A WORCESTERSHIRE singer who has become a solo sensation on BBC’s The Voice said she does not actually like being on stage on her own and always wanted to be in a band.

Becky Hill impressed the judges, including Jessie J and Will.I.Am, and the public alike with her rendition of John Legend’s Ordinary People during her blind audition and tonight battled her way through to the live shows.

But she admitted she never thought she would make it to her first public audition because she didn’t finish her job at HR’s bar in Bewdley until 2.30am the same morning.

She chose the song on the train journey to Birmingham after scrolling through her iPod.

The 18-year-old from Bewdley said: “I was so unprepared. I was sat on the train thinking ‘what can I sing?’ “It’s always been such a beautiful song so I sang it and they asked me to sing it for my blind audition.

“It was very lucky, it’s such a favourite song of mine.”

As part of Team Jessie, she went head to head with pop duo Indie and Pixie in their battle performance of Irreplaceable by Beyoncé, a song which her mother once said she couldn’t sing.

“I don’t really have a lot of memory of doing the performance itself, it was a bit of a whirlwind. We all gave a performance of a lifetime and really did the song proud.

“The pressure is on now. I don’t really have any achievements in mind, I just want to do my best and sing to the world.”

Becky, a sixth form student at Bewdley High School and Sixth Form Centre, said she was now going to make most of her time working one-to-one with Jessie J and with the show’s live band.

“I felt that Jessie would be the kind of coach that would really take me on and work hard with me.

“I really do get a hell of a lot out of all the sessions. She is really on the ball and we both really want the same thing, I bounce off her energy.”

She says she is “so happy” with the song she’s been given to work on but was keeping its identity a secret.

“I’m really looking forward to performing it and doing something different with it.”

But Becky said no matter how well she does on The Voice she wants to finish her education before starting her career, having been accepted onto the vocal higher diploma course at Guildford’s Academy of Contemporary Music.