Clodagh Rodgers
Clodagh Rodgers (5 March 1947 – 18 April 2025) was a Northern Irish singer and actress recognized for her pop hits in the late 1960s and early 1970s, as well as her fourth-place finish representing the United Kingdom at the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Jack in the Box".[1][2] Born in Warrenpoint, County Down, to a family involved in entertainment—her father promoted dancehalls—she began performing publicly at age 13, secured a recording contract with Decca Records by 14, and debuted on television in 1962.[3][2] Rodgers achieved commercial success after signing with EMI in 1968, charting with singles such as "Come Back and Shake Me" (UK No. 3 in 1969) and "Goodnight Midnight" (UK Top 10 in 1969), alongside albums like Clodagh Rodgers and Midnight Clodagh.[4][3] Her selection for Eurovision, held in Dublin amid the Troubles, drew IRA death threats targeting her as a Catholic from Northern Ireland performing for the UK, yet she proceeded, earning 98 points for fourth place and subsequent UK chart success for the entry.[3] Beyond music, she appeared in variety shows, commercials, theatre productions including Blood Brothers (1994–1998), and television roles such as in The Bill, while maintaining a stage presence through cabaret and pantomime.[3][5] In her personal life, Rodgers married twice—first to John Morris (1968–1979), with whom she had son Matt, and later to Ian Sorbie (1987 until his death in 1995), father of her second son Sam—and faced setbacks including divorce, her second husband's passing, and a 1992 bankruptcy from a restaurant venture.[3][2] She continued performing sporadically into later years before succumbing to a three-year illness at age 78.[2]Early life
Family background and upbringing
Clodagh Rodgers was born on 5 March 1947 in Warrenpoint, County Down, Northern Ireland, to parents Gertrude Rodgers and Louis Rodgers.[3][6] Her father worked as a music promoter, arranging performances for entertainers including Adam Faith, Michael Holliday, and Johnny Cash in Northern Ireland dancehalls, which positioned the family in proximity to the entertainment industry without direct involvement in performance.[3][7] Rodgers grew up in a working-class household in Warrenpoint, a small town in rural County Down, alongside siblings that included Louis, Lavinia, and Frank, some of whom pursued singing careers.[3][8] The family's self-reliant structure relied on Louis Rodgers' promotional earnings rather than external support, fostering an environment of practical exposure to touring artists through his bookings rather than formal training or privilege.[7] Her early education occurred locally in Northern Ireland, concluding when she left school at age 15 amid the family's eventual relocation to England for professional opportunities, though her formative years remained rooted in the disciplined, industry-adjacent dynamics of her parents' home.[2][6]Initial entry into music
Rodgers' entry into music was facilitated by her father Louis Rodgers, a dancehall tour promoter whose professional network provided initial performance opportunities. At age thirteen, she began appearing as a support act for established artists in local County Down venues, leveraging these family ties to gain stage experience.[3][9] Following her exit from school at fifteen, her father's connections secured an audition leading to a contract with Decca Records in 1962. This marked her professional recording debut, driven by personal ambition amid the competitive industry landscape of the era.[10][11] Her first release, the single "Believe Me I'm No Fool" backed by "End of the Line" in late 1962 and produced by Shel Talmy, failed to chart, as did her subsequent three Decca singles through 1963-1965. These early efforts underscored the trial-and-error nature of breaking through, requiring sustained persistence without immediate commercial validation.[11][3] In 1965, Rodgers shifted to EMI's Columbia label, adopting the spelling "Cloda Rogers" for releases including "Stormy Weather" in 1966, which also did not achieve chart success. This move reflected ongoing adaptation in pursuit of viability, though initial obscurity persisted.[3] By late 1968, she transitioned to RCA Records, concluding a phase of label experimentation characterized by uncharted singles and highlighting the causal role of familial support and individual resolve in navigating early career hurdles.[9]Recording career
Early releases and label changes
