Never Had a Dream Come True (S Club 7 song)

2000 single by S Club 7 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Never Had a Dream Come True" is a song by British pop group S Club 7, released as a single in the United Kingdom on 27 November 2000. It was chosen to be the official 2000 BBC Children in Need song.[1] The pop ballad[2] peaked atop the UK Singles Chart, becoming Britain's ninth-best-selling single of 2000. Outside the UK, it peaked within the top 10 of the charts in Ireland, Sweden, and the United States—where it reached number 10 and became the group's only single to appear on the Billboard Hot 100.[3] The song was included on a re-release of the band's second album, 7 (2000), and their third album, Sunshine (2001).

B-side
  • "Perfect Christmas"
  • "Spiritual Love"
  • "Stand by You"
Released27 November 2000 (2000-11-27)
Recorded2000
Quick facts Single by S Club 7, from the album 7 (reissue) ...
"Never Had a Dream Come True"
Single by S Club 7
from the album 7 (reissue)
B-side
  • "Perfect Christmas"
  • "Spiritual Love"
  • "Stand by You"
Released27 November 2000 (2000-11-27)
Recorded2000
GenrePop
Length4:00
Label
Songwriters
Producers
  • Cathy Dennis
  • Oskar Paul
S Club 7 singles chronology
"Natural"
(2000)
"Never Had a Dream Come True"
(2000)
"Don't Stop Movin'"
(2001)
Audio sample
Music video
"Never Had a Dream Come True" on YouTube
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Content

The song "Never Had a Dream Come True" is about the aftermath of a break-up. The protagonist says that even though she might date other people, she will always have love for her former boyfriend. Jo O'Meara sings the lead vocals for the song while the rest of the members of S Club 7 perform backup vocals.

Use in media

Jo O'Meara sings the song as a solo in S Club's 2003 feature film, Seeing Double. The demo version of the song was also used as the opening theme in the 2000 television series S Club 7 Go Wild! and the S Club 7 Christmas Special. The instrumental version of the demo was briefly heard in the earlier special Artistic Differences. S Club 7 performed the song in the ITV Panto Aladdin.

Track listings

Credits and personnel

Credits are lifted from the Sunshine album booklet.[9]

Studio

  • Mastered at Transfermation (London, England)

Personnel

  • Cathy Dennis – writing, production
  • Simon Ellis – writing
  • Paul Gendler – guitar
  • Oskar Paul – keyboards, programming, production
  • Pete Murray – keyboards
  • Anne Dudley – string arrangement
  • James McMillan – additional programming
  • Stephen Lipson – additional programming, additional production
  • Heff Moraes – mixing
  • James Reynolds – engineering
  • Richard Dowling – mastering

Charts

More information Chart (2000–2001), Peak position ...
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Certifications

More information Region, Certification ...
Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Sweden (GLF)[33] Gold 15,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[34] Platinum 853,000[35]

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

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Release history

More information Region, Date ...
Region Date Format(s) Label(s) Ref.
United Kingdom 27 November 2000
  • CD
  • cassette
[36]
United States 24 April 2001
[37]
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Cover versions

Multiple artists have performed covers of the song, some of whom include pop duo Same Difference on series 4 of The X Factor in 2007 and singer Natalie Paris in 2023. In May 2024, Adele performed a brief snippet of the song during a live performance at her Weekends with Adele residency in Las Vegas.

On 26 November 2021, O'Meara released an acoustic version of the song on all digital streaming platforms.

References

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