The Spectrum

The Spectrum - '60s Essex pop/beat, UK "The Monkees" attempt

Group from United Kingdom

Genres: 60s, Psychedelic Rock, psychedelic pop, british

About The Spectrum

Manufactured by the London office of RCA Victor as a British answer to The Monkees, Essex pop/psychedelia group The Spectrum found greater success abroad, especially in Spain. The Spectrum were mostly known in Europe, despite being a British band. They never had any luck in their own country, despite exposure on a popular children's television show for part of its run and getting a single picked up by a top pirate radio station. Tony Atkins (lead guitar), Colin Forsey (vocals), Bill Chambers (organ), Tony Judd (bass), and Keith Forsey (drums) made their debut with a single of 'Samantha's Mine' b/w 'Saturday's Child', issued in early 1967. It became much more popular in Spain (where it reached the number one spot) than it was in England. Their second single, 'Portobello Road', was picked up by Radio London, the top pirate radio outlet in England, and played very heavily, but it failed to chart. Their third single, 'Headin' for a Heatwave' hit home in Spain once again, whereas their fifth single, a cover of 'Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da' reached the top spot in Germany in 1968. The group was also featured in the closing credits of the Gerry Anderson-produced series Captain Scarlet & the Mysterons, singing the title song, but this exposure failed to get them any significant sales and the song was never issued commercially -- ironically enough, their presence on the title theme even gave the group a bit of exposure in America, of which they were never able to take advantage. By 1968, Peter Wood had replaced Chambers on the organ, and the following year Atkins switched to bass and Colin Forsey became their rhythm guitarist while John Beattie took over on lead guitar. Two additional singles were forthcoming from the group on RCA, along with an LP entitled The Light Is Dark Enough, after which the group moved to Parlophone for one last single before splitting up. This early record of mixed success seemed to be nothing up a hiccup in the career of Keith Forsey, who went on to play drums with numerous other artists, in addition to becoming a major songwriter (including co-authoring 'Flashdance (What a Feeling)' and 'Don't You Forget About Me') and producing Billy Idol, Nina Hagen, The Pointer Sisters and the Psychedelic Furs, among numerous other artists, and writing several movie soundtracks.

Taken from Last.fm

1,277 listeners  ·  6,087 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

1
station playing
1
country
1
track tracked
most active station (The Netherlands)
Heard alongside: MBTT Club80 Beatles

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

ABTT
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 192
8 Likes

The Spectrum — Top 1 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Beat (Uk) Save It For Later
Save It For Later