Rodgers signed with Decca Records at age 15, releasing her debut single "Believe Me I'm No Fool" backed with "End of the Line" in November 1962, produced by Shel Talmy.[12] [13] She followed with three additional Decca singles in 1963, including "Sometime Kind of Love" coupled with "I See More of Him," but none entered the UK Singles Chart, amid a highly competitive environment dominated by established acts and emerging beat groups.[12] [14] Transitioning to EMI's Columbia label around 1964–1965, Rodgers issued further singles such as "Mr. Heartache" in 1964 and an echo-laden cover of "Stormy Weather" backed with "Lonely Room" in 1966, the latter credited variably as "Cloda Rogers."[13] [3] These efforts, blending originals and standards, similarly garnered no chart positions, underscoring limited promotional reach and the challenges for young solo artists in the mid-1960s pop scene.[14] By 1968, Rodgers switched to RCA Records under a three-single contract, benefiting from enhanced distribution and marketing resources that previous imprints had lacked. Her opening RCA releases, while not charting, represented a strategic pivot toward more contemporary production and visibility, setting the stage for commercial traction without yet yielding breakthroughs.[12]Major hits and commercial peak
Rodgers' commercial breakthrough occurred in 1969 after signing with RCA Records, with the single "Come Back and Shake Me" peaking at number 3 on the UK Singles Chart and charting for 14 weeks.[4] This was followed by "Goodnight Midnight", which reached number 4 on the same chart, contributing to her recognition as the best-selling female singles artist in the UK for that year.[4][13] These successes were supported by RCA's promotional efforts, including television appearances that highlighted her energetic stage presence and visual appeal, such as being voted "Best Legs in British Show Business" by audiences as a measure of her pop performer charisma.[15] In 1970, Rodgers sustained momentum with "Biljo", another top-10 entry driven by similar upbeat pop styling and RCA backing under the management of her husband John Morris, though specific sales figures beyond chart performance remain undocumented in primary records.[4][16] Her peak-era output emphasized catchy, lighthearted singles that capitalized on the late-1960s shift toward accessible bubblegum pop, achieving three UK top-10 hits overall in this phase amid a competitive market dominated by established acts.[17][4] This period marked her highest commercial visibility, with RCA's investment in her image as a vibrant, relatable female artist aiding sustained radio and TV play without reliance on broader album sales, as her debut LP charted only briefly.[4][17]Later recordings and output
Following the release of "Jack in the Box" in 1971, Rodgers' subsequent singles achieved lower commercial performance. "Lady Love Bug", issued in September 1971, peaked at number 28 on the UK Singles Chart and spent 12 weeks in the Top 75.[4] In 1972, she released the album It's Different Now on RCA Records, which did not enter the UK Albums Chart.[18] Further singles from this period, including non-charting efforts, marked a decline from her earlier Top 10 successes amid the transition to glam rock and other genres that overshadowed bubblegum pop styles.[12] Rodgers signed with Polydor Records in 1976, releasing the album Save Me in 1977, though it failed to generate significant sales or airplay.[19] She issued two final original singles in 1980, after which production of new material halted.[19] From the 1980s onward, Rodgers' discography consisted exclusively of compilations capitalizing on her earlier hits, such as Come Back and Shake Me: The Kenny Young Years 1969-71 in 2012, reflecting retrospective catalog reissues rather than fresh recordings.[18] Over her career, she produced six studio albums and five compilations in total, with original output effectively concluding by the early 1980s.[20]Eurovision participation
Selection process for 1971
The BBC internally selected Clodagh Rodgers, a Northern Irish singer from Warrenpoint, County Down, to represent the United Kingdom at the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest, citing her established popularity in both the UK and the Republic of Ireland as a key factor.[2][21] This choice occurred amid heightened sectarian tensions during the Troubles, with some observers noting the BBC's apparent consideration of political optics in opting for a Catholic artist from Northern Ireland to perform in Dublin, the contest's host city.[22] Rodgers, aged 24 at the time, had achieved prior commercial success with singles such as "Come Back and Shake Me" (peaking at number 6 on the UK Singles Chart in 1969) and "Goodnight Midnight" (number 4 in 1970), which underscored her appeal as a performer capable of delivering upbeat pop material.