The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
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MARMALADE
REFLECTIONS OF MY LIFE
(“Junior” Willie Campbell, Thomas McAleese)
London 20058
No. 10 May 9, 1970
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Marmalade was formed in Glasgow, in 1961 when two aspiring guitarists, “Junior” Willie Campbell (b.
July 24, 1946, Glasgow, Scotland) and Pat Fairley (b. Apr. 14, 1946, Glasgow), met in Glasgow. Pat and
Junior recruited vocalist Dean Ford (b. Thomas McAleese, May 31, 1947, Airdrie, Scotland), vocalist/
bassist Graham Knight (b. Dec. 8, 1946, Glasgow), and soon-to-depart drummer Raymond Duffy. Before
Marmalade’s sight and sound jelled, the unit was named the Gaylords. They quickly became quite
popular in Scotland, and were voted the country’s top group from 1964 to 1966.
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Duffy left, and Alan Whitehead (b. July 24, 1947, Owestry, England) was whacking the skins by the time
the group decided to move to London. Once settled there, they redubbed themselves Marmalade for a
show-stopping appearance at the 1967 Windsor Jazz Festival. After a successful Thursday-night
residency at the famed Marquee Club–where the Yardbirds, the Animals, and the Rolling Stones first
earned their reputations–England’s CBS label signed the group to a recording contract.
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From 1968 through 1976, Marmalade could do little amiss with British fans. Near a dozen of their singles
became U.K. hits, and more than half of these reached the Top 10 (a cover of the Beatles’ “Ob-La-Di, Ob-
La-Da” sold a million copies). Ten albums [TEN?!] were released throughout Europe, yet the moody
“Reflections of My Life” was the band’s only excursion into the hallowed halls of stateside hitdom. Before
Marmalade’s success soured, “Rainbow” (#51, 1970) and “Failing Apart at the Seams” (#49, 1976) caused
minor U.S. chart disturbances.
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