fbpx
Wikipedia

Sound of the Underground (album)

Sound of the Underground is the debut studio album by English-Irish girl group Girls Aloud, formed through the ITV television series Popstars: The Rivals. It was released in Ireland on 23 May 2003, in the United Kingdom and Europe on 26 May 2003, and reissued on 17 November 2003 through Polydor. Girls Aloud worked with a variety of musicians and producers on Sound of the Underground, which was largely inspired by 1980s music. Comparisons were made with artists such as Bananarama, The Bangles, Blondie and Spice Girls.

Sound of the Underground
Studio album by
Released23 May 2003
RecordedNovember 2002 – April 2003
Genre
Length
  • 53:44 (standard)
  • 55:04 (reissue)
LabelPolydor
Producer
Girls Aloud chronology
Sound of the Underground
(2003)
What Will the Neighbours Say?
(2004)
Reissue edition cover
Singles from Sound of the Underground
  1. "Sound of the Underground"
    Released: 16 December 2002
  2. "No Good Advice"
    Released: 12 May 2003
  3. "Life Got Cold"
    Released: 18 August 2003
  4. "Jump"
    Released: 17 November 2003

Sound of the Underground debuted to generally favourable reviews from contemporary music critics, who noted the high quality of the album compared to output from other reality show contestants. The album was certified platinum in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). It yielded four singles, including the title track, which topped the UK Singles Chart for a month. The album has sold 368,000 copies in the United Kingdom alone.

The album was re-released on 16 June 2023,[1] in celebration of the album's 20th anniversary, available in vinyl format for the first time.

Background and recording edit

Girls Aloud were formed through the ITV1 programme Popstars: The Rivals by a public vote on 30 November 2002.[2] Their debut single "Sound of the Underground" was one of sixty songs that Brian Higgins and Miranda Cooper had written with the aim of launching their own girl group.[3] The song was originally recorded in 2001 by London girl group Orchid, who disbanded before gaining a firm record deal.[4] It was produced by Xenomania and chosen by Girls Aloud's manager Louis Walsh as their debut single.[4] "Sound of the Underground" was 2002's Christmas number one single and spent a further three weeks at number one.[5][6] "Sound of the Underground" and another Xenomania production, Sugababes' "Round Round", have been called "two huge groundbreaking hits",[7] credited with reshaping British pop music for the 2000s.[8]

Following the single's success, Girls Aloud proceeded to begin recording their debut album, which shares its title with the single. As the team grew, their music began to take over the nation. Girls Aloud worked with a variety of mostly British musicians and producers, such as Betty Boo, the Beatmasters, Graham Stack, Steve Anderson and Tim Kellett, and reunited with Higgins and Xenomania. Girls Aloud deliberately waited five months after the release of "Sound of the Underground" in order to ensure they would have a strong second single.[9] Referring to their second single "No Good Advice", Higgins said that Girls Aloud initially did not like the song – "we played them some of it, and they said: 'That's not our sound.' I objected to the use of that phrase 'our sound'. I told them they had five minutes to talk about whether or not they wanted to continue with me. They went away and spoke about it and since then it's been fine. They come in expecting to work, and there's a trust there which, I think, dates back to that day."[10]

Sound of the Underground remains Girls Aloud's only studio album not to be entirely written and produced by Higgins and Xenomania, who had initially only created two songs for the album, "Sound of the Underground" and "No Good Advice". When Higgins heard the remaining ten tracks that Girls Aloud had recorded for the album, he promptly called Polydor to complain about the lack of creative content. Higgins said, "They'd sent them off to these other Swedish guys and different people in the UK [...] I said, 'There are two completely separate groups on this record. We need to get rid of six tracks and I'll replace them'. We did that and allowed the album to stand up as a body of work."[11] This last-minute decision resulted in Girls Aloud returning to the studio to record a further four tracks with Xenomania – "Some Kind of Miracle", "Life Got Cold", "Stop" and "Love/Hate". The album was completed in April 2003 and described as a mix of "Blondie and Bananarama, with a smattering of the Spice Girls at their best thrown in."[12]

During the summer of 2003, Girls Aloud would again work with Higgins and Xenomania, recording a further three tracks – a cover version of the Duran Duran hit "Girls on Film", which would become the B-side of "Life Got Cold", "You Freak Me Out" for the film Freaky Friday and a cover version of The Pointer Sisters song "Jump" for the film Love Actually. They also re-recorded "Some Kind of Miracle", which was originally intended to be the fourth single from the album before it was scrapped in favour of "Jump". These four tracks, alongside an altered mix of "Life Got Cold", would eventually surface on a reissued version of Sound of the Underground, which was released on 17 November 2003.

Music and lyrics edit

Sound of the Underground takes influence from a number of 1980s genres, such as synthpop, power pop, and new wave, and 1990s styles like big beat, drum and bass, and garage.[13] The album received comparisons to girl groups such as Bananarama, The Bangles and Spice Girls.[12][14][15] Similarities to Kylie Minogue and Madonna were also noted.[15][16] A majority of the songs make use of guitars and electronic beats. The rise of indie rock also inspired Brian Higgins to "blur the edges between commercial music and so-called "indie" music."[11] He continued, "pop music was on its backside and indie music was about to rise, through The Strokes and everything else. We were an independent company and we were as indie as the other bands around us. The guitar riff on "No Good Advice" is very very similar to the riff on the track "Michael" by Franz Ferdinand."[11]

It was said that the album's "lyrics [were] curiously insistent upon Girls Aloud's musical credibility and autonomy of thought."[17] Higgins said that "No Good Advice" reflected his general mood of failure after a special deal between Xenomania and London Records fell through in 2000, and about persisting in spite of what people told him to do or not to do.[18] "Life Got Cold" was labelled "surprisingly poignant."[19]

Songs edit

"Sound of the Underground", which opens the album, drew comparisons to Fatboy Slim.[17][20] It was labelled "an enticing blend of spiky guitars and Fatboy Slim beats topped off with an irresistibly catchy chorus."[20] "Sound of the Underground" was further described as "a mechanistic sashay of twangy surf guitar and sultry gang vocals – Girls Aloud explodes like a five-headed Kylie Minogue."[21] "No Good Advice" was labelled "a disco track with guitar – a cross between Blondie and The Bangles."[14] Unlike many other songs, it was said to be "not obsessed with trying to be a cutting-edge club hit, [...] with at least three different killer hooks welded together" that borrowed heavily from the 1980s.[22] "Some Kind of Miracle", which is "a breezy summer pop song about trying to bag a guy", follows.[16] The Xenomania production had "layered vocals with its slow tempo despite being more formulaic."[22] The song was compared to "a 21st century Bangles", as well as former Spice Girls member and Popstars: The Rivals judge Geri Halliwell.[15][23]

