
Blimey, where to start with this? I am not an enormous admirer of Steps, but needs must. I will try and be as professional as I can. I must first confess that some of their songs are a guilty pleasure for me, and their wedding reception-friendly music is…well, uplifting. A young lad I know slaughtered me for even daring to review this. However, it was necessary for you, my wonderful readers and followers.
So…Steps have been going since the mid-90s and first burst onto the scene with their line dance smash ‘5,6,7,8’. Since then, they have had a string of hits, and among them were some reimagined covers. Quite funny when you consider many thought their first single was going to consign them to the one-hit wonder category. It is also worth noting that the band members contemplated joining due to that possibility. Don’t forget, they split up after their third album, and we saw a documentary on Claire Richards’s struggles coming to terms with that, but she did form a duo with her fellow band member Ian “H” Watkins. The band returned in 2011, complete with a four-part documentary on Sky Living giving an insight into the reunion. The documentary would get a second series in 2012 co-titled ‘Steps: On the Road Again’, and after that, they announced they would release their fourth studio album, “Light up the World”, with a six-date Christmas tour to follow upon its release.
What’s funny about this album is you would think it is another greatest hits compilation (They have done an eye-watering six!), but no. There are plenty of new tracks (Remixes included), which I discovered upon listening (I skipped most of the old ones because I have heard them before, and some of them on countless occasions. Be it at the supermarket, weddings or parties.) However, the band would just be dismissed as a nostalgia act until 2016, when they would again be taken as the serious act they were during the mid-90s to early 2000s.
I happen to listen to the deluxe edition, which has an astounding 43 tracks, complete with solo releases by the members and remixes. You have songs with uplifting production and melancholic lyrics for balance over Nile Rodgers and Chic-inspired melodies. Now, you have no fucking idea how hard this is to break down in a review because I could still be writing this this time next year. You will have to listen to the deluxe edition and decide what you enjoy and don’t.
So, you probably wonder if I have any personal favourites, and the answer is yes. Mainly the remixes of ‘Stomp’ and ‘the Runner’. The former has a slight variation on their Nile Rodgers and Chic-Esque original, which samples ‘Everybody Dance’. ABBA drives the latter, and who doesn’t mind a bit of ABBA? My third choice would have to be ‘the Slightest Touch’. Again, it has that classic Steps hallmark to it with its uplifting instrumentation over melancholic lyrics—something mastered by the likes of the Smiths and Oasis when they were around. “Platinum Collection” is a journey from then until now, and you can see how they have evolved and managed to maintain their status. Not bad for potential one-hit wonders.
Song recommendations: ‘Stomp(Steps 25)’, ‘the Runner’, ‘the Slightest Touch’
8/10
