Scottish actor, comedian. Star of Cracker & The Harry Potter movies. |
ibiza classifieds |
Female pop band |
Described as 'The Greatest Living British Explorer', having walked across the South Pole. |
Donna was an original host on MTV and the Big Breakfast. |
Legendary |
Politician |
Very recognisable and amiable former England rugby international. |
Capital Radio DJ & presenter of Sunday morning show T4 on Channel 4. |
Former presenter of The London Programme on ITV. Now candidate for Mayor of London. |
Tornado Pilot shot down, imprisoned and torturned during Gulf war. |
Entrepreneurial businesswoman who sees the bigger picture of globalisation, as well as the nitty gritty of running businesses. |
After Dinner Speakers: Dubstar, Kirsty Lang, The Rt.Hon Lord Roy Hattersley
Dubstar were formed in 1994 when Steve Hillier (songwriting/programming) met Chris Wilkie (guitar) at a club in Newcastle where he was DJing. They auditioned for singers and eventually recruited student Sarah Blackwood (b. Halifax, Yorkshire, England) after she sang over two acoustic songs for them. They began to write and record songs together, keen to produce a sound that was authentically "modern". As Wilkie summarized: "We didn't really know where we were going when we started, but it certainly wasn't backwards." Their first demo tape, which secured a contract with Food Records, included a cover version of Billy Bragg's "St Swithin's Day". The band's debut album, Disgraceful, mixed club-orientated beats in addition to strong hooks and pop dynamics, earning several comparisons to Saint Etienne. Despite critical acclaim, it failed to produce a breakthrough, although it contained the Top 40 single "Stars". That changed with the UK Top 20 success of "Not So Manic Now", which prompted a reissue of "Stars" in early 1996. Their second album proper, Goodbye, contained more bittersweet songs and spawned two hit singles in "Cathedral Park" and "No More Talk".