BBC Review
One quarter of Ireland's most famous pop siblings goes it alone...
Talia Kraines2007
Whether youâre willing to admit it or not, The Corrs were a great pop band. Admittedly they were a bit twee, but if you could look past that, the likes of âWhat Can I Doâ and the spine tingly âRunawayâ offered polish to the charts of the 1990s.
Personality though was never their strong point. Known to many as three pretty girls and a weird brother, we probably couldnât have imagined any of them successfully going on to do anything else but be in The Corrs. But now, the youngest of the girls, Andrea, is relishing the hiatus in her family band by striking out with her own debut solo record.
Thereâs nothing immediate about âTen Feet Highâ though, and itâs difficult to see exactly who would buy it. Those who liked the âIrishnessâ of The Corrs will be miss their tin whistle. And anyone who thought superstar producer Nellie Hooper might inject a bit of pop sass into Andrea will find it all a bit wishy-washy.
âShame On Youâ, the anti-war first single, is a good example of such mediocrity. Andreaâs soft vocals sit over a shallow drum rhythm that never really reaches fruition. A stronger dance beat behind the vocal could easily have turned it into a Jurgen Vries alike dance classic. The vampy âHello Boysâ opens the album and initially sparks hopes that Andrea has filled the open electro princess gap in the pop market but despite itâs thrilling synths, her vocals let the track down. And letâs try to forget the creepy âI Doâ presenting Andrea in almost lullaby mode
While the first half of the album is entirely disposable, if you can wait, the good bits almost arrive. â24 Hoursâ is a perky pop song that, like âIdeal Worldâ could happily have fitted on âTalk On Cornersâ. A somewhat incongruous cover of Squeezeâs âTake Me Iâm Yoursââ has a dark, 80s electro-edge oozing with Hooperâs trademark bleeps and actually shows Andreaâs voice at itâs best.
âTen Feet Highâ is then, a somewhat missed opportunity. Trying to combine sultry electro with mum-friendly pop has created a disappointing mix with neither style really excelling.

