The Overlanders were formed in 1963 by Paul Arnold on piano and guitar, Lori Mason on piano and harmonica, and Peter Bartholomew on guitar, with all three singing in a vocal trio style. They focussed on the American folk/country style of music, and they were influenced by the likes of The Kingston Trio, The Brothers Four and The Four Freshmen. The group were signed to the Harold Hammond agency, who also handled The Settlers, and for a while The Crazy World of Arthur Brown, and they were picked up by Pye Records in the Spring of 1963, who assigned recording manager Tony Hatch to the group. Their first release was 'Summer Skies And Golden Sands'/'Call Of The Wild', with both sides self-composed by the three members, and it could have been a hit single with a bit more luck. With the success of Lennon and McCartney as songwriters, group members were encouraged to write their own material, and so The Overlanders composed many of their own songs. The follow-up 'Movin'' also failed to chart, but their third release, a cover of Chad And Jeremy's 'Yesterday's Gone', managed to attain a high of No. 75 in July 1964 on the US Billboard chart. Their next single release was 'Don't It Make You Feel Good', which was written by Hank Marvin and Bruce Welch and had originally appeared on the album 'Dance With The Shadows', but it followed the same fate as their first two, as did the next five single releases.
Their producer Tony Hatch obviously believed the group had hit potential, and gave them chance after chance, but after nine releases, with none of them charting in the UK, The Overlanders decided to bring in a rhythm section, and added Terry Widlake on bass and David Walsh on drums, which allowed the group to expand from a folk based trio to a more pop sounding quintet. In 1965 Hatch announced that he had procured The Beatles' 'Michelle' for recording, and immediately booked a session at Pye Studios for the band to record it. The single was rush-released on 31 December 1965, ahead of any potential competing versions, and the gamble paid off with the record peaking at No. 1 in the UK, remaining at that spot for three weeks. Pye capitalised on the hit single by releasing an EP and an album of the same name, but none of the material was new as it consisted of songs from their previously failed singles. It was hard finding a successful follow-up single, and both Hatch's 'My Life' and a cover of The Mamas and The Papas 'Go Where You Wanna Go' failed to chart, and so Arnold left to take his chances on a solo career, being replaced by vocalist/guitarist Ian Griffiths. The revised group carried on for a further twelve months, with the only release being 'Go! With The Overlanders And The Settlers', an album issued by Pye in a vain attempt to revitalize the careers of two of its floundering acts.
The Overlanders finally parted ways in October 1967, with Widlake and occasional member Vic Lythgoe turning up in The Cuppa T for two singles on Deram. Paul Arnold reformed the band in April 1968 as The New Overlanders for two singles on RCA, but their time had passed, and nothing more was heard from them after they failed to chart. The band had continued to record following 'Michelle' becoming a hit, and if Pye hadn't wasted some of these recordings by pairing them with songs from The Settlers for the 'Go!...' album then they could have released a record of new material in 1966, which just might have shown the public that they weren't just a one-hit wonder. However, that didn't happen, and so we can only speculate on what such an album could have sounded like, and it could have been something like this, which adds a couple of their singles which didn't make the 'Michelle' album to tracks from the 'Go!...' album, plus some other unreleased recordings.
01 If I Gave You
02 My Life
03 Anna Marie
04 Sing A Song Of Sadness
05 Don't Let It Happen Again
06 Go Where You Wanna Go
07 Rainbow
08 Girl From Indiana
09 Circle Line Blues
10 Movin'
11 This Land
12 Cradle Of Love
13 Delia's Gone
14 I Wonder Why
15 Shanghai Rooster
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