Spice Girls Reunion: “There Is an Ongoing Discussion Among the Girls,” Source Says | Eonline.com
This. MUST. Happen. Especially if the world is going to end this year.
Posts tagged with Geri Halliwell
This. MUST. Happen. Especially if the world is going to end this year.
Forget the #London2012 Olympics. Forget Viva Forever:The Musical. (Well, actually, don’t forget either of those, because they’re both going to be #major…). Rumors are now swirling in the tabloids (thanks to @OfficialMelB) that the #SpiceGirls are set to perform at HRH QEII’s Diamond Jubilee. As fun as that would be, I really can’t see Lizzie slamming it to the left OR shaking it to the right.
Whatever the truth behind these rumors, may I make a suggestion? Please accompany anything with new material. I love all of the classics, but I’d really like to hear something new. Besides, the Spice Girls signed a five album deal with Virgin. Excluding solo projects, to date, Virgin has only officially released four albums. Let’s crank out one more! :)
This is any Anglophile’s dream come true.
Promotional single covers for “If You Wanna Have Some Fun,” “Tell Me Why,” and “Weekend Love.” All three songs were set to be released as singles in various parts of the world before the Spice Girls would eventually abandon promotion of Forever. The promotional CD singles were released to media outlets prematurely. If you’ve been able to get you hands on them, they are quite the valuable collectors’ item. I have “If You Wanna Have Some Fun” and “Tell Me Why,” but I can’t seem to find a copy of “Weekend Love” anywhere. If you have any idea — that would make a fantastic Christmas gift… wink, wink; nudge, nudge.
This is the ad that was placed in The Stage, circa March 1994, in which one Victoria Adams, Melanie Brown, Melanie Chisholm, Geri Halliwell and Michelle Stephenson would answer, forming the all-girl pop group, Touch. Stephenson would later be replaced by Emma Bunton, creating the Spice Girls. Nearly 17 years later, Viva Forever, the West End musical inspired by the Spice Girls music, written by Jennifer Saunders and produced by Judy Craymer, focuses on the idea of fame and how one achieves it.