A classical girl band, if that isn't an oxymoron, whose first album appeared in 2000. Bond consists of four members: the Australians Haylie Ecker on first violin and Tania Davis on viola, Gay-Yee Westerhoff on cello, and a second violinist who goes by the name of Eos, because one member of a pop group has to have the funny name.

Bond was the brainchild of the producer Mel Bush, the man behind Vanessa Mae, a solo violinist who burst on to the scene several years before Bond with a similar formula of electronically souped-up classics-lite promoted with the simple expedient of not wearing very much.

Many of the tracks on their first album, Born (2000), were also produced by Magnus Fiennes and/or the Croatian composer Tonči Huljić: Fiennes is the brother of actors Joseph and Ralph, and composed the soundtrack for Ralph's film Eugene Onegin.

Of the 13 tracks on the original version of Born (later releases also include their 2001 single Wintersun), only one is an acknowledged classical piece, Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. Tchaikovsky aficionados should steer clear of the Bond version, which adds electric violins and a rock beat to the familiar cannonades.

The hit single from Born, Victory, is a Huljic composition, and like the rest of his contributions to the album is supposed to echo Eastern European marches and folk songs. Anyone expecting a latter-day Béla Bartók will be disappointed: Huljić, who insinuated to the folks back home that the whole project was his idea, is better known in Croatia as a purveyor of disposable pop music, both with his own band Magazin and with seemingly any blonde singer who happens to come his way.

The lack of avowed classical music on Born saw it disqualified from the British classical chart after two weeks, when the Chart Information Network decided that 'The dance beats mean it is not really a classical idiom.' The album, then at number 2, entered the pop chart at number 36.

Bond's publicists milked the dispute for all it was worth, leaking the news that their record company Decca had banned them from using a nude photograph on the album cover, and Born rose by ten places the week after.

Bond are prime suspects in the controversy over the apparent dumbing down of classical music. Alongside Vanessa Mae and such groups as The Planets, whose concoctor Mike Batt is better known for The Womble Song, they make up an identity parade which non-purists might be very happy to have to judge.

Detractors complain that the group are no better than manufactured pop music, regardless of the girls' first-class degrees from, in Haylie's case, the prestigious Guildhall School of Music and Drama. Certainly, Bond are leading lights in the emerging classical crossover genre, a catch-all title for smash-hit tenors, graduates from the shows and the endlessly churned out classical chillout compilations.

Their admirers, however, hope that Bond might attract listeners who might feel intimidated by classical music and will be inspired to move on to the hard stuff. Haylie still keeps up a solo career, and gave a concert in July 2001 with the Luxembourg Philharmonic.

Bond's second album, Shine, was released in 2002 and promised to cause as much of a stir as Born. Although Huljić and Bond had parted company, the collaborators included Stuart Crichton, responsible for a bootleg fusion of Kylie Minogue's Can't Get You Out Of My Head and New Order's Blue Monday.

Shine's reworkings of Albinoni's Adagio for Strings (as Big Love Adagio) and Borodin's Polovtsian Dances still wouldn't qualify it for the classical chart. The waft of Roma violins on the unoriginally titled Gypsy Rhapsody might not be too frowned upon, but the samples of racing cars and heartbeats on Speed, and the version of Led Zeppelin's Kashmir, might well have had Shine drummed out in any case.