The Bros band The Goss twins and their friend
Craig Logan were schoolboys when they became successful with Bros in 1986. They sold 16 million records worldwide and hit the number one spot with tracks including "
I Owe You Nothing" and "
When Will I Be Famous?". Their debut album,
Push, went 4× Platinum in the UK and peaked at number two. It remained in the UK charts for 84 weeks. In 1989, Bros won the
Brit Award for "Breakthrough Artist", receiving the award from
Ronnie Wood and
Bill Wyman of
The Rolling Stones. After announcing a one-off Bros reunion show in the
London O2 Arena in 2017, tickets sold out in seven seconds. Goss wrote the theme song
Lovely Las Vegas for the TV station
Fox 5, which was used for more than 10 years. He also wrote the theme song
It’s The End of the Road for the American TV show
So You Think You Can Dance. Goss contributed to the soundtrack of the 1999 movie
Stuart Little, writing the song
Lucky Day. He published a memoir in 2005,
More Than You Know. After Bros split, Goss moved to America. By 2010, he was performing in Las Vegas, at
Caesars Palace in January 2010. 2018 saw the release of the documentary
Bros: After The Screaming Stops, which was about Matt and his brother's life. It premiered at the
BFI London Film Festival. It won "Best Documentary" at the
National Film Awards and a
BAFTA. Following a national theatre release, the movie went on to become the most downloaded BBC production in 2018 and was viewed more than 20 million times. In 2021, he was awarded the
Royal Society of St George honorary membership medal. In 2022, he contended on
Strictly Come Dancing. In 2023, Goss embarked on a UK tour, The Matt Goss Experience, which began at the
Royal Albert Hall with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and his 15-piece MG Big Band. He performed his songs, new original music and his own tribute to
Cole Porter.{{cite news|title=The Matt Goss Experience - Symphony Hall - Birmingham ==Philanthropy==