John Peel Wiki

Changes to the look of John Peel Wiki will take place in the near future due to a new skin being rolled out over Oct/Nov across Wikia. Please see the Wikia Staff Blog for further details. On this site, the changes will affect the navigation from the left menu, as well as introduce a fixed page width with narrower content space. Please be patient while adjustments are made for the switch to the new system.

UPDATE: As the change is now in force for some users, I have switched the navigation to the simplified one for the new system. Please check Navigation in the Help section if you can't find things. I also initially made small adjustments to the front page layout, but have now reverted to the old look until all users are on the new system.

COUNTDOWN: Just a reminder for people still using Monaco that the final switch to the new skin is due on Nov. 3. After that, it will no longer be offered as an option. Sorry. Nothing to do with me.

Steve W

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John Peel Wiki
Foundations

The Foundations were a British soul band, active from 1967 to 1970. The evolved out of a group called The Ramong Sound aka The Ramongs. They were an eight man multi-racial group made up of three white Londoners, four West Indians and a Sri Lankan. For approximately one and a half months Arthur Brown was in the group. They were originally discovered by Ron Fairway and were briefly managed by Fairway and Barry Class until Fairway was ousted leaving Class in charge.

They had a UK number 1 hit with their first release, "Baby, Now That I've Found You", They followed up with "Back On My Feet Again" which went to number 18 and "Any Old Time (You're Lonely Or Sad)" which got to number 48.

The original lead singer Clem Curtis and another member, tenor sax player Mike Elliott left in 1968. The Foundations had two more big hits with Curtis's replacement, lead singer Colin Young. "Build Me Up Buttercup" went number 2 in 1968 and In The Bad Bad Old Days" which went to number 8 in 1969. The group's last chart entry was with their own composition "Born To Live, Born To Die" which charted number 46.

The group disbanded towards the end of 1970. Since the 1970's Clem Curtis has continued to perform in a revived version of the group named Clem Curtis & The Foundations, Meanwhile, Colin Young formed his own shortlived version of the group, New Foundations.

Later years, Curtis along with original guitarist Alan Warner, keyboard player, Vince Cross and drummer, Andy Bennett, recorded new versions of The Foundations classic tracks plus additional material. This appears on the 1992 album Greatest Hits which in spite of its title is not a compilation.

Links to Peel[]

In an July 2021 interview with Mike Naylor of BBC Three Counties Radio, Mike Warner of The Foundations praised Peel and mentioned the experience of doing his session:

"Yes yeah I remembered that. Yeah yeah John Peel yeah. The atmosphere was good. We did some live stuff. Of course we didn't just do our hits you know. We did what we do on stage. The thing with John Peel, he liked things that were different didn't he? so when we done the live stuff, we did stuff that no one heard of over here." [1]

Sessions[]

1. Recorded: 1968-01-08. First Broadcast: 14 January 1968

  • A Whole New Thing / Back On My Feet Again / Help Me / 96 Tears

Other Shows Played[]

The_Foundations_-_Baby_Now_That_I've_Found_You_(Mono)_(Official_Audio)

The Foundations - Baby Now That I've Found You (Mono) (Official Audio)

1968
1999

See Also[]

External Links[]