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Girls Aloud's provocative attire received attention. Dave Simpson of The Guardian gave the show three stars out of five. He chastised the covers, saying Girls Aloud "fare best when they are playing their own songs." [11] Lisa Verrico of The Times also awarded the concert three stars out of five and shared a similar point of view to Simpson. She ...
Ten: The Hits Tour (also known as The 10th Anniversary Tour) was the sixth concert tour by British-Irish girl group Girls Aloud in support of the greatest hits album Ten (2012). It was the group's first tour in four years, following a three-year hiatus. [2] [3] The tour ranked on Pollstar's annual "Top 100 Mid Year Worldwide Tours". It earned ...
Girls Aloud played a number of festivals and open-air concerts over the summer. They were scheduled to perform at the Beamish Summer Festival, held at Beamish Hall in August as part of a two-day event organised by Hope 4 Kidz. [11] However, due to weather problems, the concert was cancelled. Girls Aloud also played at Pop in the Park and 2008's ...
Girls Aloud reunite for the first in 11 years (Tom Dymond/Shutterstock) They reunited with new music for their 10th anniversary in 2012, while a second reunion was planned for their 20th ...
The Los Angeles FireAid benefit concert brought together 27 musical acts to raise money for short-term relief efforts and long-term initiatives in Southern California in the wake of January's ...
The Girls Aloud Show was the seventh concert tour by English-Northern Irish girl group Girls Aloud, with 30 shows across Ireland and United Kingdom.The tour marked the group's first tour since 2013's Ten: The Hits and their first as a quartet, following the death of Sarah Harding in 2021.
The FireAid benefit concert, the one-night-only event bringing together 27 musicians, was held Thursday night to help fund efforts to rebuild communities impacted by the Los Angeles wildfires.
Pasquale Rotella, CEO of Insomniac events — which puts on big-name EDM festivals like Electric Daisy Carnival — agreed with Yousaf, telling HuffPost that there’s simply more men on the production side of EDM. “There are a lot of female agents, managers and publicists in the industry but most of them are pushing male artists,” he said.