Girls Aloud were formed through the
ITV1 programme
Popstars: The Rivals by a public vote on 30 November 2002. Their debut single "
Sound of the Underground" was one of sixty songs that
Brian Higgins and
Miranda Cooper had written with the aim of launching their own girl group. The song was originally recorded in 2001 by London girl group Orchid, who disbanded before gaining a firm record deal. It was produced by
Xenomania and chosen by Girls Aloud's manager
Louis Walsh as their debut single. "Sound of the Underground" and another Xenomania production,
Sugababes' "
Round Round", have been called "two huge groundbreaking hits", credited with reshaping British pop music for the 2000s. Following the single's success, Girls Aloud proceeded to begin recording their debut album, which shares its title with the single. As the team grew, their music began to take over the nation. Girls Aloud worked with a variety of mostly British musicians and producers, such as
Betty Boo, the
Beatmasters,
Graham Stack,
Steve Anderson and
Tim Kellett, and reunited with Higgins and Xenomania. Girls Aloud deliberately waited five months after the release of "Sound of the Underground" in order to ensure they would have a strong second single. Referring to their second single "
No Good Advice", Higgins said that Girls Aloud initially did not like the song – "we played them some of it, and they said: 'That's not our sound.' I objected to the use of that phrase 'our sound'. I told them they had five minutes to talk about whether or not they wanted to continue with me. They went away and spoke about it and since then it's been fine. They come in expecting to work, and there's a trust there which, I think, dates back to that day."
Sound of the Underground remains Girls Aloud's only studio album not to be entirely written and produced by Higgins and Xenomania, who had initially only created two songs for the album, "Sound of the Underground" and "No Good Advice". When Higgins heard the remaining ten tracks that Girls Aloud had recorded for the album, he promptly called Polydor to complain about the lack of creative content. Higgins said, "They'd sent them off to these other Swedish guys and different people in the UK [...] I said, 'There are two completely separate groups on this record. We need to get rid of six tracks and I'll replace them'. We did that and allowed the album to stand up as a body of work." This last-minute decision resulted in Girls Aloud returning to the studio to record a further four tracks with Xenomania – "
Some Kind of Miracle", "
Life Got Cold", "Stop" and "Love/Hate". The album was completed in April 2003 and described as a mix of "Blondie and Bananarama, with a smattering of the Spice Girls at their best thrown in." During the summer of 2003, Girls Aloud would again work with Higgins and Xenomania, recording a further three tracks – a cover version of the
Duran Duran hit "
Girls on Film", which would become the B-side of "Life Got Cold", "You Freak Me Out" for the film
Freaky Friday and a cover version of
The Pointer Sisters song "
Jump" for the film
Love Actually. They also re-recorded "Some Kind of Miracle", which was originally intended to be the fourth single from the album before it was scrapped in favour of "Jump". These four tracks, alongside an altered mix of "Life Got Cold", would eventually surface on a reissued version of
Sound of the Underground, which was released on 17 November 2003. == Music and lyrics ==