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Bern Elliott and the Fenmen were a British beat group, active between 1961 and 1964, and best known for their 1963 cover version of the song, "Money". ==Biography== Bern Elliott and the Fenmen formed in Kent in 1961, and performed over the next two years in clubs in Hamburg, Germany, before being signed to a recording contract with Decca in early 1963. "Money" was released by several artists at the time, but Bern Elliott and the Fenmen were unique as a group in registering a UK Singles Chart Top 20 hit in December 1963. Elliot and the Fenmen's Merseybeat style belied their southern England roots. A few more releases failed to make much headway, as their style started to sound dated.〔 However, they did appear on the 13 March 1964 episode of the UK television programme, ''Ready Steady Go!'', playing their follow-up hit, "New Orleans". In May 1964, Elliot parted company with his Fenmen, and utilised The Klan for a short time as his backing group. The following year several solo efforts also failed to chart. The Fenmen continued, issuing further efforts both for Decca and CBS, including "I've Got Everything You Need, Babe" (1965) and "Rejected" (1966).〔〔 Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page recalled: : After the Fenmen themselves disbanded, Wally Allen (aka Wally Waller) and John Povey moved on to The Pretty Things.〔 "Money" later reached the UK Singles Chart in versions by The Flying Lizards (1979) and The Backbeat Band (1994). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bern Elliott and the Fenmen」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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