[4][3] The song selection proceeded via the BBC's national final, "A Song for Europe," in which Rodgers performed all six competing entries during episodes of the television program It's Cliff Richard!, broadcast weekly in February 1971.[23][21] "Jack in the Box," composed by John Worsley (under his pseudonym Les Vandyke) with lyrics by David Myers, emerged as the winner through a combination of regional jury votes and public postcards, reflecting both expert and audience preferences for its lively, cabaret-style arrangement.[24][21] Alternatives considered included "Wind of Change," which placed second in the voting, but "Jack in the Box" was favored for its catchy melody and Rodgers' charismatic delivery during the rehearsals and broadcasts.[25] Rodgers' preparation involved adapting the song's staging for television and eventual international performance, with the BBC emphasizing her vocal range and stage presence honed from prior hits, while navigating the logistical challenges of a UK entry originating from a Northern Irish artist in a politically charged year.[2] The process highlighted the BBC's internal dynamics in balancing artistic merit with broader representational considerations, without public artist auditions.[26]Performance and results
Clodagh Rodgers performed "Jack in the Box" as the ninth entry in the running order at the Eurovision Song Contest on 3 April 1971, held at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[27][28] The song, an upbeat pop number with a bouncy rhythm evoking a circus motif, featured Rodgers delivering energetic vocals while swaying on stage in a pink ensemble of long-sleeved top and short shiny pants adorned with beads.[29][13] Under the contest's voting system, where each participating country's two jurors (one aged 16–25 and one 26–55) scored songs from 1 to 5 points each, yielding 2–10 points per nation, the United Kingdom amassed 98 points to finish fourth out of 18 entries.[30][31] This placed it behind Monaco's winning entry "Un banc, un arbre, une rue" by Séverine (128 points), Spain's "En un mundo nuevo" by Karina (116 points), and France's "Comé comprendre" by Jean-Claude Pascal (136 points), but ahead of Germany's "Diese Welt" by Katja Ebstein (100 points).[31] Among the points received, Austria awarded 4, while Belgium, Finland, France, Malta, and the Netherlands each gave 3; Luxembourg, Spain, and Switzerland contributed 2 points each.[32] The UK delegation, including Rodgers and her team, traveled to Dublin for the event amid standard preparations, with the performance broadcast live on BBC Television to UK audiences.[33] Immediately following the results announcement, the song's chart performance surged, peaking at No. 4 on the UK Singles Chart in the weeks after the contest.[27] Contemporary accounts highlighted the track's cheerful style and Rodgers' charismatic delivery as contributing to its solid reception, though it fell short of a podium finish by 2 points from third place.[13][26]Associated controversies
Rodgers faced significant backlash in the Republic of Ireland for representing the United Kingdom at the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin, amid heightened tensions from the Troubles in Northern Ireland.[22] As a Catholic singer born in Warrenpoint, County Down, her selection by the BBC—intended partly to mitigate hostility by choosing a Northern Irish entrant—was viewed by some Irish republicans as a provocative or traitorous act, exacerbating national divisions.[34] The Irish Republican Army (IRA) issued death threats and warnings of kidnapping if she proceeded, reflecting broader anti-British sentiment and the era's sectarian strife, though sentiments among Irish audiences were divided, with some supporting her as a fellow Catholic performer.[34] [7] Rodgers defended her participation as a professional commitment, emphasizing the career opportunity despite the risks and refusing to withdraw, which underscored the personal stakes amid polarized Irish identities without aligning explicitly with unionist or republican positions.[3] Security measures were heightened around the event, but she performed undeterred, highlighting how individual ambition intersected with geopolitical frictions.[34] In the UK, the song "Jack in the Box" drew minor criticism from some commentators for its perceived lightweight, formulaic style in the vein of prior Eurovision entries, though this was tempered by its subsequent commercial performance, reaching number 4 on the UK Singles Chart.[3]Media and television career
