Club Mix

Club Mix is a two-disc album remixed by British musician/DJ Sonique and released in 2001.

Track listing

Disc one

  • "Right One" - Silicone Soul
  • "Guitar Track"
  • "Mind Made Up" (Robbie Rivera's Dark Dub)
  • "Travelling On" (Koma and Bones Remix) - Kevin Beber, Keenan & Tamra
  • "Slippery Track" (Dano's Pre-Flight Dub) - Mood II Swing
  • "10 in 01" (Paul Van Dyk's Members Only Mix) - Members of Mayday
  • "Scram"
  • "New Year's Dub"
  • "Groove No. 1" (Original Solaris Mix)
  • "Can't Take the Feeling" (Fab Club Version)
  • "Struggle for Pleasure" (Filterheadz Remix) - Minimalistix
  • "Black Sun" (Total Eclipse Mix) - Jamie Anderson
  • "Musak" (Steve Lawler Remix) - Trisco
  • "Let's Beuk"
  • "Even More Bounce" - Silvio Ecomo
  • "Secrets" (Ian Wilkie's C-Bit Dub) - Mutiny UK
  • "Inner Laugh" (James Holden Remix) - Roland Klinkenberg
  • "Days Go By" (Lucien Foot Remix) - Dirty Vegas
  • "Tantric"
  • "Café del Mar '98" (Original Three 'N One Mix/It Feels So Good Acappella) - Energy 52 & Sonique
  • Disc two

  • "Destiny Calls" (Peak Energy Mix) - JDS
  • "Storm" (Jan Driver Remix) - Storm
  • S Club 7

    S Club 7 is an English pop group created by former Spice Girls manager Simon Fuller consisting of members Tina Barrett, Paul Cattermole, Rachel Stevens, Jo O'Meara, Hannah Spearritt, Bradley McIntosh, and Jon Lee. The group was formed in 1998 and quickly rose to fame by starring in their own BBC television series, Miami 7. In their five years together, S Club 7 had four UK number-one singles, one UK number-one album, and a string of hits throughout Europe, including a top-ten single in the United States, Asia, Latin America and Africa. They recorded four studio albums, released 11 singles and went on to sell over 10 million albums worldwide. Their first album, S Club (1999), had a strong 1990s pop sound, similar to many artists of their time. However, through the course of their career, their musical approach changed to a more dance and R&B sound which is heard mostly in their final album, Seeing Double (2002).

    S Club 8

    S Club 8, formerly S Club Juniors, were a spin-off of the British pop group S Club 7. The group's members, Frankie Sandford, Jay Asforis, Daisy Evans, Calvin Goldspink, Stacey McClean, Aaron Renfree, Hannah Richings, and Rochelle Wiseman were all in their early teens or younger when they were chosen from thousands of hopefuls on the television series S Club Search in 2001.

    The group was originally intended only as a support act at Wembley Arena on S Club 7's S Club Carnival Tour. The group also had its own documentary series, S Club Juniors: The Story.

    History

    2001–03: Formation, Carnival tour and Together

    S Club Juniors was formed in 2001 through a reality television show. The auditions were aired on CBBC. S Club Juniors' appearances was considered a success and consequently 19 Entertainment, the management company that had created S Club 7 and auditioned S Club Juniors, decided they should perform as a support act at all of the venues on the tour. The juniors made their first television appearance on Children in Need on 16 November 2001.

    Firestorm (novel)

    Firestorm is a science fiction novel by David Sherman and Dan Cragg. It is set in the 25th Century in Sherman and Cragg's StarFist saga. "Firestorm more concludes the Ravenette campaign for the 34th fist and the Force Recon (introduced in Backshot, and expands in Recoil, two books of a three book sub series).

    Reception

    Publishers Weekly in their review said "readers looking for accounts of futuristic combat that depict realistically the psychology of men in battle need look no further." Roland Green reviewing for Booklist said "more of the usual good stuff for military sf buffs from two master depicters of grunts at war, which Sherman and Cragg themselves once were."

    Notes


    Firestorm (anime)

    Firestorm (ファイアーストーム) is a Japanese anime series co-created by Gerry Anderson and John Needham. The series combines CGI animation for mecha and traditional cel animation for characters. Despite high-quality animation and an emphasis on futuristic vehicles traditional to Anderson productions (such as Thunderbirds), the series was not warmly received in Japan. Series availability in other countries has been limited.

    Plot

    By the year 2104, the nations of Earth have finally achieved world peace. However, that peace is threatened by a new worldwide terrorist organization called Black Orchid. To counter this threat, the United Nations has created a military peacekeeping force called Storm Force. Each Storm Force unit (8 total) acts independently, operating primarily from a large twin-hulled submarine. As the series opens, a new elite unit is formed called Storm Force 9, which is assigned a special mission code-named "Firestorm."

    Early in the series, the Firestorm team discover that Black Orchid is secretly a front for a worldwide invasion of outer-space aliens who can disguise themselves as humans. The aliens have developed a drug which will turn humans into their mindless slaves, and scheme to put the drug into our water supply.

    Tonight (Danny Byrd song)

    "Tonight" is a song by drum and bass DJ, producer and musician Danny Byrd featuring fellow Hospital Records artist Netsky. It is the fourth single released from his third album Rave Digger. The song was released on 6 February 2011 for digital download and on 12" vinyl on 7 February 2011. The single peaked at number 91 on the UK Singles Chart and number 11 on the UK Dance Chart.

    Track listings

    Chart performance

    Release history

    References

    External links

  • Official website

  • Tonight (1957 TV series)

    Tonight was a BBC television current affairs programme presented by Cliff Michelmore and broadcast in Britain live on weekday evenings from February 1957 to 1965. The producers were the future Controller of BBC1 Donald Baverstock and the future Director-General of the BBC Alasdair Milne. The audience was typically seven million.

    BBC TV background

    Tonight was, like Six-Five Special, created by the BBC to fill in the 'Toddlers' Truce' closed period between 6.00pm and 7.00pm (the 'Truce' was officially abolished only a few days before Tonight was first broadcast). Tonight began broadcasting from the Viking studio in Kensington, known by the BBC as 'studio M'. It eventually transferred to one of the main studios in Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush, west London.

    Content and style

    The programme covered the arts and sciences as well as topical matters and current affairs. There was a mixture of incisive and light-hearted items: unscripted studio interviews, by Derek Hart, Geoffrey Johnson-Smith and Michelmore himself; and filmed reports. Reporters included Alan Whicker, Fyfe Robertson, Kenneth Allsop, Chris Brasher, Julian Pettifer, Brian Redhead and Polly Elwes.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×