"All I Need (All I Don't)" was described as "a Kylie-type tune set to squelchy techno", as well as "a disco-funk workout with traces of Cameo and Bedtime Stories vintage Madonna".[15][16] "Life Got Cold", the album's first ballad and third single, was a late addition to the album, completed by Xenomania shortly before the album's release.[24] The song received attention because of similarities between the guitar riff of "Life Got Cold" and that of the Oasis hit "Wonderwall" (1995).[25][26] Warner/Chappell Music has since credited Oasis songwriter Noel Gallagher.[27] The song was called a "charming ballad" that was "a sweet but slightly sad pop song".[22] The song begins with a rap.[16] "Mars Attack", produced by Betty Boo and the Beatmasters, "is hip hop-referencing surf punk."[15]

"Stop", a Xenomania production sung entirely by Nadine Coyle apart from the chorus, "starts like the Skids' "Into the Valley" but gets sultry instead of surreal."[15] The album's eighth track, "Girls Allowed", was co-written by Westlife member Brian McFadden. It was described as both "Basement Jaxx meets Spice Girls" and "Donna Summer meets Dannii Minogue".[16][19] "Forever and a Night" was described as "a soppy love song earmarked as a Christmas single",[16] but slated for sounding like "every girl-group slushy song ever written."[19] "Love/Hate", another song crafted by Xenomania, "lays vocals over garage beats."[16] A second contribution from Betty Boo and the Beatmasters, "Boogie Down Love", follows. It was said that it "mixes the hook of Blondie's "Call Me" with the bells from "Rapture"",[15] as well as being deemed "electro stomping".[28] "Don't Want You Back" was co-written by Anders Bagge, who also wrote Samantha Mumba's "Gotta Tell You", which bears similarities. It was labelled as "love song" in which Girls Aloud are "swooning over bois [sic]".[29] "White Lies" was co-written and produced by Tim Kellett, a former member of The Durutti Column, Simply Red, and Olive.

The original UK edition of the album featured two bonus tracks. "Love Bomb", another Betty Boo collaboration, was compared to Boo's "Where Are You Baby?".[29] "Everything You Ever Wanted" borrows its opening line from The Rolling Stones.[16] In December 2003, the album was re-released with the omission of "Don't Want You Back" and the bonus tracks. Three new songs appeared instead. "Jump", a cover of song "Jump (for My Love)" by The Pointer Sisters, was recorded for the soundtrack to Love Actually (2003). Cheryl Cole noted in Girls Aloud's autobiography Dreams That Glitter – Our Story (2008) that the single "was the point when we realized everything we'd been doing was quite down and moody [...] and that's not what people wanted." "You Freak Me Out" is a pop-rock song that was written and recorded specifically for the Disney film Freaky Friday (2003),[30] Also included was Girls Aloud's cover of "Girls on Film", originally a Duran Duran classic, that originally appeared as a B-side to "Life Got Cold".

Release and promotion edit

Sound of the Underground was released in Ireland on 23 May 2003 and in the United Kingdom and European countries three days later, through Polydor Records and Universal Music Group. The international versions of the album exclude the bonus tracks "Love Bomb" and "Everything You Ever Wanted". A reissue of Sound of the Underground was released on 17 November 2003. It replaced the original bonus tracks and "Don't Want You Back" with three new songs: "Jump", "You Freak Me Out", and "Girls on Film". The radio edit of "Life Got Cold" and a remix of "Some Kind of Miracle", also replaced the original versions. Originally, the album would be promoted with a tour with their fellow Popstars: The Rivals contestants; however, the tour was cancelled due to poor ticket sales. Instead, the group promoted the album on their What Will the Neighbours Say...? Tour (2005) along with their second studio album What Will the Neighbours Say? (2004). Sound of the Underground and other Girls Aloud releases were made available for sale on the US iTunes Store on 26 June 2007 through Interscope Records.

On 26 March 2023, it was reported that the remaining members of Girls Aloud are to share unreleased tracks from the archives, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the album.[31] On 28 April 2023, the band released the promotional single "Sound Of The Underground (Alternative Vocal Mix)", revealed the tracklisting for the forthcoming album reissue, and released a new 4k version of the original music video. The 2023 reissue will be available on vinyl for the very first time.[32]

Singles edit

"Sound of the Underground", Girls Aloud's debut single, was released on 16 December 2002. Competing against the Popstars: The Rivals boyband, One True Voice, they used a combative "Buy girls, bye boys" slogan to persuade the public to buy their single.[33] "Sound of the Underground" received a positive response from most music critics. The music video was shot in a London warehouse just days after Girls Aloud's formation in the last week of competition of Popstars: The Rivals. "Sound of the Underground" debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart and spent four consecutive weeks at number one,[6] earning a platinum certification in March 2003.[34] "No Good Advice" was released five months later in May 2003. In 2003, the song won the Popjustice £20 Music Prize, awarded to the best British pop single of the past year. The video for "No Good Advice" features the members of Girls Aloud clad in metallic, silver, futuristic outfits which can also be seen on the cover of this album. The song debuted at number two. The third single was intended to be "Some Kind of Miracle", but was changed to fan favourite "Life Got Cold". The music video depicts the band members in stunted movement, wandering around an abandoned city setting. The song failed to achieve the success of Girls Aloud's first two singles, peaking at number three. "Some Kind of Miracle" was replaced again, this time with their cover of "Jump", recorded for the Love Actually soundtrack. The music video for "Jump" was made to appear like it was intertwined with Love Actually. The song debuted at number two on the UK Singles Chart.[35] "You Freak Me Out" was due for release, with Girls Aloud even performing it on television; however, Girls Aloud proceeded to record their second studio album What Will the Neighbours Say?.

