Soda Club music video Go Go Crazy

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth

Gwen Stefani - Soda Club - La Bouche music video What You Waiting For? - Someday (M.A.S.H Remix) - In Your Life (Dezrok Club Edit)

Soda Club music video Someday

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth (Pascal Club Edit)

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth

Soda Club music video Keep Love Together (Original Version)

Soda Club music video Take My Breath Away (Flip N' Fill Remix Edit)

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth

Soda Club music video Someday (M.A.S.H Remix)

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth

Soda Club music video Take My Breath Away

Soda Club - Pascale Feat. Karen Parry - Aurora Feat. Naimee Coleman music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth - I Think We're Alone Now (Flip 'N' Fill Edit) - Ordinary World (Above And Beyond Remix)

Soda Club music video Take My Breath Away (Flip N' Fill Remix Edit)

Soda Club music video Someday

Soda Club music video Keep Love Together

Soda Club music video Heaven Is A Place On Earth

Soda Club music video Take My Breath Away

Soda Club music video Keep Love Together (Divine Inspiration Video)

Soda Club Feat. Ashley Jade music video Ain't No Love (Ain't No Use)

Soda Club were one of the more commercial trance acts to emerge during the mid-2000s. Comprised of four strikingly attractive young women, the British quartet (Gina, Hannah, Charlotte, Andrea) sang a combination of originals (namely their hit "Keep Love Together") and retro covers (namely Belinda Carlisle's "Heaven Is a Place on Earth" and Berlin's "Take My Breath Away"). These songs were performed in the fashion of progressive trance ( trademark dramatic breakdowns and all ) yet were structured like pop songs. Moreover, each of their singles was made available in both standard (single edits for radio and video) and remixed formats (longer, club-ready mixes for DJs); plus, the model-like ladies starred in some tantalizing videos and were well marketed with a barrage of sexy publicity photos. In mid-2004 Water Music Dance released a full-length album by the group, Anthem Alert, which was a double-disc affair: one disc comprised of songs, the other of numerous videos for the various singles. Given the overtly commercial nature of the group (not one but four beautiful women [à la Spice Girls], '80s pop covers, the eye-candy videos, trance music itself, etc.), critics were unforgiving, which of course is to be expected in such cases, something most fans recognized and couldn't care less about.

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