Feels So Good (Atomic Kitten Album)

Feels So Good (Atomic Kitten Album)

Feels So Good is the second studio album by girl group Atomic Kitten and the first full original album featuring Jenny Frost. The style of the album is comparable with the first album and consists mainly of pop ballads, happy songs and one cover version. After releasing a cover version of "Eternal Flame" on the previous album, Susanna Hoffs from The Bangles was asked to write a track for the album called "Love Doesn't Have To Hurt". The girls teamed up with Rob Davis for the songwriting and production of several songs and as a result, Kylie Minogue with whom he frequently collaborated, donated the song, "Feels So Good", to the album. Out of gratitude and because they feel it is a great title, the group decided to name the album after that song.

The album performed well on the charts with both Feels So Good sold 80,000 in its first week and the single "The Tide Is High" becoming number one in the same week, selling 145,000 copies. They were the second girl band to enter the number one in both the singles and albums charts at the same time, (after the Spice Girls). During the release of the single "The Last Goodbye / Be With You", the album climbed back to the top ten in two weeks. The album was certified double platinum and the album was certified Platinum by the IFPI for selling more than one million copies in Europe. The album was further promoted with the simultaneous release of the book Atomic Kitten: So Good, So Far by Ian McLeish in which the girl group gave an insight look into their early career.

Read more about Feels So Good (Atomic Kitten Album):  Track Listing, Bonus Tracks

Famous quotes containing the words feels and/or kitten:

    The danger in happiness.—”Now everything turns out for the best for me, now I love every destiny:—who feels like being my destiny?”
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    Do you see that kitten chasing so prettily her own tail? If you could look with her eyes, you might see her surrounded with hundreds of figures performing complex dramas, with tragic and comic issues, long conversations, many characters, many ups and downs of fate,—and meantime it is only puss and her tail.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)