Record

CodeDS/UK/14928
NameCarter-Lewis and the Southerners (c.1960)
Datesc.1960
GenderGroup (Male)
Place of Birth/OriginBirmingham, England (formed)
RelationshipsMembers:
Ken Lewis - guitar, vocals,
John Carter - vocals
BiographyCarter-Lewis and the Southerners were an early-1960s rock band, formed by the Birmingham-born musicians Ken Lewis and John Carter.

Carter and Lewis were initially songwriters. The early 1960s saw the rise of the Liverpool Sound, and Carter and Lewis recorded copies of the latest group hits and performed them for the BBC Light Programme's shows Easy Beat and Saturday Club. They wrote Mike Sarne's 1962 chart-topping single "Will I What?". Eventually their manager Terry Kennedy convinced them that they needed to form a band to showcase their songs. Jimmy Page (who replaced Canadian, Lorne Greene on guitar), Viv Prince (later of Pretty Things) and Perry Ford were members of the band, although Page was only there briefly. However, few of their singles featured Carter-Lewis compositions.

Carter and Lewis composed songs for a number of other artists, including Brenda Lee and P.J. Proby. John Carter sang the lead on The New Vaudeville Band's 1966 number 1 hit, "Winchester Cathedral", and the pair wrote Herman's Hermits 1965 hit "Can't You Hear My Heartbeat", which reached number 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100.

Carter, Lewis and Ford continued as The Ivy League, who had a number of chart hits, and also providing backing vocals on such hit singles as The Who's "I Can't Explain"). In 1966 they left the Ivy League to form the production company 'Sunny Music', creating The Flower Pot Men whose hit "Let's Go To San Francisco" reached number 4 in the UK Singles Chart in 1967. By this time Carter and Lewis worked purely as songwriters, arrangers, producers and studio-based musicians – if their recorded work subsequently found an audience, they would then organize a group around that name to actively promote the recordings via concerts, etc. In this fashion they were responsible for White Plains, First Class, and others in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

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