Matthew Weston Goss (September 29, 1968), better known as Matt Goss, is an English singer-songwriter who rose to fame as a member of the '80s pop group Bros. Born in Lewisham, London, he formed the proto-boy band Bros with his twin brother Luke and Craig Logan in 1986, achieving mainstream success with their multi-platinum studio debut Push (1988) and winning a Brit Award for British Breakthrough Act in 1989. Following the band's dissolution in 1992, Matt Goss embarked on a solo career that began with 1995's The Key, whose title track scraped the Top 40 of the UK Singles Chart. After issuing the album One as Co*Bra in 1997, he went on a recording hiatus until 2004's Early Side of Later, released under his own name. The LP reached Number 87 on the UK Albums Chart and was followed by Gossy (2009), which included the chart-topping dance music hit "Firefly" featuring Paul Oakenfold. That same year, he took a residency at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas that quickly turned into a three-year contract to headline at the iconic Caesars Palace, becoming one of the most popular entertainers in the Sin City for over a decade. In subsequent years, Matt Goss published his best-selling autobiography and resumed his recording career with 2013's Life You Imagine. A nine-year hiatus ensued, after which he cracked the British Top 10 with the album The Beautiful Unknown in 2021.
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