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The Fourmost

 
Artist: The Fourmost
 
The Fourmost

Group Members:

Dave Lovelady, Brian O'Hara, Mike Millward, Billy Hatton

Similar Artists:

  • Formed: 1961
  • Disbanded: 1969
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "First and Fourmost," "The Most of the Fourmost," "Hello Little Girl"
  • Representative Songs: "Hello Little Girl" "A Little Loving"

Biography

The Fourmost were originally known as the Blue Jays, then the Four Jays, and then the Four Mosts, before finally taking on the name under which they finally succeeded. Lead guitarist and singer Brian O'Hara (b. Liverpool, Mar. 12, 1942) and rhythm guitarist and singer Mike Millward (b. Bromborough, Cheshire, May 9, 1942) had a pleasing attack on their instruments and sang well enough, even harmonizing well, and with bassist-singer Billy Hatton (b. Liverpool, June 9, 1941) and drummer (and sometime singer) Dave Lovelady (b. Liverpool, Oct. 16, 1942), the Fourmost were one of the better combos working Liverpool in the early 1960's. They could rock hard, with a crisp guitar sound and vocals that wailed convincingly, and Hatton's bass work had a nicely melodic sound--the group lacked the distinctiveness of Gerry & The Pacemakers at their best, but were never as sappily sentimental as their major sub-Beatles Liverpool rivals could get, and had a livelier, leaner, and more refined sound than such competitors as the Swingin' Blue Jeans.

The Fourmost's fortunes took a sharp turn upward in 1963 when they were given the nod by Brian Epstein and became a part of his stable of Liverpool-based acts. Their bookings improved and they were signed to EMI's Parlophone label, where they were recorded by George Martin. The band also got access to a pair of Lennon-McCartney originals ("Hello Little Girl," "I'm In Love") that got them noticed, and they peaked in April of 1964 with the single "A Little Lovin'," which got to No. 6 in England. Unfortunately, none of the Fourmost were songwriters, and this left them at the mercy of outside inspiration and outside sources for songs, which quickly dried up as dozens of rival bands started covering the same material.

They also looked a bit stiff on stage and on television, which was a problem as the bands around them got bolder in their presentations. Additionally, like a lot of early Liverpool acts, the Fourmost were oriented toward music careers that left room for cabaret-style humor, believing--as had been the case before the Beatles--that a band eventually branched out from straight ahead rock 'n roll. Their music included a fair lacing of comedy tracks amid perfectly respectable covers of numbers like "The In Crowd" and "Some Kind of Wonderful." Once the music around them began maturing in a different direction, into more advanced forms of rock 'n roll rather than toward pop, they found themselves on the outside looking in--in 1965, while the Beatles were taking the first steps into the druggy ambience and the diverse folk and Indian sounds that would spice their second flourishing, and the Rolling Stones were shaking up the airwaves with "Satisfaction," the Fourmost were covering "Why Do Fools Fall In Love" (a great song, to be sure, but not exactly aiming high in ambition). With a few breaks and more focus, they might've been a somewhat more pop oriented equivalent to the Action, but it wasn't to be.

The group never charted a single after the spring of 1964, despite an attempt in the summer of the 1966 to piggy-back once more on the Beatles' work with a cover of "Here, There and Everywhere." The death of Mike Millward from leukemia in 1966 doomed the band's prospects, although as late as 1969, Paul McCartney was still throwing some help their way. By then, they were fixtures on the cabaret circuit, and long since forgotten by most of the public. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Fourmost
Top
The Fourmost
Origin Liverpool, England
Genre(s) Merseybeat, pop music
Years active 1961-present
Website [http://www.thefourmost.co.uk

The Fourmost were an English Merseybeat band that recorded in the 1960s. Their biggest UK hit single was 1964's "A Little Loving".

