John "Carter" Shakespeare and Kenneth "Lewis" Hawker were both from Birmingham, and came down to London to make a name for themselves in the music industry. They were offered a deal by manager Terry Kennedy, and moved with him to Southern music at 5 Denmark Street. He re-christened them Carter & Lewis, and produced the seven singles they cut for Piccadilly, Ember and Oriole between 1961 and 1964 under the name Carter-Lewis And The Southerners. They had developed a close harmony style similar to the Everly Brothers, and were soon established as a popular radio team, appearing on BBC Light Programme shows 'Saturday Club' and 'Easy Beat'. The group became a vehicle for publishing the songs that stemmed from the Carter-Lewis partnership, and in summer 1964 Carter and Lewis disbanded The Southerners in order to concentrate on writing and doing sessions. By July 1964, they expanded to a trio, by teaming up with another session singer and songwriter, Brian Pugh aka "Perry Ford". Pugh was also a songwriter, penning hits for Adam Faith with 'Someone Else's Baby', and The Fortunes' 'Caroline', and was running a studio for Reg Calvert in Denmark Street when Carter and Lewis approached him. The trio developed a clear liking for high-falsetto vocals, being influenced by The Four Freshmen and The Beach Boys, and they christened themselves The Ivy League. They started out providing backing vocals on other artists' sessions, such as Sandy Shaw's 'Always Something There To Remind Me', Tom Jones' 'It’s Not Unusual', and The Who's 'Can't Explain', but after deciding to record their own music they signed to Pye's Piccadilly subsidiary.
Their debut single failed to chart, but the follow-up 'Funny How Love Can Be' crashed into the UK Top 10, prompting the need to form a backing group and go out on tour. Micky Keene and Dave Wintour left The Tony Colton’s Crawdaddies to become The Ivy League backing band, and were joined by keyboardist Mike O'Neill and drummer Clem Cattini. The original trio released a few more singles, but only managed to release one full-length album, 'This Is The Ivy League', as because they preferring writing and producing to touring, Carter and Lewis pulled out of the band, being replaced by Tony Burrows (ex-Kestrels) and Neil Landon (ex-Burnetts). At this time, the band cut the best record 'My World Fell Down', a John Carter/Geoff Stephens composition which Gary Usher and LA group Sagittarius turn into a masterpiece in 1967. The Ivy League toured the UK and Europe unflaggingly throughout 1966 with new backing band The Jaybirds, who later found success as Ten Years After. In the summer of 1967 Carter and Lewis recorded a song they wrote to articulate the sentiments of the flower-power movement, releasing 'Let's Go To San Francisco' under the name The Flowerpot Men', and as there was no real group of this name, they rented out the band name to Tony Burrows, who put together a tour ensemble to satisfy the popular demand generated by the single, which made number4 in the UK charts in September 1967. Although The Ivy League was basically a different group from 1966 onwards, Carter, Lewis and Ford continued to write all their songs, and by the end of 1967 they had released enough material to make up a second album, but as they broke up before that could happen, here is what their sophomore record could have sounded like.
Track listing
01 Running Round In Circles
02 One Day
03 When You're Young
04 Suddenly Things
05 Our Love Is Slipping Away
06 Rain Rain Go Away
07 My World Fell Down
08 Four And Twenty Hours
09 Arrivederci Baby
10 Tomorrow Is Another Day
11 Willow Tree
12 I Could Make You Fall In Love
13 Tossing And Turning
14 Thank You For Loving Me
15 In The Not Too Distant Future
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