The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
Main MenuConcept Refinement The Author..Wayne JancikGolden Age Of The 50sGolden Age Of The 60s1970s and There After
TIN TIN
“TOAST AND MARMALADE FOR TEA”
(Steve Groves)
Atco 6794
No. 20 May 29, 1971
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Tin Tin consisted of two Steves, surnamed Groves (guitar, bass, mellotron) and Kipner (keyboards, bass).
In the late ’60s, both blokes walked out on group affiliations in their native Australia to form what was
intended to be a successful songwriting partnership. After cranking out a number of tunes, the Steves
recorded some demos and moved to London.
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With a stack of psychedelicized Beatles-like records cut and canned, the Down Under dudes approached
fellow Australian Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees. Gibb liked their stuff, particularly an item called “Toast
and Marmalade for Tea.” For some long-forgotten reason, the guys named themselves after Tin Tin, a
Belgian cartoon character. Atco Records released the disk, and a sizable chunk of the Western world
concurred with Maurice’s thumbs-up assessment. “Marmalade,” produced by Gibb, oozed onto the charts.
The follow-up, “Is That the Way” (#59, 1971)–also produced by Gibb–struggled with the lower reaches of
the Hot 100, but “Talkin’ Turkey” and other singles stiffed.
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