Contents

Biography

Lead guitarist/singer Brian O'Hara and bass guitarist/singer Billy Hatton, friends since grammar school, formed The Blue Jays in 1958. The group changed their name to the Four Jays and made their debut at the Cavern Club on 1 March 1961, nearly three weeks before The Beatles. Rhythm guitarist/singer Mike Millward (ex-The Undertakers) joined the Four Jays in November 1961, followed by the drummer/singer Dave Lovelady in September 1962. In the summer of 1963, the group - now called The Fourmost - signed a management contract with Brian Epstein. This led to their being auditioned by George Martin and signed to EMI's Parlophone record label.

With Epstein as their manager, The Fourmost (like Cilla Black, Billy J. Kramer and The Dakotas, Peter and Gordon, and Tommy Quickly) had access to early Lennon/McCartney compositions felt to be unsuitable for The Beatles to record. The Fourmost's first two singles were written by John Lennon. "Hello Little Girl", one of the earliest Lennon songs (dating from 1957) was released on 30 August 1963. Their follow-up single, "I'm in Love" (Lennon/McCartney), was released on 15 November 1963. It was notable as one of the earliest Beatles-penned songs to be released in the United States but, as with the Fourmost's other singles, it failed to chart there.

Their biggest hit followed. "A Little Loving", written by Russ Alquist, reached Number 6 in the UK Singles Chart in mid 1964. But from this point on, none of their singles would crack the Top 20 in the UK. "How Can I Tell Her" was followed by a cover version of The Four Tops' "Baby I Need Your Loving", "Everything In The Garden", and "Girls, Girls, Girls" (originally recorded by The Coasters and a hit for Elvis Presley).

The group's only album, First and Fourmost, from September 1965, contained a version of Jackie DeShannon's "Till You Say You'll Be Mine". Other tracks included "My Block", a re-make of "The In Crowd", and cover versions of Little Richard's "The Girl Can't Help It" and "Heebie-Jeebies". The band appeared in the 1965 film, Ferry Cross the Mersey and on the soundtrack album of the same name.

In August 1966, the group released a cover of another Beatles' song, "Here, There and Everywhere,"[1] followed by a cover of George Formby's "Auntie Maggie's Remedy" in November 1966. The latter song was representative of a comedic element to some of the group's recordings, songs which included "Baby Sittin' Boogie" and Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller's "Yakety Yak". The country-influenced "Turn The Lights Down Low" (the b-side of "Auntie Maggie's Remedy") was a short-lived effort to branch out to less pop-oriented fare.

In 1968, now on the CBS record label, they recorded "Apple, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie", an R&B hit by Jay & the Techniques, followed by "Rosetta" (suggested by Paul McCartney, who played piano on it), and "Easy Squeezy". The group soon stopped recording, and became popular on the cabaret circuit.

Mike Millward died from leukaemia in 1966. Brian O'Hara took his own life in 1999.

Original band members

UK singles

  • "Hello Little Girl" (Lennon/McCartney)/"Just In Case" - September 1963 - Number 9
  • "I'm in Love" (Lennon/McCartney)/"Respectable" - December 1963 - Number 17
  • "A Little Loving"/"Waitin' For You" - April 1964 - Number 6
  • "How Can I Tell Her"/"You Got That Way" - July 1964 - Number 33
  • "Baby I Need Your Loving"/"That's Only What They Say" - November 1964 - Number 24
  • "Everything In The Garden"/"He Could Never" - July 1965
  • "Girls, Girls, Girls"/"Why Do Fools Fall in Love" - November 1965 - Number 33
  • "Here, There and Everywhere" (Lennon/McCartney)/"You've Changed" - August 1966
  • "Auntie Maggie's Remedy"/"Turn The Lights Down" - November 1966
  • "Apple, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie"/"I Couldn't Spell!!" 1968
  • "Rosetta"/"Just Like Before" - 1968
  • "Easy Squeezy"/"Do I Love You?" - 1969[2][3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Allmusic.com biography by Bruce Eder
  2. ^ Thefourmost.co.uk - discography
  3. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. pp. 211. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  • First and Fourmost album - liner notes by Tony Barrow

External links


 
 
Learn More
Fourmost Return (2001 Album by Jimmy Smith)
Pure: 60s [EMI] (2007 Album by Various Artists)
Want Ad Reader (1985 Album by The New Breed)

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