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [21]
BBC Music(positive)[28]
BBC News(positive)[22]
Drowned in Sound(8/10)[29]
Entertainment.ie     [20]
The Guardian     [17]
RTÉ.ie     [19]
Yahoo! Music          [15]

Sound of the Underground received generally favourable reviews from music critics. The Times noted that Sound of the Underground "is packed with everything you want from a pop record – attitude, aggression, guitars, disco beats and steals from Phil Spector."[16] Yahoo! Music said that Girls Aloud "have made a seriously fine debut album. OK, so it's not Blonde on Blonde, Innervisions or OK Computer, but it may well be another Spice."[15] A number of reviews noted the high quality of the album compared to output from other reality show contestants.[15] It was said that "Girls Aloud are on the better end of the commercial pop scale."[19] Ian Youngs of BBC News bluntly stated, "Reality pop is not supposed to be this good."[22] BBC Music said "time will tell if they are set to take the mantle as the new Spice Girls or slip rapidly down pops dumper as the new Hear'Say. But their debut album is sure to shut up at least some of their cynics, myself included."[28]

However, many reviewers agreed that the album's quality declined towards the end.[16][20][22][28] RTÉ.ie wrote, "After a while it does start sounding a bit samey but for a manufactured pop album, this is a fairly standard fault."[19] The ballads featured on Sound of the Underground were slated.[16][17] Andrew Lynch of entertainment.ie said that "the ill-advised attempt to show off their sensitive side results in some truly dismal ballads."[20]

Commercial performance edit

The album debuted at number two on the UK Albums Chart behind Justin Timberlake's debut studio album Justified (2002). Selling 38,000 copies in its first week[36] it went on to sell 300,000, achieving a platinum certificate, their first of many. Spending only eighteen weeks in the charts the album was later re-released to feature new songs.[37] This release only managed to peak at number forty-two but is now the only commercial print of the album.

The album was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on 6 June 2003.[38] It was certified platinum five months later.[39]

Track listing edit

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Sound of the Underground.

Original version
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Sound of the Underground"
3:41
2."No Good Advice"
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:48
3."Some Kind of Miracle"
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Jeremy Wheatley
3:09
4."All I Need (All I Don't)"
  • Ava Knox
  • Chris Peters
  • Drew Peters
Peters & Peters3:38
5."Life Got Cold"
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:57
6."Mars Attack"
Betty Boo and the Beatmasters3:28
7."Stop"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Matt Gray
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:35
8."Girls Allowed"
Graham Stack3:26
9."Forever and a Night"
  • Gary Miller
  • Mark Mueller
  • Andy Goldmark
3:17
10."Love/Hate"
  • Higgins
  • Scarlett
  • Eve Bicker
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
4:40
11."Boogie Down Love"
  • Clarkson
  • Carter
  • Glanfield
Betty Boo and the Beatmasters3:22
12."Don't Want You Back"Arnthor & BAG3:19
13."White Lies"
Kellett4:00
UK bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
14."Love Bomb"
  • Clarkson
  • Mike Ward
  • Shaun Ward
Betty Boo and the Beatmasters2:55
15."Everything You Ever Wanted"Anderson2:53
Total length:53:44
20th anniversary edition disc 2
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Sound of the Underground" (alternative vocal mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Scarlet
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:39
2."Jump" (from Love Actually)
  • Steve Mitchell
  • Marti Sharron
  • Gary Skardina
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:39
3."Girls on Film"Duran DuranXenomania3:40
4."Lights, Music, Camera, Action"
  • Nigel Lowis
  • Paul Meehan
  • Lee
  • Lowis
  • Meehan
3:11
5."On a Round"Korpi & BlackCell2:42
6."No Good Advice" (parental advisory version)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:46
7."Sacred Trust"Bee GeesIan Curnow5:00
8."Life Got Cold" (radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Gallagher
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:29
9."Grease" (from Greasemania)Barry GibbBetty Boo & The Beatmasters3:27
10."Hopelessly Devoted to You" (from Greasemania)John FarrarStack3:14
11."Some Kind of Miracle" (new mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Cowling
  • Powell
  • Lee
  • Lynch
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Wheatley
3:19
12."You Freak Me Out" (from Freaky Friday)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Powell
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:05
13."No Good Advice" (original demo)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:52
14."Stay Another Day"
  • Denis Ingoldsby
  • Andrew Murray
  • Christian Ballard
4:20
Total length:50:34
20th anniversary edition disc 3
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Sound of the Underground" (instrumental breakdown mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Scarlet
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:39
2."Girls Allowed" (almighty radio edit; from Love Actually)
  • McFadden
  • Shorten
Stack3:39
3."Some Kind of Miracle" (illicit mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Cowling
  • Powell
  • Lee
  • Lynch
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:40
4."Life Got Cold" (Stella Browne vocal mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Gallagher
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:11
5."No Good Advice" (Dreadzone vocal mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Jon Shave
2:42
6."Jump" (Almighty vocal mix)
  • Steve Mitchell
  • Marti Sharron
  • Gary Skardina
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:46
7."Sound of the Underground" (Flip & Fill remix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Scarlet
  • Higgins
  • Wheatley
5:00
8."Life Got Cold" (29 Palms remix edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Gallagher
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:29
9."No Good Advice" (Flip & Fill remix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Whealey
  • Xenomania
  • Shave
3:27
10."Jump" (Flip & Fill remix)
  • Steve Mitchell
  • Marti Sharron
  • Gary Skardina
 3:14
11."No Good Advice" (Doublefunk vocal mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Shave
3:19
12."Girls Allowed" (Almighty vocal mix)
  • McFadden
  • Shorten
Stack3:05
Total length:76:00


UK 2003 re-issue
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Sound of the Underground"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Scarlett
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:41
2."No Good Advice"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:48
3."Life Got Cold" (radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Gallagher
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:57
4."Jump" (from Love Actually)
  • Steve Mitchell
  • Marti Sharron
  • Gary Skardina
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:39
5."Some Kind of Miracle" (new mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Cowling
  • Powell
  • Lee
  • Lynch
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Wheatley
3:19
6."All I Need (All I Don't)"
  • Knox
  • C. Peters
  • D. Peters
Peters & Peters3:38
7."Mars Attack"
  • Clarkson
  • Carter
  • Glanfield
Betty Boo and the Beatmasters3:28
8."You Freak Me Out" (from Freaky Friday)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Powell
  • Nystrøm
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:01
9."Girls Allowed"
  • McFadden
  • Shorten
Stack3:26
10."Forever and a Night"
  • Miller
  • Mueller
  • Goldmark
  • Miller
  • Rawling
3:17
11."Love/Hate"
  • Higgins
  • Scarlett
  • Bicker
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
4:40
12."Boogie Down Love"
  • Clarkson
  • Carter
  • Glanfield
Betty Boo and the Beatmasters3:22
13."Stop"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Gray
Xenomania3:35
14."White Lies"
  • Kellett
  • Nordstrom
Kellett3:06
15."Girls on Film" (United Kingdom bonus track)Duran DuranXenomania3:42
16."Sound of the Underground" (music video)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Scarlett
  • Xenomania
Xenomania3:46
17."No Good Advice" (music video)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Nystrøm
Xenomania3:54
18."Life Got Cold" (music video)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Coler
  • Cowling
  • Gallagher
Xenomania4:05
Total length:55:04
Covers and other appearances

