Last updated: 4 hours ago
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 (<a href="spotify:artist:25tu0d8Po5c4IVXsZnXUU8">Gina</a>, Hannah, Charlotte, Andrea) sang a combination of originals (namely their hit "Keep Love Together") and retro covers (namely <a href="spotify:artist:7xkAwz0bQTGDSbkofyQt3U">Belinda Carlisle</a>'s "Heaven Is a Place on Earth" and <a href="spotify:artist:2aS6jYh7ysTL1ZUsHneNgM">Berlin</a>'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 <a href="spotify:artist:0uq5PttqEjj3IH1bzwcrXF">Spice Girls</a>], '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. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi
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