In
1963 they went electric, with Rod mastering the bass guitar;
they added a drummer and keyboards player. They were managed
by the flamboyant concert promoter Reg Calvert, who prevailed
upon them to accompany a singer Calvert had renamed "Robbie
Hood". The Clifftones inevitably became the Merry Men,
dressed in jerkins and green tights.
They emerged at the end of this period as the Fortunes Rhythm
Group. By now, Rod had dropped the name Bainbridge and chosen
Allen from a telephone directory. They worked up a series
of songs associated with Dionne Warwick, Gene Pitney and Broadway
theatre. So eclectic was their repertoire that Calvert would
often challenge an audience: "Name any tune and if the
Fortunes can't play it, you win five shillings!"
In
1963, they won a beat contest at the Gay Tower Ballroom in
Edgbaston and were signed by Decca. The Fortunes' second single
for the label was the plaintive ballad Caroline, which was
adopted as a theme tune by the pirate radio station of that
name. Calvert was also entangled in the shadowy world of pirate
radio, and was shot and killed in 1966 as a result of rivalry
with another pirate station owner.
The
Fortunes' first hit was in 1965, when You've Got Your Troubles
reached No 2 in Britain and No 7 in the US. The song, composed
by leading Tin Pan Alley writers Roger Greenaway and Roger
Cook, featured Allen's soaring lead vocals, as did the follow-up
hit, Here It Comes Again. The group then toured the US and
released This Golden Ring on their return. It reached the
Top 20.
Although
its success was slightly marred when the Fortunes admitted
in a magazine interview that they had not played the instruments
on the recording, they were booked to appear at the prestigious
NME Poll Winners Show at Wembley Arena, where they performed
This Golden Ring before several thousand screaming teenagers.
The
Fortunes issued a further 10 singles in the 1960s. None was
a hit, although several featured songs written by Allen and
other group members, the best of which was The Idol by Allen
and Pritchard. Despite their lack of chart success, the band
prospered by playing the cabaret club circuit and by recording
jingles for several television and cinema commercials. The
most distinctive of these was Allen's rendition of It's the
Real Thing, the Coca-Cola theme.
The
band's recording career was briefly revived in the early 1970s,
when Greenaway and Cook supplied them with two more hit songs,
Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling and Freedom Come, Freedom
Go. These were followed by Storm in a Teacup, co-written by
Lindsey De Paul and Barry Blue.
These
successes renewed demand for live appearances by the Fortunes
and the group kept on in steady work right up to the present.
Allen played his last show with the group at Yeovil last November,
shortly after he was diagnosed with liver cancer. The Fortunes
have a full engagement book for 2008, and the surviving group
members have said that it was his wish that they should continue
after his death. Allen is survived by his wife Margaret, son
Leigh, daughter Sharon and three grandchildren.
Rod
Allen (Rodney Bainbridge) Musician
Born
March 31 1944; died January 10 2008.
Rod
was without doubt, the Voice Of The 60's.
An
incredible vocalist, a nice man, and a very good friend.
The
Fortunes.
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