Charts edit

Certifications edit

Certifications for Sound of the Underground
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[46] Platinum 368,000[45]

Release history edit

List of release dates, showing region, edition(s), format(s), label(s), catalog number and reference(s).
Region Date Edition(s) Format(s) Label(s) Catalog Ref.
Ireland 23 May 2003 Standard Polydor 9865315 [47][48]
Europe 26 May 2003 Universal Music 9865319
United Kingdom Polydor 9865315
Ireland 17 November 2003 Reissue 9865961 [49][50]
United Kingdom
United States 26 June 2007 Standard Digital download Interscope
Various 16 June 2023 Deluxe 20th anniversary edition CD, digital download, streaming, vinyl Universal Music Operations [51]

References edit

  1. ^ "Girls Aloud - Sound of the Underground (Deluxe Edition)". Apple Music. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  2. ^ "Popstars girl group picked". BBC News. 2 December 2002. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  3. ^ Robinson, Peter (2009). "Sound of the Underground". The Singles Boxset (Booklet). Girls Aloud. London, England: Fascination Records. p. 7.
  4. ^ a b "Girls Aloud: Is it really a cover?". CBBC Newsround. BBC. 21 December 2002. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  5. ^ "Girls Aloud top festive chart". BBC News. 23 December 2002. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  6. ^ a b "Sound of the Underground". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  7. ^ Neil McCormick (13 August 2009). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 16 August 2009. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  8. ^ Emily MacKay (November 2009). "End of Decade: Sound of the Overground". NME. Retrieved 3 December 2009.
  9. ^ Sylvia Patterson (25 March 2008). . The Lipster. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  10. ^ Pete Paphides (26 October 2006). "The Trojan horses of pop". The Times. London. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  11. ^ a b c Andreas Soteriou (13 April 2010). . Ponystep. Archived from the original on 27 April 2010. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  12. ^ a b Neil Wilkes (30 April 2003). "Girls Aloud prepare for album release". Digital Spy. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  13. ^ Finney, Tim (14 December 2006). . Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  14. ^ a b "New Girls Aloud single set for May". Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 27 March 2003. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Angus Batey (30 May 2003). . Yahoo! Music. Archived from the original on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lisa Verrico (23 May 2003). "Hello, girls". The Times. London. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  17. ^ a b c d Alexis Petridis (23 May 2003). "Girls Aloud: Sound of the Underground". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 April 2010.
  18. ^ Ben Thompson (18 July 2004). "Heart of the country, home of the hits". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Anne-Louise Foley (13 June 2003). "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground". Raidió Teilifís Éireann. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  20. ^ a b c d e Andrew Lynch (4 June 2003). "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground". The Irish Times. Entertainment.ie. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  21. ^ a b Johnny Loftus. "Sound of the Underground". AllMusic. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Ian Youngs (23 May 2003). "Girls Aloud trounce pop rivals". BBC News. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  23. ^ Gemma Pike (15 May 2003). "Girls aim to make a noise". Runcorn and Widnes Weekly News. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  24. ^ Robinson, Peter (2009). "Life Got Cold". The Singles Boxset (Booklet). Girls Aloud. London, England: Fascination Records. p. 11.
  25. ^ "Blu secure at number one in midweeks". CBBC Newsround. BBC. 20 August 2003. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  26. ^ . Tourdates.co.uk. 18 August 2003. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
  27. ^ . Warner/Chappell Music. Warner Music Group. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  28. ^ a b c d Jacqueline Hodges (11 June 2003). "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground". BBC Music. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  29. ^ a b c Adie Nunn (4 June 2003). . Drowned in Sound. Archived from the original on 3 October 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  30. ^ Neil Wilkes (6 November 2003). "Another movie track for Girls Aloud". Digital Spy. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  31. ^ "Girls Aloud to release new music to mark 20th anniversary of 'Sound Of The Underground'". NME. 26 March 2023. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  32. ^ Skinner, Tom (27 April 2023). "Girls Aloud announce 'Sound Of The Underground' 20th anniversary reissue". NME. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  33. ^ Sullivan, Caroline (16 December 2002). "Females with attitude". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  34. ^ "Certified Awards – Sound of the Underground". British Phonographic Industry. 14 March 2003. Retrieved 24 February 2008.[dead link]
  35. ^ "Singer Jackson tops album chart". BBC News. 23 November 2003. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  36. ^ girls aloud rule – girls aloud – DISCOGRAPHY
  37. ^ Sound Of The Underground:Amazon:Music
  38. ^ "Certified Awards – Sound of the Underground (Gold)". British Phonographic Industry. 6 June 2003. Retrieved 24 February 2008.[dead link]
  39. ^ . British Phonographic Industry. 28 November 2003. Archived from the original on 18 December 2007. Retrieved 24 February 2008.
  40. ^ "Dutchcharts.nl – Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground" (in Dutch). Hung Medien.
  41. ^ "Greekcharts.com – Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground". Hung Medien.
  42. ^ . Chart-Track. IRMA.
  43. ^ "Girls Aloud | Artist | Official Charts". UK Albums Chart.
  44. ^ a b c "Girls Aloud | Artist | Official Charts". UK Albums Chart.
  45. ^ Caulfield, Keith (21 March 2013). "Girls Aloud: A Whole Lotta Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  46. ^ "British album certifications". British Phonographic Industry. Select albums in the Format field. Select Platinum in the Certification field. 
  47. ^ "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground (CD, Album, Enh) at Discogs". Discogs. 26 May 2003. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  48. ^ "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground – Amazon Music". Amazon Music. 26 May 2003. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  49. ^ "Girls Aloud – Sound of the Underground (CD, Album, Enh, S/Edition) at Discogs". Discogs. 17 November 2003. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  50. ^ "Sound of the Underground: Amazon: Music". Amazon. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  51. ^ Smith, Carl (26 April 2023). "Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Deluxe Edition 20th anniversary album re-release: tracklist, formats and more". Official Charts. Retrieved 28 April 2023.

