15 August (2010-08-15) – 19 September 2010 (2010-09-19)
Must Be the Music is a British television musical talent competition contested by aspiring singers and musicians drawn from public auditions. The show is a music competition and reality show that was broadcast in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Auditions were held in Edinburgh, Manchester, London and also held in Ireland.[1][2] The show began airing in August on Sky1, and was also simulcast in HD. Fearne Cotton presented the show. The first and only series was won by Emma's Imagination, a female singer from Dumfries.[3]
The winning act received £100,000 to help kick-start their music career. In the initial televised audition phase as well as the three semi-finals and final, contestants sang in front of the judges – Jamie Cullum, Sharleen Spiteri and Dizzee Rascal.[4] Among the notable artists competing in the show were Irish fiddler Daithí Ó Drónaí and The Trinity Band, who went on to win Live and Unsigned in 2011.
The show was broadcast on Sky1. Must Be the Music was devised as a spin-off for the highly successful Got to Dance, which finished its first series in February. The live finals were held at Wembley Arena. Must Be the Music had a live audience behind the judges. During the live finals, the public voted for their favourite act, which they wished to keep in the competition.
Format
The auditions took place in early August 2010 in front of the three celebrity judges. Unlike X-Factor which limits itself only to singers, Must Be the Music was open to all musicians, who were allowed to play their own compositions.[5] Fearne Cotton described the show as "It's about acts who can sing, play... or do both!"[6]
The audition process culminated in the judges selecting 15 acts for the semi-finals which took place at the Fountain Studios in Wembley (which is also used for The X Factor). Each semi-final had five acts with a five-minute voting window at the end of the show to decide which two acts from each semi-final proceeded to the final, which took place on 19 September at Wembley Arena.
The winner of the show received a £100,000 cash fund rather than a record contract with an emphasis on giving the acts control over their careers. Additionally, every song performed on the show was available to download from iTunes and Sky Songs with 100 per cent of the net profits of the songs and merchandise going to the musicians.[5] A case at the High Court in February 2014 established that the format was not copied from a proposal from another company.[7]
Semi-finalists
Act
Members
Description
Chakula Soul
Shanice Smith, Vocals
Fidel Lea, Guitar / vocals
Christina Hizon, Keyboard and vocals
Max Coghlan, Drummer
Whitnie Parkes, Vocals
Beatrice Anderson, Vocals
Ben Soan, Bass
Ben Lochrie, Guitar
Chakula Soul, meaning 'food for the soul' in Swahali, are a Hip Hop Soul R’n’B band made up of eight musicians who all attend BRIT school, one of the UK's best known Performing Art Schools.[8]
CK Gospel Choir
Harlano Weekes, Director / singer
Scarlet Gabriel, Singer
Cathy Murphy, Singer,
Tremaine Dawkins, Singer,
Sheyi Martins, Singer,
Adeola Ranson, Singer,
Junior Abanulo, Singer,
Brian Ingram, Keyboard,
Malika Wilson-Muir, Singer,
Hannah Ledwidge, Drummer
Laura Edwards, Singer,
Sarah Blake, Singer,
Lawrence Insula, Bass,
Michael Jablonka, Guitarist,
T.J. Weekes, Singer
CK Gospel Choir sing soul, gospel, pop, jazz and classical, putting a gospel twist on all their performances. Their unique approach means there is no one lead vocalist; all 15 singers take it in turns to lead by splitting songs into solo verses.[9]
Violinist Daithí O Dronaí combines his fiddle and a recording loop station to create distinctive sounds for his music. Performing entirely solo with no pre-recorded tracks, Daithí creates looped sounds like tapping his violin as a drumbeat and even uses his Nintendo DS to get distinctive sounds.[10]
Ebony Steel Band
Pepe Francis
Steve Lewis,
Kayleigh Lewis,
Carlene Etienne,
Joshua Prescod,
Cerise Edwards-Lynch,
Ashley George,
Ashley Bullard,
Navina Nallamuthu,
Richard Coutain,
Darren Francis,
Anthony Francis,
Samuel Dubois,
Delphina James,
Patrick Holder,
Jerome Witter
Starting life in a garden shed 40 years ago, the 15-strong Ebony Steel Band have performed all over the world. Part of the Princes' Trust, the band regularly play in front of the Queen and received her Unsung Heroes Award for the work they do in the community.[11]
27-year-old Singer/Songwriter Emma spends her days filling the streets of Glasgow with her quirky voice, melancholic verse and acoustic guitar[12] Not to be confused with Emma Gillespie of The Missive[13]
Flow Dem
Mason (Mdot),
Anton (Antizzle),
Raymond (Lil Ray),
Carvell (Lil C),
Michael (MK)
Grime Band- Flow Dem Have already performed in front of 2000 people at Fashion Wales Live and been the support for MC Skepta on stage.[14]
Hero
Hero
11-year-old Harpist and Singer Hero has already earned enough from busking to record her own album.
Kyle
Kyle
Kyle taught himself to play piano by watching YouTube videos[15]
Legion of Many
Jeremy Goddard
Mark Goddard,
Mike Morgan,
Tom Vincer,
Gabriel Wetz,
Peter Atkinson,
Kesty Morrison,
Gemma Alexander
Legion of Many have an electro dance sound and an eclectic set of costumes[16]
Five man group Missing Andy are a true British band who have performed alongside the Pigeon Detectives and The Wombats at South by Southwest Festival in Texas after R.E.M pulled out.[17]
From March 2011 the first edition of the program, titled Must Be the Music. Tylko muzyka, has been broadcast by Polish TV station Polsat. The show became very successful among the audience with approximately three million viewers each season and by 2016 was running its eleventh edition. The first Polish winner, Enej band, achieved great commercial success that added to the show's popularity. Numerous Polish artists launched their careers through the program, such as LemON, Red Lips, Oberschlesien, Marcin Patrzalek, Tune or Shata QS. On 8 May 2016, after the final of the show's eleventh edition, the show was canceled by Polsat.[24]