Description
Bananarama's tenth studio album, 2009's "Viva", remains their most electro sounding collection to date. It was a collaboration with celebrated producer, composer, songwriter and remixer Ian Masterson, whose credits include work with Girls Aloud, Kylie Minogue and the Pet Shop Boys. .His instinctive grasp of Bananarama's sound, spirit and energy resulted in some monumental feel-good pop-dance music. Amongst the album's many highlights is 'Seventeen', which unfolds as an undulating, low-slung electro number with the vocals recalling the all-consuming thrill of first time love. There's also the seductive vibe of the track 'Extraordinary' and the unforgettable lead single 'Love Comes', an out and out celebratory dancefloor smash! The album is a veritable masterclass in melodic, upbeat pop. It was also the album on which Sara and Keren both started to play bass guitar again after a 17 year break!."Viva" originated as a discofied cover versions album, but Sara and Keren changed their mind on this approach half way through recording, in response to their, then, record company actively preferring their original compositions to the array of disco styled cover versions. Just three of these originally chosen cover versions made it through to the final track listing of 'Viva'. 'Rapture' had been originally recorded by trance act iiO in 2001 and had been both a dance floor and chart smash hit throughout Europe and the United States. The second cover version included was Bananarama's inventive take on the 1978 disco classic 'The Runner' by The Three Degrees and an earlier pop track 'S-S-S-Single Bed' from 1976 was the last cover version selected. This had originally been recorded by Fox. .Four additional cover version rarities, originally made available as either bonus 'download only' album tracks or as B-sides on the related singles, have also been included in this deluxe expanded edition. These were 'Voyage, Voyage', the 1986 worldwide, anthemic, Europop hit by French singer Desireless; Bryan Adams' pop/ro