sound, underground, album, mars, attack, redirects, here, trading, card, series, mars, attacks, movie, mars, attacks, sound, underground, debut, studio, album, english, irish, girl, group, girls, aloud, formed, through, television, series, popstars, rivals, re. Mars Attack redirects here For the trading card series see Mars Attacks For the movie see Mars Attacks Sound of the Underground is the debut studio album by English Irish girl group Girls Aloud formed through the ITV television series Popstars The Rivals It was released in Ireland on 23 May 2003 in the United Kingdom and Europe on 26 May 2003 and reissued on 17 November 2003 through Polydor Girls Aloud worked with a variety of musicians and producers on Sound of the Underground which was largely inspired by 1980s music Comparisons were made with artists such as Bananarama The Bangles Blondie and Spice Girls Sound of the UndergroundStudio album by Girls AloudReleased23 May 2003RecordedNovember 2002 April 2003GenreDance poppower poppop rockrockdrum and bassLength53 44 standard 55 04 reissue LabelPolydorProducerSteve Anderson Anders Bagge Arnthor Birgisson Beatmasters Betty Boo Brian Higgins Tim Kellett Gary Miller Peters amp Peters Brian Rawling Graham Stack Jeremy Wheatley XenomaniaGirls Aloud chronologySound of the Underground 2003 What Will the Neighbours Say 2004 Reissue edition coverSingles from Sound of the Underground Sound of the Underground Released 16 December 2002 No Good Advice Released 12 May 2003 Life Got Cold Released 18 August 2003 Jump Released 17 November 2003Sound of the Underground debuted to generally favourable reviews from contemporary music critics who noted the high quality of the album compared to output from other reality show contestants The album was certified platinum in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry BPI It yielded four singles including the title track which topped the UK Singles Chart for a month The album has sold 368 000 copies in the United Kingdom alone The album was re released on 16 June 2023 1 in celebration of the album s 20th anniversary available in vinyl format for the first time Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Music and lyrics 3 Songs 4 Release and promotion 5 Singles 6 Critical reception 7 Commercial performance 8 Track listing 9 Charts 9 1 Weekly charts 9 2 Year end charts 10 Certifications 11 Release history 12 ReferencesBackground and recording editGirls Aloud were formed through the ITV1 programme Popstars The Rivals by a public vote on 30 November 2002 2 Their debut single Sound of the Underground was one of sixty songs that Brian Higgins and Miranda Cooper had written with the aim of launching their own girl group 3 The song was originally recorded in 2001 by London girl group Orchid who disbanded before gaining a firm record deal 4 It was produced by Xenomania and chosen by Girls Aloud s manager Louis Walsh as their debut single 4 Sound of the Underground was 2002 s Christmas number one single and spent a further three weeks at number one 5 6 Sound of the Underground and another Xenomania production Sugababes Round Round have been called two huge groundbreaking hits 7 credited with reshaping British pop music for the 2000s 8 Following the single s success Girls Aloud proceeded to begin recording their debut album which shares its title with the single As the team grew their music began to take over the nation Girls Aloud worked with a variety of mostly British musicians and producers such as Betty Boo the Beatmasters Graham Stack Steve Anderson and Tim Kellett and reunited with Higgins and Xenomania Girls Aloud deliberately waited five months after the release of Sound of the Underground in order to ensure they would have a strong second single 9 Referring to their second single No Good Advice Higgins said that Girls Aloud initially did not like the song we played them some of it and they said That s not our sound I objected to the use of that phrase our sound I told them they had five minutes to talk about whether or not they wanted to continue with me They went away and spoke about it and since then it s been fine They come in expecting to work and there s a trust there which I think dates back to that day 10 Sound of the Underground remains Girls Aloud s only studio album not to be entirely written and produced by Higgins and Xenomania who had initially only created two songs for the album Sound of the Underground and No Good Advice When Higgins heard the remaining ten tracks that Girls Aloud had recorded for the album he promptly called Polydor to complain about the lack of creative content Higgins said They d sent them off to these other Swedish guys and different people in the UK I said There are two completely separate groups on this record We need to get rid of six tracks and I ll replace them We did that and allowed the album to stand up as a body of work 11 This last minute decision resulted in Girls Aloud returning to the studio to record a further four tracks with Xenomania Some Kind of Miracle Life Got Cold Stop and Love Hate The album was completed in April 2003 and described as a mix of Blondie and Bananarama with a smattering of the Spice Girls at their best thrown in 12 During the summer of 2003 Girls Aloud would again work with Higgins and Xenomania recording a further three tracks a cover version of the Duran Duran hit Girls on Film which would become the B side of Life Got Cold You Freak Me Out for the film Freaky Friday and a cover version of The Pointer Sisters song Jump for the film Love Actually They also re recorded Some Kind of Miracle which was originally intended to be the fourth single from the album before it was scrapped in favour of Jump These four tracks alongside an altered mix of Life Got Cold would eventually surface on a reissued version of Sound of the Underground which was released on 17 November 2003 Music and lyrics editSound of the Underground takes influence from a number of 1980s genres such as synthpop power pop and new wave and 1990s styles like big beat drum and bass and garage 13 The album received comparisons to girl groups such as Bananarama The Bangles and Spice Girls 12 14 15 Similarities to Kylie Minogue and Madonna were also noted 15 16 A majority of the songs make use of guitars and electronic beats The rise of indie rock also inspired Brian Higgins to blur the edges between commercial music and so called indie music 11 He continued pop music was on its backside and indie music was about to rise through The Strokes and everything else We were an independent company and we were as indie as the other bands around us The guitar riff on No Good Advice is very very similar to the riff on the track Michael by Franz Ferdinand 11 It was said that the album s lyrics were curiously insistent upon Girls Aloud s musical credibility and autonomy of thought 17 Higgins said that No Good Advice reflected his general mood of failure after a special deal between Xenomania and London Records fell through in 2000 and about persisting in spite of what people told him to do or not to do 18 Life Got Cold was labelled surprisingly poignant 19 Songs edit Sound of the Underground which opens the album drew comparisons to Fatboy Slim 17 20 It was labelled an enticing blend of spiky guitars and Fatboy Slim beats topped off with an irresistibly catchy