the spice girls

Even though the Spice Girls split in 2001, they had never really gone out of the picture at all. The solo careers of Geri Halliwell, Melanie Chisholm, Emma Bunton, Melanie Brown, and Victoria Beckham didn’t take off as they might have anticipated when they broke apart but their music always maintained its flow. And now the all-English, all-girl member band has returned to the music arena with a bang.

Spice Girls are the biggest girl band in pop music history and what better way to celebrate than a documentary to be broadcasted on the BBC. The still popular-as-ever Spice Girls would now have their detailed history and backdrop reached to even a larger audience with the completion of a documentary titled Spice Girls: Giving You Everything. The documentary will be screened on BBC One in the UK and will be directed by Emmy-award winning Bob Smeaton, who is associated with the brilliant The Beatles Anthology.

The documentary project is already underway and will explore the band from its conception in 1994 to the present day reunion. The documentary is expected to shed some insight into how Spice Girls came to be associated with girl power and how the band has helped to usher in a new scene in British pop culture. The best part is the personal touch of the band’s members: all the five girls would give their own comments and opinions on their band.

This year the Spice Girls have announced their reunion and comeback with a greatest hits album scheduled for release on November 12. The album will feature all the single hits that the band has have had since its formation and will also showcase two new exciting tracks, Headlines (Friendship Never Ends) and Voodoo.

So the world is eagerly awaiting another wave of Spice Girls mania. But the question is whether the girl band can be as successful as they were in the late 1990s.

Image Source: Pop Rock 80s

Source: AceShowBiz