‘You’re My Number One’ is indelibly tied to S Club 7’s formative years in look and sound, but established a reliable formula for the group.
Tag: polydor
Rachel Stevens – Funky Dory
Rachel Stevens’ second single found her sampling David Bowie. But was this work of pop art just a bit too abstract for the mainstream?
Hear’Say – Everybody
‘Everybody’ marked the launch of Hear’Say’s second album. But coming just eight months after their first, was this too much, too soon?
S Club – Alive
‘Alive’ ended up serving as more of an epilogue to S Club’s career, but for a brief moment it heralded a new era for the group.
Rachel Stevens – More, More, More
As cover versions go, ‘More, More, More’ is as harmlessly cheery as it is entirely unnecessary for Rachel Stevens.
S Club 8 – Sundown
If ‘Sundown’ couldn’t firmly restore S Club 8 back to (near) chart-topping glory, then what on earth could?!
Rachel Stevens – I Said Never Again (But Here We Are)
Rachel Stevens went all out on ‘I Said Never Again (But Here We Are)’, but she was fighting a losing battle against an internet leak.
Triple Eight – Give Me A Reason
‘Give Me A Reason’ was Triple Eight’s crowning glory, arriving at a time when – by rights – it probably shouldn’t have existed at all.
Rachel Stevens – Some Girls
What happens when a singer in need of a hit meets a producer who won’t play by the rules? One of the best pop songs of the ’00s, of course.
S Club 8 – Fool No More
Now the sole group under the S Club-brand, ‘Fool No More’ was surely the moment S Club 8 would ascend to the top of the charts…wasn’t it?
S Club – Love Ain’t Gonna Wait For You
Although ‘Love Ain’t Gonna Wait For You’ was to be S Club’s final single, at least they were considerate enough to warn us beforehand.
Triple Eight – Knockout
Triple Eight sought to fill the boyband void with their debut single ‘Knockout’. But were they punching above their weight?