chorus 20 Sound of the Underground was further described as a mechanistic sashay of twangy surf guitar and sultry gang vocals Girls Aloud explodes like a five headed Kylie Minogue 21 No Good Advice was labelled a disco track with guitar a cross between Blondie and The Bangles 14 Unlike many other songs it was said to be not obsessed with trying to be a cutting edge club hit with at least three different killer hooks welded together that borrowed heavily from the 1980s 22 Some Kind of Miracle which is a breezy summer pop song about trying to bag a guy follows 16 The Xenomania production had layered vocals with its slow tempo despite being more formulaic 22 The song was compared to a 21st century Bangles as well as former Spice Girls member and Popstars The Rivals judge Geri Halliwell 15 23 All I Need All I Don t was described as a Kylie type tune set to squelchy techno as well as a disco funk workout with traces of Cameo and Bedtime Stories vintage Madonna 15 16 Life Got Cold the album s first ballad and third single was a late addition to the album completed by Xenomania shortly before the album s release 24 The song received attention because of similarities between the guitar riff of Life Got Cold and that of the Oasis hit Wonderwall 1995 25 26 Warner Chappell Music has since credited Oasis songwriter Noel Gallagher 27 The song was called a charming ballad that was a sweet but slightly sad pop song 22 The song begins with a rap 16 Mars Attack produced by Betty Boo and the Beatmasters is hip hop referencing surf punk 15 Stop a Xenomania production sung entirely by Nadine Coyle apart from the chorus starts like the Skids Into the Valley but gets sultry instead of surreal 15 The album s eighth track Girls Allowed was co written by Westlife member Brian McFadden It was described as both Basement Jaxx meets Spice Girls and Donna Summer meets Dannii Minogue 16 19 Forever and a Night was described as a soppy love song earmarked as a Christmas single 16 but slated for sounding like every girl group slushy song ever written 19 Love Hate another song crafted by Xenomania lays vocals over garage beats 16 A second contribution from Betty Boo and the Beatmasters Boogie Down Love follows It was said that it mixes the hook of Blondie s Call Me with the bells from Rapture 15 as well as being deemed electro stomping 28 Don t Want You Back was co written by Anders Bagge who also wrote Samantha Mumba s Gotta Tell You which bears similarities It was labelled as love song in which Girls Aloud are swooning over bois sic 29 White Lies was co written and produced by Tim Kellett a former member of The Durutti Column Simply Red and Olive The original UK edition of the album featured two bonus tracks Love Bomb another Betty Boo collaboration was compared to Boo s Where Are You Baby 29 Everything You Ever Wanted borrows its opening line from The Rolling Stones 16 In December 2003 the album was re released with the omission of Don t Want You Back and the bonus tracks Three new songs appeared instead Jump a cover of song Jump for My Love by The Pointer Sisters was recorded for the soundtrack to Love Actually 2003 Cheryl Cole noted in Girls Aloud s autobiography Dreams That Glitter Our Story 2008 that the single was the point when we realized everything we d been doing was quite down and moody and that s not what people wanted You Freak Me Out is a pop rock song that was written and recorded specifically for the Disney film Freaky Friday 2003 30 Also included was Girls Aloud s cover of Girls on Film originally a Duran Duran classic that originally appeared as a B side to Life Got Cold Release and promotion editSound of the Underground was released in Ireland on 23 May 2003 and in the United Kingdom and European countries three days later through Polydor Records and Universal Music Group The international versions of the album exclude the bonus tracks Love Bomb and Everything You Ever Wanted A reissue of Sound of the Underground was released on 17 November 2003 It replaced the original bonus tracks and Don t Want You Back with three new songs Jump You Freak Me Out and Girls on Film The radio edit of Life Got Cold and a remix of Some Kind of Miracle also replaced the original versions Originally the album would be promoted with a tour with their fellow Popstars The Rivals contestants however the tour was cancelled due to poor ticket sales Instead the group promoted the album on their What Will the Neighbours Say Tour 2005 along with their second studio album What Will the Neighbours Say 2004 Sound of the Underground and other Girls Aloud releases were made available for sale on the US iTunes Store on 26 June 2007 through Interscope Records On 26 March 2023 it was reported that the remaining members of Girls Aloud are to share unreleased tracks from the archives to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the album 31 On 28 April 2023 the band released the promotional single Sound Of The Underground Alternative Vocal Mix revealed the tracklisting for the forthcoming album reissue and released a new 4k version of the original music video The 2023 reissue will be available on vinyl for the very first time 32 Singles edit Sound of the Underground Girls Aloud s debut single was released on 16 December 2002 Competing against the Popstars The Rivals boyband One True Voice they used a combative Buy girls bye boys slogan to persuade the public to buy their single 33 Sound of the Underground received a positive response from most music critics The music video was shot in a London warehouse just days after Girls Aloud s formation in the last week of competition of Popstars The Rivals Sound of the Underground debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart and spent four consecutive weeks at number one 6 earning a platinum certification in March 2003 34 No Good Advice was released five months later in May 2003 In 2003 the song won the Popjustice 20 Music Prize awarded to the best British pop single of the past year The video for No Good Advice features the members of Girls Aloud clad in metallic silver futuristic outfits which can also be seen on the cover of this album The song debuted at number two The third single was intended to be Some Kind of Miracle but was changed to fan favourite Life Got Cold The music video depicts the band members in stunted movement wandering around an abandoned city setting The song failed to achieve the success of Girls Aloud s first two singles peaking at number three Some Kind of Miracle was replaced again this time with their cover of Jump recorded for the Love Actually soundtrack The music video for Jump was made to appear like it was intertwined with Love Actually The song debuted at number two on the UK Singles Chart 35 You Freak Me Out was due for release with Girls Aloud even performing it on television however Girls Aloud proceeded to record their second studio album What Will the Neighbours Say Critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 21 BBC Music positive 28 BBC News positive 22 Drowned in Sound 8 10 29 Entertainment ie nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 20 The Guardian nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 17 RTE ie nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 19 Yahoo Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 15 Sound of the