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Lemonescent : ウィキペディア英語版
Lemonescent


Lemonescent were a Scottish girl group formed in 2002. The band consisted of Lisa Rose (2002–2003), Nikki MacLachlan (2002–2004), Sarah Cassidy (2002–2004), Shonagh Strachan (2002–2004), Leona Skimming (2003–2004) and Emma Cassidy (2003–2004).
==History==
Lemonescent came together through auditions for singers held by former Johnny Hates Jazz songwriter/member Iain MacDonald; He had chosen eight girls and then cut down to four with singer and dance champion Lisa Rose Harrison, former waitress Nikki Maclachlan, singer and dancer Sarah Cassidy, and Shonagh Strachan. They were signed to Supertone Records, distributed by Universal Music and came up with the name Lemonescent.
They released their first single "Beautiful" on 17 June 2002 (originally recorded and released by Iain's band Purely Physical in 1991, and originally featured tv presenter Jenny Powell on vocals). The video was filmed at Culzean Castle〔McGrath, Leanne (2002) "HOW TO MAKE A GIRL BAND ; Behind the scenes with Lemonescent", ''Sunday Mail'', 14 April 2002, p. 36〕 by Brighter Pictures, Directed by Gavin Hay. It reached No.70 in the UK Singles Chart.〔 They performed at the Irn Bru Live + Loud festival in 2002.〔Dingwall, John (2002) "192: Lemon fresh ; Scottish quartet's debut is about to take the charts by storm", ''Daily Record'', 14 June 2002, p. 45〕 They released their second single "Swing My Hips (Sex Dance)" on 29 October 2002 accompanied by a raunchy video showing them in tight denim shorts washing a car (inspired by cult film ''Cool Hand Luke''). This performed slightly better peaking at No.48 in the UK charts, and topped ''DJ magazines Beat charts.〔"Lemons hope the fruit of their labours will be a No 1", ''Newcastle Evening Chronicle'', 3 September 2003, p. 2〕 In March 2003, they released 3rd single "Help Me Mama", which charted at No.36, landing them their first UK top 40 hit, but shortly after it hit the chart, Harrison left the group. Harrison left the band due to disagreements with their manager over their sound. Their manager made several negative remarks about Lisa after she had left the band. After Harrison's departure, the remaining members auditioned for a replacement, eventually taking on two new members, Emma Cassidy (Sarah's cousin) and Leona Skimming. Their fourth single (and their first to include new members Emma and Leona), "Cinderella" was released in June 2003, and entered the UK charts at No.31, their highest charting hit of their career. In between releases the band would perform at roadshows up and down the UK, toured with boy band Triple 8,〔"Pop girls greet fans", ''Glasgow Evening Times'', 3 September 2003, p. 15〕 and performed at the Scotland v. Lithuania football match at Hampden Park in October 2003.〔"Girl band will help to roar on Bertie's boys", ''Glasgow Evening Times'', 3 October 2003, p. 11〕〔Bendoris, Matt (2003) "Heaven Scent", ''The Sun'', 13 October 2003, p. 29〕 Their fifth single "Unconditional Love", released September 2003, was on course to give them their biggest hit, appearing at No.20 in the midweeks, but was removed from the chart due to suspicions of chart-rigging by bulksale-buying. It was confirmed by the Official Charts Company that hundreds of copies of the single were being bought in bulk in and around Glasgow.〔Fulton, Rick (2003) "YOU LEMONS ; Chart-fixing claims sink girls' CD", ''Daily Record'', 9 September 2003, p. 3〕
The band released their debut album, ''Unconditional Love'' in October 2003. The album sold poorly and failed to chart. They supported Atomic Kitten on their UK tour in 2004,〔"The Razz: Sweetener for Lemonescent", ''Daily Record'', 11 November 2003, p. 12〕〔 and in the same year performed at the D-Code 2004 event, aimed at warning teenagers of the dangers of drink, drugs and smoking.〔"Girl band back anti-drug gig", ''Glasgow Evening Times'', 18 March 2004, p. 5〕 Other charity work included involvement in the "Go Yellow" walk in Glasgow, for which they performed a fundraising concert.〔Murray, Graham (2004) "Kids on scent for charity walk", ''Glasgow Evening Times'', 18 May 2004, p. 11〕 Their final single was a cover version of Free's "All Right Now", with a promotional video filmed in Egypt.〔"M2: Girl group school gig", ''Birmingham Mail'', 23 April 2004, p. 48〕 It sparked interest from television networks, with appearances on BBC's ''Top of the Pops Saturday'', ''Top of the Pops 2'', and ''The Saturday Show'', ITV's ''The Chart Show'', and others, but only peaked at number 37 in the UK Singles Chart.〔〔Bendoris, Matt (2004) "Rock switch has made us All Right now says Scots babes Lemonescent", ''The Sun'', 27 May 2004, p. 53〕 Skimming left in 2004, citing 'musical differences', leaving the group back as a four-piece. The group continued to perform at roadshows, showcasing two new songs ("Model Life" and "Make My Fantasy Come True") but were never released, and the planned 2nd album was scrapped.
Lemonescent split up in early 2005, with Sarah Cassidy explaining "it couldn't really go any further, so we decided to call it a day".〔Lyons, Beverley & Bennett, Cath (2005) "THE RAZZ: Bitter split? No we're still pals say Lemonescent girls after calling time on pop ambition", ''Daily Record'', 18 January 2005, p. 19〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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