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Artist
In a period where bands regularly pigeonholed themselves into a genre, Career Girls made life difficult for themselves by spreading their musical net wide. 'Welcome Back, Moon Girl' (the band's full length debut) could almost be a compilation album: from harmony driven guitar pop (Triple J favourite End Credits and What Everyone Says) to electro-disco (One Size Fits All), from swampy rock'n'roll (Empty) to '70s police show themes (Theme From "S.Q.U.A.D.D!"). They called it a day in 2004 after seven years, an album, two singles and an EP. Musical archeologists of the future will download these songs and go "man, they should have been huge." Or, at least, "hey, they had some neat tunes." In easy to follow dot-point form: • Were Todd Hutchinson, Sasha Pazeski, Jeremy Reglar, Andrew P Street and formed mid-1998. • Released their debut CDEP 'Hooray for Everything' in October 1999, featuring Part-Timer and Caffeine Nation, both of which enjoyed airplay on Triple J and community radio. The EP was produced by the band themselves and resulted in the band being awarded the Most Outstanding Songwriter award at the 2000 SA Music Industry awards. • Released a limited edition split 7" single in March, 2001 (along with friends Tyke), featuring the non-album instrumental track Undressed By Kings. It sold out on the night of the launch. • Preceded their debut album with the End Credits single in June 2001, featuring the album version of the song, two brand new tracks and a remix featuri