Underground received generally favourable reviews from music critics The Times noted that Sound of the Underground is packed with everything you want from a pop record attitude aggression guitars disco beats and steals from Phil Spector 16 Yahoo Music said that Girls Aloud have made a seriously fine debut album OK so it s not Blonde on Blonde Innervisions or OK Computer but it may well be another Spice 15 A number of reviews noted the high quality of the album compared to output from other reality show contestants 15 It was said that Girls Aloud are on the better end of the commercial pop scale 19 Ian Youngs of BBC News bluntly stated Reality pop is not supposed to be this good 22 BBC Music said time will tell if they are set to take the mantle as the new Spice Girls or slip rapidly down pops dumper as the new Hear Say But their debut album is sure to shut up at least some of their cynics myself included 28 However many reviewers agreed that the album s quality declined towards the end 16 20 22 28 RTE ie wrote After a while it does start sounding a bit samey but for a manufactured pop album this is a fairly standard fault 19 The ballads featured on Sound of the Underground were slated 16 17 Andrew Lynch of entertainment ie said that the ill advised attempt to show off their sensitive side results in some truly dismal ballads 20 Commercial performance editThe album debuted at number two on the UK Albums Chart behind Justin Timberlake s debut studio album Justified 2002 Selling 38 000 copies in its first week 36 it went on to sell 300 000 achieving a platinum certificate their first of many Spending only eighteen weeks in the charts the album was later re released to feature new songs 37 This release only managed to peak at number forty two but is now the only commercial print of the album The album was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry BPI on 6 June 2003 38 It was certified platinum five months later 39 Track listing editCredits adapted from the liner notes of Sound of the Underground Original versionNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Sound of the Underground Miranda CooperBrian HigginsNiara ScarlettHigginsXenomania3 412 No Good Advice CooperHigginsNick ColerLisa CowlingLene NystromHigginsXenomania3 483 Some Kind of Miracle CooperHigginsCowlingTim PowellShawn LeeEdele LynchHigginsXenomaniaJeremy Wheatley3 094 All I Need All I Don t Ava KnoxChris PetersDrew PetersPeters amp Peters3 385 Life Got Cold CooperHigginsColerCowlingNoel GallagherHigginsXenomania3 576 Mars Attack Alison ClarksonPaul CarterAmanda GlanfieldBetty Boo and the Beatmasters3 287 Stop CooperHigginsMatt GrayHigginsXenomania3 358 Girls Allowed Brian McFaddenJonathan ShortenGraham Stack3 269 Forever and a Night Gary MillerMark MuellerAndy GoldmarkMillerBrian Rawling3 1710 Love Hate HigginsScarlettEve BickerHigginsXenomania4 4011 Boogie Down Love ClarksonCarterGlanfieldBetty Boo and the Beatmasters3 2212 Don t Want You Back Anders BaggeMichelle BellArnthor BirgissonArnthor amp BAG3 1913 White Lies Tim KellettSandria NordstromKellett4 00 UK bonus tracksNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length14 Love Bomb ClarksonMike WardShaun WardBetty Boo and the Beatmasters2 5515 Everything You Ever Wanted Steve AndersonSteve LeeLisa GreeneAnderson2 53Total length 53 44 20th anniversary edition disc 2No TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Sound of the Underground alternative vocal mix CooperHigginsScarletHigginsXenomania3 392 Jump from Love Actually Steve MitchellMarti SharronGary SkardinaHigginsXenomania3 393 Girls on Film Duran DuranXenomania3 404 Lights Music Camera Action Nigel LowisPaul MeehanLeeLowisMeehan3 115 On a Round Karen PooleHenrik KorpiMathias JohanssonKorpi amp BlackCell2 426 No Good Advice parental advisory version CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsXenomania3 467 Sacred Trust Bee GeesIan Curnow5 008 Life Got Cold radio edit CooperHigginsColerCowlingGallagherHigginsXenomania3 299 Grease from Greasemania Barry GibbBetty Boo amp The Beatmasters3 2710 Hopelessly Devoted to You from Greasemania John FarrarStack3 1411 Some Kind of Miracle new mix CooperHigginsCowlingPowellLeeLynchHigginsXenomaniaWheatley3 1912 You Freak Me Out from Freaky Friday CooperHigginsPowellNystromHigginsXenomania3 0513 No Good Advice original demo CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsXenomania3 5214 Stay Another Day Tony MortimerDominic HawkenRob KeanDenis IngoldsbyAndrew MurrayChristian Ballard4 20Total length 50 34 20th anniversary edition disc 3No TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Sound of the Underground instrumental breakdown mix CooperHigginsScarletHigginsXenomania3 392 Girls Allowed almighty radio edit from Love Actually McFaddenShortenStack3 393 Some Kind of Miracle illicit mix CooperHigginsCowlingPowellLeeLynchHigginsXenomania3 404 Life Got Cold Stella Browne vocal mix CooperHigginsColerCowlingGallagherHigginsXenomania3 115 No Good Advice Dreadzone vocal mix CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsXenomaniaJon Shave2 426 Jump Almighty vocal mix Steve MitchellMarti SharronGary SkardinaHigginsXenomania3 467 Sound of the Underground Flip amp Fill remix CooperHigginsScarletHigginsWheatley5 008 Life Got Cold 29 Palms remix edit CooperHigginsColerCowlingGallagherHigginsXenomania3 299 No Good Advice Flip amp Fill remix CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsWhealeyXenomaniaShave3 2710 Jump Flip amp Fill remix Steve MitchellMarti SharronGary Skardina 3 1411 No Good Advice Doublefunk vocal mix CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsXenomaniaShave3 1912 Girls Allowed Almighty vocal mix McFaddenShortenStack3 05Total length 76 00 UK 2003 re issueNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Sound of the Underground CooperHigginsScarlettHigginsXenomania3 412 No Good Advice CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromHigginsXenomania3 483 Life Got Cold radio edit CooperHigginsColerCowlingGallagherHigginsXenomania3 574 Jump from Love Actually Steve MitchellMarti SharronGary SkardinaHigginsXenomania3 395 Some Kind of Miracle new mix CooperHigginsCowlingPowellLeeLynchHigginsXenomaniaWheatley3 196 All I Need All I Don t KnoxC PetersD PetersPeters amp Peters3 387 Mars Attack ClarksonCarterGlanfieldBetty Boo and the Beatmasters3 288 You Freak Me Out from Freaky Friday CooperHigginsPowellNystromHigginsXenomania3 019 Girls Allowed McFaddenShortenStack3 2610 Forever and a Night MillerMuellerGoldmarkMillerRawling3 1711 Love Hate HigginsScarlettBickerHigginsXenomania4 4012 Boogie Down Love ClarksonCarterGlanfieldBetty Boo and the Beatmasters3 2213 Stop CooperHigginsGrayXenomania3 3514 White Lies KellettNordstromKellett3 0615 Girls on Film United Kingdom bonus track Duran DuranXenomania3 4216 Sound of the Underground music video CooperHigginsScarlettXenomaniaXenomania3 4617 No Good Advice music video CooperHigginsColerCowlingNystromXenomania3 5418 Life Got Cold music video CooperHigginsColerCowlingGallagherXenomania4 05Total length 55 04 Covers and other appearances Jump is a cover of The Pointer Sisters Girls on Film is a cover of the UK band Duran Duran The track Girls on Film appeared as a B side to their single Life Got Cold The tracks Love Bomb and Girls Allowed appeared as B sides to their single Jump You Freak