PinkPantheress teaming with Kylie Minogue, Jade and more for Fancy That remix album
Boy's A Liar singer PinkPantheress has announced a star studded remix version of her Fancy That mixtape with appearances from Kylie Minogue, Sugababes and Jade.

PinkPantheress is releasing a remix album featuring Kylie Minogue, Jade and more.
The 24-year-old singer dropped her second mixtape Fancy That - which featured singles Tonight and Illegal - in May this year, and just a few months later she has unveiled plans for a star studded new version of the record.
In a post on X and Instagram, the pop star - was born Victoria Walker - shared a video combining animated and live action footage of herself as PinkPantheress, and under her real name.
As canned laughter played over the video, the animated version of the singer wrote a list of names on a whiteboard, confirming the collaborators for the remix album.
As well as Kylie and Little Mix star Jade, the collection will also feature Sugababes, Anitta, SEVENTEETN, JT, Zara Larsson, Basement Jaxx, Groove Armada and Ravyn Lenae.
Rounding off the list are Oklou, Yves, Bladee, Rachel Chinouriri, Nia Archives, Kaytranada, Joe Goddard, Mochakk, Loukeman and Lead, Sega Modega, DJ Caio Prince and Adame DJ, and Kilimanjaro.
The singer quipped: "I think I do fancy some more."
In September, PinkPantheress confirmed she was performing live without autotune for the first time.
During an appearance on NPR's Tiny Desk, she told the crowd: "This is my first performance I’ve done with no tuning.
“I’ve never sang with no tuning before so this is really scary. I nearly didn’t do this because the NPR people were like, ‘You can’t use anything.’
"Then I was like, ‘Let me try to figure it out and see how it goes.’”
During the special concert, she performed stripped down and unique versions of her early songs like Attracted To You and Pain, along with viral hit Illegal, and renditions of The Aisle, Passion and Tonight.
Back in 2023, PinkPantheress admitted she was proud to be a Black woman representing her own mix of alt-pop and drum'n'bass.
She told NME: "It’s another example of Black people managing to spearhead a whole genre of music, and I’m really glad I’m the one doing that."