There are two types of females who listen to the Pusssycat Dolls: girls with whose bedrooms are slathered in the color pink, and 20-somethings who go on weekend pub crawls wearing glitter and b*tch boots. That the Dolls's initial incarnation as an L.A. and Vegas cabaret act has turned into a pop success (headlined by sassy-girl anthem "Don't Cha") is definitely due to their power in numbers, because taken solo they don't make as much of an impression.
"Inside every woman is a Pussycat Doll," says Robin Antin, the innovator behind the singing-and-dancing ensemble that has risen from underground cool to major label hot. It's about female empowerment, about being confident with who you are. It's about singing and dancing in front of a mirror by yourself and having fun.
With their debut album, PCD, set for release by A&M Records on September 13, 2005 (led by the #1 smash Don't Cha a duet with Busta Rhymes and produced by Cee-Lo), The Pussycat Dolls go beyond being extraordinarily beautiful. With tremendous voices, and after working with today?s top songwriters and producers (including Will.I.Am from the Black Eyed Peas, Timbaland, Rich Harrison, Sean Garrett and Ron Fair), The Pussycat Dolls are ready to stamp their mark on music and on attitudes.