The X Factor: The Band

(Redirected from Harrison Cole)

The X Factor: The Band is a special edition of British reality talent competition The X Factor, which premiered on 9 December 2019 on ITV. The format for the series was announced on 4 November 2019 as a last-minute replacement for a planned All Stars spin-off series, which was originally supposed to air following The X Factor: Celebrity in late 2019.[1] The format is an accelerated version of The X Factor whereby solo artists auditioned in front of Simon Cowell and Nicole Scherzinger to try to win a place in a boyband or girlband. The new bands would then compete for a chance to join Cowell's record label and launch their careers.

The X Factor: The Band
Presented byDermot O'Leary
Judges
WinnerRLY / Real Like You
Finals venueResorts World Arena
No. of episodes4
Release
Original networkITV
Original release9 December (2019-12-09) –
15 December 2019 (2019-12-15)

Following closed auditions at Cowell's record label, series 3 winner Leona Lewis joined the judges panel for the live audience auditions and live finale. Industry experts were also on hand to help including producers Naughty Boy and Fred Ball as well as singer Ella Eyre and songwriter Carla Williams. The Band ran over the course of four episodes on 9, 11 and 13 December 2019. The live finale was held at Resorts World Arena on 15 December 2019, where the girlband (RLY) Real Like You beat boyband Unwritten Rule to win a recording contract with Syco Music. Real Like You's winner's single is an original song titled "Be Like Them".

Background

edit

The series was first reported in early 2019 as being The X Factor: All Stars, as the regular series is being put on hiatus due to declining ratings.[2] However, in November 2019, it was announced that the proposed All Stars series had been axed in favour of The X Factor: The Band. The new spin-off saw acts audition to form part of a girl group and boy band. The news came just weeks after former X Factor winners Little Mix announced their own plans for a similar series, Little Mix: The Search, on BBC One in 2020.[3][4]

The auditions took place at Syco Music headquarters in London, in front of the judges and industry experts.[5] The series aired over four episodes, beginning Monday 9, then Wednesday 11 and Friday 13 December before the live finale on Sunday 15 December which was held at the Resorts World Arena in Birmingham.[6][5] Speaking on the decision to host the finale in Birmingham, host Dermot O'Leary said "It’s always nice to get out and take the show around the country. We did the final in Manchester a few years ago, which went really well. It’s always nice to get out and see other places and you get a full sense of the whole country being involved as well. I’m looking forward to it!"[7]

Hosts and judges

edit

Dermot O'Leary returned to host the programme.[5] Cowell judged the programme alongside Nicole Scherzinger, who has previously served as a judge on the main version of the programme as well as judging the recently aired celebrity version,[6] and third series winner Leona Lewis. Industry experts and artists will also join the judges as experts, including producer Naughty Boy[5] and singer-songwriter Ella Eyre.[5]

Episodes

edit

Closed Auditions (9 December 2019)

edit

The series began with a number of auditions held at Syco Music headquarters in London. Auditionees sang in front of Cowell and Scherzinger a number of industry experts sat in the background. The industry panel included Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Lil' Eddie who previous worked with Cowell as a vocal coach on The X Factor USA and who has previously worked with Fifth Harmony.[8] Joining Eddie was Norwegian producer-songwriter Fred Ball (whose previous credits include One Direction),[9] British producer-artist Naughty Boy who has worked with many previous contestants of The X Factor[10] and Grammy nominated songwriter Carla Williams of Xenomania.[11]

Arena Auditions: Girls (11 December 2019)

edit

Filmed on 4 December and aired two days after the record label auditions, O'Leary hosted auditions in front of a studio audience at Resorts World Arena in Birmingham. Contestants who made it through the label auditions were invited back to perform in front of the judges panel which also included Lewis. The industry panel from the previous episode were also present.[12]

Arena Auditions: Boys (13 December 2019)

edit

Filmed on 5 December and aired four days after the record label auditions aired, The boys' auditions got underway. Hopefuls auditioned in front of a studio audience and the judges. Like the girls' auditions, Lewis joined the judging panel and the industry experts panel was also present.[13]

Live Final (15 December 2019)

edit

The Live Final, held 2 days after the Boys Arena Auditions aired, was broadcast live from the Resorts World Arena, in front of a studio audience of 7,000 people.[citation needed]

