the time their debut single, "Bringing It All Back," climbed to the top of the U.K. charts. The show debuted in the U.S. on the Fox Family Channel in the fall of 1999, and S Club made its way Stateside in early 2000. That year, S Club 7 also won a Brit award for Best British Newcomer, and began work on a cable series for American audiences titled S Club 7 in L.A. The septet wrapped up a busy 2000 with the release of their sophomore album, 7, late in the fall. Several top ten hits followed, however, their fourth, 2002's Seeing Double, was the first one not to debut in the Top Ten. Cattermole left the group to return to his old metal band, Skua. He formed Skua in school before he joined S-Club 7. After Cattermole's departure, the group shortened its name to S-Club. O'Meara recorded a solo single called Different Kind of People, but remained with S-Club. In April 2003, the pop group announced their upcoming May split from a show live at London's Docklands Arena. S-Club had 10 top five singles and four multi-platinum albums during their four-year reign. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide
S Club 7's Discography (8)
| Best: The Greatest Hits of S CLUB 7 | Polydor Limited |
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| Best - The Greatest Hits (International... |
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| Sunshine | Polydor Limi... |
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| '7' | Polydor Limi... |
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| 7 | Polydor Limi... |
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Compilations Featuring S Club 7 (20)
| The Crying Game | Universal Mu... |
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| Big Brother 2003 | Universal Mu... |
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| Smash Hits: THE REUNION | Virgin Recor... |
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| Fool No More | Polydor Limi... |
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| I Love Christmas | BBC Worldwid... |
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Shazam Recommends...
Shazamers Who iD'd S Club 7
| Featured Review | |
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Girls Sugababes |
| By roping in credible producers such as Richard X and peppering their songs with up to the minute electro touches, Sugababes have managed to create songs that appealed as much to the cynical music press as it did to teenage girls. Throw in a revolving door line up and a media fascination with the bands perceived moodiness and you have a recipe for the most successful girl band of the new millennium. However on "Girls", a cover of Ernie K-Does early R&B classic "Here Comes The Girls", The "Babes" lack any of the inventiveness that made singles such as "Freak Like Me" and "Push The Button" so enjoyable. As countless artists have proved over the years, there's nothing wrong with uncovering a hidden gem and putting your own spin on things; Soft Cell's "Tainted Love" springs to mind as a good example. However, you can't help thinking that The Sugababes' producers have hardly been "diggin' in the crates" to uncover "Here Come The Girls" since it has been used extensively by Boots over the last couple of years to sell beauty products. Throw in a few predictable Mark Ronson style horn riffs and you have a sub Atomic Kitten mess that tarnishes a lot of the bands efforts to be taken seriously. | |
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