
One Touch is a Soul & Funk album by Sugababes, originally released in 2000. On Gatefold: 48 pressings tracked.
Sound DNA
- Soul & Funk
- Contemporary R&B
- polished
- sarcastic
- urban
About
There’s never been a British girl band quite like Sugababes. When they first emerged at the turn of the millennium, their insouciant attitude was an achingly cool antidote to the hyperactive maximalism and primary-colored pre-teen pop (think Steps and S Club 7) that had ruled for so long. Sugababes’ coolness came straight from their founding members: Siobhán Donaghy, Mutya Buena, and Keisha Buchanan. Still teenagers (15 and 16) when <i>One Touch</i> was released in 2000, the three had undeniable chemistry. Each had a distinctive voice, as well. Donaghy was angelic, Buchanan was bright and forceful, and Buena delivered the grit and soul. When brought together, it all melted into something akin to aural nirvana. And <i>One Touch</i> was hardly the work of manufactured music industry puppets. Out of the 12 songs on Sugababes’ debut album, the band members cowrote nine—including the distinctive debut single, “Overload.” That song remains a high point for early-2000s British pop: built around a now-iconic bassline and relentlessly shuffling drums, the intricate and windy production is pared back, pushing the group’s vocals forward in the mix. Then, out of nowhere, everything drops out to make room for a surf-guitar solo—only to swing back around for a momentous final chorus and the band’s signature ad-libs. The complexity of “Overload” wasn’t a fluke and, in the decades since its release, the rest of <i>One Touch</i> hasn’t lost any of its unexpected sophistication. The UK garage stylings of “Same Old Story” and the smoky trip-hop of “Lush Life” are still charged with electricity, while the gothic “Run for Cover” is every bit as haunting as it was in 2000: “You never seem to wonder/How much you make me suffer/I speak it from the inside,” the band members sing on the chorus, their harmonies as tight an an impenetrable barrier. Of course, this iteration of the Sugababes—dubbed “the Origibabes“ by fans—would be short-lived: Donaghy left the band in 2001 and was replaced by ex-Atomic Kitten member Heidi Range. Still, the magic of that original lineup would linger, even as the group slowly imploded. Then, in 2013, the founding members reunited, eventually reclaiming the Sugababes moniker. After decades apart, the sacred three were together once more.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1Overload4:35
- 2One Foot In3:24
- 3Same Old Story3:02
- 4Just Let It Go5:00
- 5Look At Me3:57
- 6Soul Sound4:29
- 7One Touch4:18
- 8Lush Life4:25
- 9Real Thing4:03
- 10New Year3:50
- 11Promises3:15
- 12Run For Cover3:47
Credits
Performers
- Skilz 1 SMDARRANGED BY
- Jony RockstarBASS PROGRAMMED BY PERCUSSION
- Chris WatsonGUITAR
- Felix HowardGUITAR KEYBOARDS
- Cameron McVeyKEYBOARDS
- Paul SimmPIANO KEYBOARDS STRINGS
- Michael BrownGUITAR
- Pascal DanaëGUITAR
- Luke SmithKEYBOARDS
- Paul WatsonKEYBOARDS
- Matt RoweKEYBOARDS PROGRAMMED BY DRUM PROGRAMMING
- John ThemisGUITAR
- LamyaBACKING VOCALS
- Xavier BarnettBACKING VOCALS
- Pino PalladinoBASS
- Andrew SmithGUITAR
- Ron TomLEAD GUITAR PROGRAMMED BY
- Mark FrankPROGRAMMED BY
Rare pressing on Gatefold · 48 pressings tracked on Gatefold
