Wayne Fontana & The Mindbenders

Wayne Fontana was born Glynn Ellis in Manchester, England, on
October 28th, 1945. He started his musical career at school with a
skiffle group called The Velfins, and later formed a Rock & Roll
outfit called The Jets, with whom he worked the pubs and clubs of
Greater Manchester.
In 1963 the group was spotted playing in Manchester's Oasis Club
and asked to undertake an audition for Philips/Fontana Records at the
same venue on the following evening in front of a live audience. The
chance was too good to turn down but the next evening only Wayne (who
took his surname from the Fontana Records label) and the bass player
(Bob Lang) turned up!
Faced with an extreme dilemma - and in sheer desperation - Wayne
turned to two of his musician friends in the audience who had
turned up to lend moral support. So with Eric Stewart on guitar and
Ric Rothwell on drums they managed to weave together enough material
to pass the audition, impress the record company and land the
lucrative contract. The band now needed a name, so - stimulated by a
recent movie at the local cinema - the group became known as The
Mindbenders.
Their debut Fontana single - released a few months later - was a
cover version of Bo Diddley's
Roadrunner, which enjoyed moderate success. A year and two more
singles later though, they finally hit the chart jackpot with a cover
of Major Lance's American hit Um Um Um Um Um Um which reached
Number 2 in Britain, and in 1965 their single Game Of Love
topped the British and American charts.
During the same year, Wayne's 'backing band' (The Mindbenders) cut
a single of their own - called Groovy Kind Of Love - and when
the single reached the Top 3 they decided to branch out on their own,
leaving Wayne to concentrate on a solo career. While Wayne moved into cabaret,
the band enjoyed considerable success over the following months -
including two more hit singles and an appearance in the movie
To Sir With Love -
before finally retiring to
the climes of Northern Variety clubs.
Wayne Fontana made the chart again with four singles from 1965 to
1966, the most successful of which was Pamela Pamela which
reached Number 11 in 1966. Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman returned in the 1970s with 10cc
while Wayne spent his time touring the British cabaret circuit (and
frequently touring America with Rock & Roll revival shows). He was
remanded in custody in 2007 after admitting setting fire to a debt
collector's car. The judge criticised Fontana for arriving at Derby
Crown Court dressed as the Lady of Justice. He had to hand a sword and
scales to guards but kept on a crown, cape and dark glasses, claiming
"justice is blind".
Fontana denied 'arson with intent to endanger life', claiming the
bailiff had escaped the vehicle before it set alight. But he admitted
'arson being reckless to whether life is endangered', saying he did in
fact ignite the fuel and set the car on fire. He now lives in Spain.
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