Formed in Dublin-Ireland in 1998, Westlife followed
in the tradition of European boy bands like Take That and Boyzone. The group
performed ballads and club-worthy pop songs for a devoted European audience,
becoming one of the continent's most successful bands in the process. Although
they never managed to find American success, Westlife released six
platinum-selling records in the U.K. and eventually sold more than 40 million
albums worldwide, a feat that helped them eclipse the popularity of pop titans
like Boyzone, whose lead singer had managed the band during its infancy.
Vocalists
Shane Filan, Kian Egan, and Mark Feehily first performed together in another
pop group, IOYOU, and experienced their first brush with success when Simon
Cowell considered signing them to BMG. The group's other singers didn't make
the cut, however, and a new round of auditions was launched to find more
capable members. Nicky Byrne and Bryan McFadden were eventually added, the
group was signed, and Westlife began prepping its debut album with the help of
Louis Walsh, Boyzone's manager, and Boyzone member Ronan Keating. Their debut
single, "Flying Without Wings," entered the U.K. charts at number one
in 1999, a feat that Westlife replicated one year later with "Seasons in
the Sun" and "Swear It Again." All three songs were also
released on the group's self-titled debut, which was met with similar success
and went platinum in the U.K. An American release followed in early 2000
courtesy of Arista Records.
Westlife
never managed to make a dent in America’s pop scene, where national acts like the Backstreet
Boys, *NSYNC, and Britney Spears reigned supreme. It was a different story in
the U.K., though, where the group charted 14 number one singles and continued
releasing hit albums. Both Coast to Coast and A World of Our Own went
multi-platinum, and the group celebrated its success by releasing a hits
compilation, Unbreakable, Vol. 1: The Greatest Hits, in 2002. Turnaround
followed in 2003 and fared similarly well, but Bryan McFadden nevertheless left
the lineup one later year in the hopes of launching his own career. Real to Me, his first single as a solo artist, topped the
charts in 2004.
Westlife continued touring after McFaddens exit and released Allow Us to Be Frank, a tribute to the Rat Pack, in late 2004. They returned to their contemporary pop formula with 2005’s Face to Face -- their biggest-selling album in three years -- and continued releasing material throughout the rest of the decade, including The Love Album, Back Home, and Where We Are.
Westlife continued touring after McFaddens exit and released Allow Us to Be Frank, a tribute to the Rat Pack, in late 2004. They returned to their contemporary pop formula with 2005’s Face to Face -- their biggest-selling album in three years -- and continued releasing material throughout the rest of the decade, including The Love Album, Back Home, and Where We Are.
In
November 2010, Westlife released Gravity, their tenth studio album. Following
the release of single "Safe", the band announced they would be
leaving Simon Cowell's label Syco. Citing a lack of support from Cowell
following Syco's unwillingness to release a second single from Gravity, the
group signed a one-album deal with RCA Records. A Greatest Hits album was then
released a year after Gravity, featuring four new songs that would turn out to
be the band's last as they announced they were to split following a farewell
tour. Sold out in minutes, the tour was a huge success, ending on 23 June, 2012
at Croke Park Stadium in Dublin, Ireland, in front of a crowd of over 80,000.
Source
:
http://www.billboard.com/artist/431288/westlife/biography
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