Rachel Stevens Discography

Rachel Stevens Discography

The discography of Rachel Stevens, a British pop singer, consists of two studio albums and eight singles. Stevens gained fame as a member of the pop group S Club 7. The group released its final album in 2003, and Stevens signed a four-album solo record deal with 19 Entertainment and Polydor Records.

Stevens released her solo debut studio album Funky Dory that September. The album reached number nine on the UK album chart and the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) awarded the it with a gold certification in October 2003. Two singles, "Sweet Dreams My LA Ex" and "Funky Dory", were initially released from the album: "Sweet Dreams My LA Ex" peaked at number two in the UK and received a silver certification from the BPI. In July 2004, Stevens released the single "Some Girls" as a charity record for Sport Relief, and the single's success prompted Polydor to re-issue Funky Dory with three new songs.

Come and Get It, her second studio album, was released in October 2005. The album debuted at number 28 in the UK, and its three singles were commercially unsuccessful. In May 2010, Stevens announced plans to record a new album "in the near future".

Read more about Rachel Stevens Discography:  Singles, Other Charted Songs, Other Appearances

Famous quotes containing the words rachel and/or stevens:

    If anyone should want to know my name, I am called Leah. And I spend all my time weaving garlands of flowers with my fair hands, to please me when I stand before the mirror; my sister Rachel sits all the day long before her own, and never moves away. She loves to contemplate her lovely eyes; I love to use my hands to adorn myself: her joy is in reflection, mine in act.
    Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)

    At twelve, the disintegration of afternoon
    Began, the return to phantomerei, if not
    To phantoms. Till then, it had been the other way:
    One imagined the violet trees but the trees stood green,
    At twelve, as green as ever they would be.
    The sky was blue beyond the vaultiest phrase.
    —Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)