Contestants' performances on the final live show
Band Order Song Order Song Order Song Order Song Result
Real Like You 1 "Independent Women" 4 "Sorry Not Sorry" 6 "Problem"/"Can't Feel My Face" 8 "Be Like Them" (original song) Winners (55.1%)
Unwritten Rule 2 "Bad Guy" 3 "Dance Monkey" 5 "Love Me like You Do" 7 "Before You Go" Runners-up (44.9%)

Bands

edit

Key:

  – Winners
  – Runners-up

Real Like You

edit

The final line-up of Real Like You was announced at the end of the second episode, where the judges initially stated that the band would be a quintet consisting of Jess Folley, Seorsia Jack, Luena Martinez, Halle Williams and Kellimarie Willis. However, Virginia Hampson was also added to the line up at the last minute, making the number of members six.[14]

Contestant Age Hometown Result
Jess Folley 16 Essex Winners
Virginia Hampson 17 Essex
Seorsia Jack 18 County Laois, Ireland
Luena Martínez 20 North London
Halle Williams 19 London
Kellimarie Willis 17 Ryton-on-Dunsmore

Unwritten Rule

edit

At the end of the third episode, the judges announced that six boys would make the final line-up.[15]

Contestant Age Hometown Result
Harrison Cole 19 Surrey Runners-up
Boaz Dopemu 19 Surrey
Caius Duncombe 19 London
Fred Roberts 17 Chorleywood, Hertfordshire
Jed Thomas 16 Meriden, West Midlands
Reece Wiltshire-Fessey 19 Wales

Reception

edit

The show received mixed reviews.[16][17] None of the episodes managed to attract more than 3 million viewers.[18]

References

edit
  1. ^ Anderton, Joe (4 October 2019). "X Factor All Stars scrapped as Simon Cowell launches new show to rival Little Mix's BBC series". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  2. ^ Harp, Justin (14 February 2019). "Simon Cowell's X Factor and BGT each getting TWO series in 2019". Digital Spy.
  3. ^ "When does X Factor: the Band start, and what has Simon Cowell said about Little Mix's rival show?". Heart. United Kingdom: Global. 24 November 2019. Archived from the original on 25 November 2019. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  4. ^ Anderton, Joe (4 November 2019). "X Factor All Stars scrapped as Simon Cowell launches new show to rival Little Mix's BBC series". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e Darvill, Josh (5 December 2019). "Watch a first look at The X Factor: The Band with Simon Cowell and Nicole Scherzinger". TellyMix. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  6. ^ a b Bray, Abbie (3 December 2019). "Leona Lewis confirmed as guest judge for X Factor: The Band as Simon Cowell 'snubs' Louis Walsh". Metro. Associated Newspapers. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  7. ^ Wilson, Victoria (5 December 2019). "Dermot O'Leary reveals all about The X Factor: The Band". WhatsonTV. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  8. ^ Furn, Daniel (9 December 2019). "Who is X Factor: The Band industry expert Lil' Eddie?". Radio Times. Immediate Media Co. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  9. ^ Furn, Daniel (9 December 2019). "Who is X Factor: The Band industry expert Fred Ball". Radio Times. Immediate Media Co. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  10. ^ Furn, Daniel (9 December 2019). "Who is X Factor: The Band industry expert Naughty Boy". Radio Times. Immediate Media Co. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  11. ^ Furn, Daniel (9 December 2019). "Who is X Factor: The Band industry expert Carla Williams". Radio Times. Immediate Media Co. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  12. ^ "Episode 2 - Birmingham Auditions". The X Factor: The Band. Series 1. Episode 2. 11 December 2019. ITV. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  13. ^ "Episode 3 - Birmingham Auditions". The X Factor: The Band. Series 1. Episode 3. 13 December 2019. ITV. Retrieved 14 December 2019.
  14. ^ "Virginia Hampson: "The X Factor has a bigger reputation than Little Mix: The Search"". Radio Times. 12 December 2019. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  15. ^ Harp, Justin (13 December 2019). "The X Factor: The Band reveals boyband making the finals". Digital Spy.
  16. ^ Nicholson, Rebecca (11 December 2019). "The X Factor: The Band review – Cowell's tragic bid to revive a dying show". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  17. ^ "The X Factor: The Band is actually quite good – it's just too little, too late for the talent show". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  18. ^ "Four-screen dashboard | BARB". Retrieved 24 December 2019.