Disney So Hot Summer





Did you mean:
Disney So Hot Summer
Disne So Hot Sumer












Girls Aloud
From left to right: Kimberley Walsh, Cheryl Cole, Sarah Harding, Nicola Roberts, Nadine Coyle
From left to right: Kimberley Walsh, Cheryl Cole, Sarah Harding, Nicola Roberts, Nadine Coyle
Background information
OriginLondon, England
Genre(s)Pop
Instrument(s)Singing
Years active2002–present
Label(s)Polydor, Fascination
Associated
acts
Louis Walsh, One True Voice, Phixx
Websitewww.girlsaloud.co.uk
Members
Cheryl Cole
Nadine Coyle
Sarah Harding
Nicola Roberts
Kimberley Walsh

Girls Aloud are a British girl group created by ITV1 talent show Popstars: The Rivals in 2002. The group, consisting of Cheryl Cole (née Tweedy), Nadine Coyle, Sarah Harding, Nicola Roberts and Kimberley Walsh, has become one of the most successful British pop groups of the decade, with a record-breaking sixteen consecutive Top 10 singles (including three number ones), four platinum albums (including a number one) and record sales in excess of 4.2 million in the UK. They are Smash Hits Poll Winners, have won a TMF Award and have been nominated for a BRIT Award.

Their British production team Xenomania are well-known for embracing various influences, from Electronica, House, Power Pop and Dance, among others. Indeed, the music of Girls Aloud ranges from the distinctly 1980s sound of "No Good Advice" and "Jump" through the 60s sound of "Love Machine" to the more futuristic sound of " The Show" and "Sexy! No No No..."

Girls Aloud hold the record for the shortest time between formation and reaching number one in the UK Charts (with their platinum-selling début single "Sound of the Underground"), and have since become one of the few reality television groups to have had continued success. Guinness World Records list them as the Most Successful Reality TV Group in the 2007 edition, and also the Most Consecutive Top Ten Entries in the UK by a Female Group in the 2008 edition.

For a contemporary pop group manufactured on reality television they have received unprecedented praise from broadsheet newspapers and the rock music press, with publications including the Observer Music Monthly, and the NME giving their music rave reviews, with The Observer calling "Biology" the single of the decade.