Code Red (British group)

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Code Red
Also known asCR
OriginUnited Kingdom
Genres
Years active1995–2001
Labels
Past members
  • Roger Ratajczak
  • Phillip Rodell
  • Neil Watts
  • Lee Missen

Code Red were a British boy band, formed in 1994.

Career[edit]

Roger Ratajczak, Phillip Rodell, Neil Watts, and Lee Missen, formed themselves as the lineup for the vocal harmony group in 1994. The band were discovered by British producer and songwriter Nicky Graham and later signed by Polydor Records. They performed in the 1996 Great British Song Contest, the UK's precursor to the Eurovision Song Contest, with the song "I Gave You Everything", and finished as runners-up in the competition to Gina G.

Their debut album Scarlet was released in 1997, and produced the hits "This Is Our Song", "Is There Someone Out There?" and a cover of the Tevin Campbell original, "Can We Talk". The band achieved significant success in South East Asia, notching up numerous number one hit singles in multiple markets. In 1997 they won best new pop act at the Channel V Music Awards, hosted in Dehli, India. At the awards ceremony the band performed their hit single 'We Can Make It', a duet with Asha Bhosle.

They appeared in the Sooty & Co. Christmas special 1997 episode "Fun In The Snow", where they performed "If You Go Away".

Two years later, they released Missin You Already on Telstar Records, a follow-up album which featured two hits, "What Would You Do If...?" and "What Good Is a Heart", which became a number 2 hit on the MTV Asia Hitlist.

The following year (2000) the band released their third and final album Crimson.

The group eventually disbanded in 2001.

Discography[edit]

Studio albums

  • 1997: Scarlet
  • 1999: Missin You Already
  • 2000: Crimson

Singles

  • 1996: "I Gave You Everything" – UK #50
  • 1996: "This Is Our Song" – UK #59
  • 1997: "Can We Talk" – UK #29
  • 1997: "Is There Someone Out There?" – UK #34
  • 1998: "What Would You Do If...?" – UK #55[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 113. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.