Sunset Strippers

Sunset Strippers are an electronic music group from the UK. They are known for their 2005 song "Falling Stars", which is a remix of the 1988 hit song "Waiting For a Star to Fall" by Boy Meets Girl, and was involved in a sampling battle with Cabin Crew. "Falling Stars" reached number 3 in the UK Singles Chart in March 2005.

The music video for "Falling Stars" features Harry Diamond (one of the group members) listening to the song in his headphones while washing his clothes in a laundromat. All of the sudden, three attractive women enter the laundromat and begin to dance all at once while washing their clothes as well. While waiting for their clothes, the women strike poses while Harry tries to attract their attention to him. The women also dance around the Laundromat, until they are seen wearing white shirts and red shorts. They begin dancing with Harry while holding a microphone. All of a sudden, an old woman and her dog arriving at the laundromat suddenly see Harry singing inside with a mop as a microphone. It turns out the women were only his imagination. Disgusted, the old woman and the dog left. Harry still continue to sing the song, even though he pretends nothing had happened.

Sunset Strippers have also remixed the Top 25 hit "Cry Little Sister", originally written by Gerard McMahon (under the pseudonym "Gerard McMann") as the theme tune for the film The Lost Boys. They have also remixed Planet Funk's song "The Switch", which features in Mitsubishi television advertisements and Irish pop band Westlife's "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for The Love Album.

The group's most recent track is "Step Right Up", which appears on the downloadable version of Clubbers Guide '08 by Ministry of Sound.

Read more about Sunset Strippers:  Members

Famous quotes containing the word sunset:

    And found on the dove-grey edge of the sea
    A pearl-pale, high-born lady, who rode
    On a horse with bridle of findrinny;
    And like a sunset were her lips,
    A stormy sunset on doomed ships....
    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)