| |
| | Sixpence None The Richer - Artist Home Page (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06) |
 | | In due time, Sixpence followed that success with its cover of the La's hit "There She Goes," adding an eleventh-hour recording of the song to its soon-to-be platinum-selling project. Establishing Sixpence as a legitimate "Breakthrough Artist," according to RandR Magazine, the song became a Top 10 pop single and video in its own right. |
 | | Sixpence's final studio album, 2002's Divine Discontent, recorded the band's struggle to come to terms with the obligations of its commercial success. |
 | | After asking where the band's name came from, Letterman teasingly interrupted Nash to ask if he could stop by her hotel room after the show. Nash's blank silence stopped him cold, chastening him into an apology. With that, she proceeded to finish her story. |
| www.wordrecords.com /sixpencenonethericher (392 words) |
|