Louise debuted new music during her set at London’s Mighty Hoopla festival on Sunday (June 2).
The Naked singer took to the stage with a showcase of hits from her solo career and years with Eternal – including a surprise appearance from bandmate Kéllé Bryan – and even threw in a teaser of her forthcoming fifth LP.
Building upon the dance-flavoured sound of tracks like Right Now and Feel from last year’s ‘Greatest Hits‘, the single features a sample of Janet Jackson’s 1994 hit Throb.
Check out fan-shot footage of the performance below.
The fabulous @LouiseRedknapp treated us to the first taste of her new material with the debut of 'Get Into It' at @mightyhoopla today.
— Daz (@dazgale) June 2, 2024
Can't wait to hear more! pic.twitter.com/zsKcMUUBPh
Louise opened up on her early years as a pop star in an interview with RETROPOP’s last summer, sharing: “If I’m honest, I wish I could do now what I did then, because I never over-thought anything and it all seemed like a great idea. I was just having a great time; I was making music, there was a lot of love and support for it, and I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m down with that’.
“The music industry has changed a lot and now everybody has something to say and we all have to bare all so everybody can have an opinion and say it directly to you in one format or another.
“Back then, it was like you were in your own little world because nothing bad ever got through to you! It was so much easier for pop stars back then because there was no negativity being fed back to you and you could immerse yourself in this bubble of excitement and fun and love for what you do.”
Throughout the ’90s, Louise established herself as a British pop institution, delivering a run of 12 UK Top 10 smashes, scooping two BRIT nominations for British Female Solo Artist, and earning Platinum status with her first two albums, ‘Naked’ (1996) and ‘Woman In Me’ (1997). But the sales are only part of the story and when it comes to career milestones, there are too many to choose from.
“There’s moments that I look back on and think, ‘Wow, I wish I’d stopped and pinched myself for a moment and really realised what a big deal this is’. Like singing at the first Apartheid concert in South Africa in front of 150,000 people – there’s not many people in the world that have done that,” she beams.
“I must have been 22 and now I look back and think, ‘That was part of history’. And it’s not that I didn’t enjoy it and appreciate it then, but I look back and I think, knowing what I know now, I might have really taken those memories in even more.
“But I can still remember certain banners in the crowd; there are visions that I’ll never forget. So I am super proud to look back over all of that and think, ‘Wow, I was lucky’.”
READ MORE: Louise celebrates her Greatest Hits, stages mini Eternal Reunion during epic 30th anniversary gig