
2.6M
VAIn 1990, five northern working-class men formed a band that would go on to become the UK’s longest-serving, still successful group act in music. A new Netflix documentary seeks to narrate their story, exploring the odyssey that it is the band’s trajectory.
Take That have been together in their current iteration as a three-piece for longer than they have in any other era. Their forthcoming 17-night stadium tour is largely sold out; demand was so high that six new dates were added on day one of the tickets going on sale. They are still the country’s top-selling boy band, beating One Direction by quite some margin. Many British bands have made comebacks, but few – if any at all – have gone on to enjoy even more sustained success the second time round.
Oasis might have reunited last year to huge open arms and fanfare, but the fastest-selling tour in UK music history still belongs to Take That, who sold a record-breaking 1.3 million tickets in a single day for their 2011 Progress Live reunion.
They are a reminder that age is not such a bad thing; that sometimes it takes a while to grow into ourselves and our careers.
#ego #goat #thebest
@vashascash










