Theaudience (band)

"Theaudience" redirects here. For this band's self-titled studio album, see Theaudience (album). For the social media presence management company, see TheAudience. For the German band, see The Audience (band). For other uses, see Audience (disambiguation).
Theaudience
Origin United Kingdom
Genres
Years active 1996–1999
Labels
Past members

Theaudience (styled as theaudience) were a Britpop group active in the 1990s.[1] They released one album and saw three singles enter the UK Singles Chart.[2] The band's singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor became a successful solo artist after the band's disbandment.

History

Theaudience were founded by guitarist Billy Reeves, formerly of the indie group Congregation. The group were fronted by Sophie Ellis-Bextor and included drummer/producer "Patch" Hannan (ex-The Sundays), Nigel Butler (ex-The Bridge), Dean Mollett (ex-Porcupine) and Kerin Smith.[3] Their one self-titled album received critical acclaim and reached #22 in the UK charts, with two of four singles released reaching the Top 40.

Reeves left the band late in 1998, and although the remaining band members wrote and demoed material for a second album it was rejected by record label Mercury Records, who then dropped the band, which split in 1999.[2] These tracks were leaked onto the internet in 2009 as a fourteen-track album under the fan-made title Quiet Storm.

Ellis-Bextor started a solo career in major label dance-pop music following the success of her collaboration with Spiller on "Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)" in 2000. Smith and Reeves were later involved with London indie pop band Friends of The Bride.

Discography

theaudience discography
Studio albums 1
Music videos 4
Singles 4

Studio albums

Title Album details Peak chart positions
UK
[4]
Theaudience 22

Singles

Title Year Peak chart positions Album
UK
[4]
"I Got the Wherewithal" 1997 170 theaudience
"If You Can't Do It When You're Young; When Can You Do It?" 1998 48
"A Pessimist Is Never Disappointed" 27
"I Know Enough (I Don't Get Enough)" 25

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.