| THE
FOUNDATIONS (ARTIEST BIOGRAPHY)
The group, made up of both West Indians and
Caucasians, is best known for their two biggest hits, Baby, Now That
I’ve Found You (a No. 1 hit in the UK singles chart, and
subsequently Top 10 in the US); and Build Me Up Buttercup (a chart
topper in the Billboard Hot 100), co-written by Michael d’Abo,
vocalist with Manfred Mann.
They are also notable for being one of the few acts not on the Tamla
Motown label, to use successfully what became known as the Motown
Sound. In terms of line-up and musical style, they anticipated the
sound of the more successful Hot Chocolate.
Original vocalist Clem Curtis left in 1968 and moved to the U.S. for
a solo career on the club circuit, encouraged by the likes of Wilson
Pickett and Sam & Dave, playing Las Vegas with The Righteous
Brothers. He was replaced by Colin Young.
The group’s final hit was the less pop-oriented, more sophisticated
Born to Live and Born to Die. They split in 1970, when the rhythm
section broke away to form the progressive group Pluto. When Curtis
returned to the UK he formed a new version of the group with little
success on record, but a lucrative spell on the 1960s nostalgia
circuit. |