Me Out was recorded specially for the film Freaky Friday Charts editWeekly charts edit 2003 weekly chart performance for Sound of the Underground Chart 2003 PeakpositionDutch Albums Album Top 100 40 53Greek Albums IFPI 41 20Irish Albums IRMA 42 6UK Albums OCC 43 22004 weekly chart performance for Sound of the Underground Chart 2004 PeakpositionUK Albums OCC 44 422007 weekly chart performance for Sound of the Underground Chart 2007 PeakpositionUK Albums OCC 44 672023 weekly chart performance for Sound of the Underground Chart 2023 PeakpositionUK Albums OCC 44 42 Year end charts edit 2003 year end chart performance for Sound of the Underground Chart 2003 PositionUK Albums OCC 76Certifications editCertifications for Sound of the Underground Region Certification Certified units salesUnited Kingdom BPI 46 Platinum 368 000 45 Release history editList of release dates showing region edition s format s label s catalog number and reference s Region Date Edition s Format s Label s Catalog Ref Ireland 23 May 2003 Standard CD digital download Polydor 9865315 47 48 Europe 26 May 2003 Universal Music 9865319United Kingdom Polydor 9865315Ireland 17 November 2003 Reissue 9865961 49 50 United KingdomUnited States 26 June 2007 Standard Digital download Interscope Various 16 June 2023 Deluxe 20th anniversary edition CD digital download streaming vinyl Universal Music Operations 51 References edit Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Deluxe Edition Apple Music Retrieved 28 April 2023 Popstars girl group picked BBC News 2 December 2002 Retrieved 28 February 2009 Robinson Peter 2009 Sound of the Underground The Singles Boxset Booklet Girls Aloud London England Fascination Records p 7 a b Girls Aloud Is it really a cover CBBC Newsround BBC 21 December 2002 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Girls Aloud top festive chart BBC News 23 December 2002 Retrieved 24 February 2008 a b Sound of the Underground Official Charts Company Retrieved 28 February 2009 Neil McCormick 13 August 2009 Xenomania how to write a hit song The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 16 August 2009 Retrieved 24 November 2009 Emily MacKay November 2009 End of Decade Sound of the Overground NME Retrieved 3 December 2009 Sylvia Patterson 25 March 2008 EXCLUSIVE How Girls Aloud beat Louis Walsh at his own game The Lipster Archived from the original on 29 August 2008 Retrieved 27 March 2009 Pete Paphides 26 October 2006 The Trojan horses of pop The Times London Retrieved 27 March 2009 a b c Andreas Soteriou 13 April 2010 Brian Higgins The Pop Don t Stop Ponystep Archived from the original on 27 April 2010 Retrieved 13 April 2010 a b Neil Wilkes 30 April 2003 Girls Aloud prepare for album release Digital Spy Retrieved 31 July 2009 Finney Tim 14 December 2006 Girls Aloud Sugababes The Sound of Girls Aloud Overloaded Pitchfork Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2010 a b New Girls Aloud single set for May Raidio Teilifis Eireann 27 March 2003 Retrieved 28 February 2009 a b c d e f g h i j Angus Batey 30 May 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Yahoo Music Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 31 July 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k Lisa Verrico 23 May 2003 Hello girls The Times London Retrieved 31 July 2009 a b c d Alexis Petridis 23 May 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground The Guardian London Retrieved 11 April 2010 Ben Thompson 18 July 2004 Heart of the country home of the hits The Guardian London Retrieved 24 February 2008 a b c d e f Anne Louise Foley 13 June 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Raidio Teilifis Eireann Retrieved 28 February 2009 a b c d e Andrew Lynch 4 June 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground The Irish Times Entertainment ie Retrieved 28 February 2009 a b Johnny Loftus Sound of the Underground AllMusic Retrieved 28 February 2009 a b c d e f Ian Youngs 23 May 2003 Girls Aloud trounce pop rivals BBC News Retrieved 28 February 2009 Gemma Pike 15 May 2003 Girls aim to make a noise Runcorn and Widnes Weekly News Retrieved 1 December 2012 Robinson Peter 2009 Life Got Cold The Singles Boxset Booklet Girls Aloud London England Fascination Records p 11 Blu secure at number one in midweeks CBBC Newsround BBC 20 August 2003 Retrieved 28 February 2009 Girls Aloud Life Got Cold Tourdates co uk 18 August 2003 Archived from the original on 28 September 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2009 Life Got Cold Warner Chappell Music Warner Music Group Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Retrieved 2 November 2008 a b c d Jacqueline Hodges 11 June 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground BBC Music Retrieved 1 August 2009 a b c Adie Nunn 4 June 2003 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Drowned in Sound Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Retrieved 13 April 2010 Neil Wilkes 6 November 2003 Another movie track for Girls Aloud Digital Spy Retrieved 1 August 2009 Girls Aloud to release new music to mark 20th anniversary of Sound Of The Underground NME 26 March 2023 Retrieved 28 April 2023 Skinner Tom 27 April 2023 Girls Aloud announce Sound Of The Underground 20th anniversary reissue NME Retrieved 28 April 2023 Sullivan Caroline 16 December 2002 Females with attitude The Guardian London Retrieved 24 February 2008 Certified Awards Sound of the Underground British Phonographic Industry 14 March 2003 Retrieved 24 February 2008 dead link Singer Jackson tops album chart BBC News 23 November 2003 Retrieved 25 February 2008 girls aloud rule girls aloud DISCOGRAPHY Sound Of The Underground Amazon Music Certified Awards Sound of the Underground Gold British Phonographic Industry 6 June 2003 Retrieved 24 February 2008 dead link Certified Awards Sound of the Underground Platinum British Phonographic Industry 28 November 2003 Archived from the original on 18 December 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Dutchcharts nl Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground in Dutch Hung Medien Greekcharts com Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Hung Medien GFK Chart Track Albums Week 22 2003 Chart Track IRMA Girls Aloud Artist Official Charts UK Albums Chart a b c Girls Aloud Artist Official Charts UK Albums Chart Caulfield Keith 21 March 2013 Girls Aloud A Whole Lotta Chart History Billboard Retrieved 21 March 2013 British album certifications British Phonographic Industry Selectalbumsin the Format field SelectPlatinumin the Certification field Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground CD Album Enh at Discogs Discogs 26 May 2003 Retrieved 12 July 2017 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Amazon Music Amazon Music 26 May 2003 Retrieved 12 July 2017 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground CD Album Enh S Edition at Discogs Discogs 17 November 2003 Retrieved 12 July 2017 Sound of the Underground Amazon Music Amazon Retrieved 12 July 2017 Smith Carl 26 April 2023 Girls Aloud Sound of the Underground Deluxe Edition 20th anniversary album re release tracklist formats and more Official Charts Retrieved 28 April 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sound of the Underground album amp oldid 1175164055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.