Key television appearances
Rodgers frequently performed on BBC's Top of the Pops throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, with her debut studio appearance on 10 April 1969 promoting "Come Back and Shake Me," followed by returns for hits including "Save Me" in 1977, contributing to the program's weekly audiences often surpassing 10 million viewers during peak eras.[35][36] In 1970, she guested on The Morecambe & Wise Show (series 3, episode 2, aired circa January), delivering live renditions such as "Tangerine" alongside the comedy duo's sketches, on a program renowned for its demanding variety format and viewership frequently exceeding 18 million.[37][38] She also appeared multiple times on The Two Ronnies, including a 1974 performance of "It's Different Now" and a 1980 duet segment, emphasizing her versatility in sketch-integrated musical spots.[39][40] Other notable 1970s variety outings included hosting the premiere episode of Seaside Special on 6 July 1973 from Great Yarmouth, as well as subsequent features like the 1975 edition with Dick Emery and Sacha Distel, and a guest role on The Generation Game (series 1, episode 2, 9 October 1971) under Bruce Forsyth, where live performances tested entertainers' adaptability before family audiences averaging 15-20 million.[41][42] On Irish television, Rodgers hosted The Clodagh Rodgers Show on RTÉ during the 1970s, showcasing her songs and guests in a format tailored to live studio demands.[12] Appearances tapered in later decades, with rarer nostalgic revivals such as 1998's Europigeon, a Eurovision parody alongside fellow alumni, reflecting sustained but selective visibility in retrospective programming.[43]Advertising and endorsement roles
Rodgers featured prominently as the face of Bisto gravy in a series of television advertisements broadcast in the United Kingdom during the 1970s and 1980s.[20][3] These commercials showcased her promoting the product's ability to brown, season, and thicken gravies efficiently, often in domestic settings that resonated with British audiences and reinforced the brand's association with everyday home cooking.[44][13] The campaign, which followed her 1971 Eurovision performance, capitalized on her established television presence to achieve widespread recognition, establishing Bisto as a staple in UK households through repeated exposure on primetime slots.[45][6] This long-term endorsement aligned with her public persona of accessibility and reliability, providing a commercial outlet that sustained visibility independent of fluctuating record sales.[3] In addition to Bisto, Rodgers's image in the late 1960s supported promotional efforts tied to fashion trends, including awards like "Miss Mini Skirt" and "Miss Golden Legs," which were presented in events endorsing shorter hemlines and garnered media attention for her physique.[6][13] These accolades, while not formal brand sponsorships, enhanced her marketability in an era when visual appeal drove celebrity endorsements, reflecting pragmatic diversification amid the entertainment industry's economic pressures.Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Rodgers married John Morris, a promotions executive previously employed at Decca Records, in London in 1968; he subsequently served as her manager during her early career.[3][13] The couple divorced in 1979.[13][46] Following her divorce, Rodgers wed Scottish guitarist Ian Sorbie in 1987.[3][6] Sorbie, whom she met during a 1980 summer season in Cleethorpes, remained her husband until his death on May 12, 1995.[1][6] Throughout her public career, Rodgers maintained a relatively private personal life, with no documented high-profile scandals or publicized romantic entanglements beyond her two marriages.[3][47]Family and later residences
Rodgers was the mother of two sons, Matt from her first marriage and Sam from her second, both of whom survived her and played central roles in her family life.[3][44] Public details on her offspring remain limited, reflecting a deliberate emphasis on privacy and familial stability over extended media exposure in her later decades; her son Sam Sorbie publicly described her as the "rock of this family," highlighting her devotion to supporting her sons amid personal challenges.[2][48] In her domestic life, Rodgers prioritized a supportive home environment, with family providing emotional resilience during health declines. While earlier career demands involved frequent travel between Northern Ireland and England, she settled into quieter routines centered on close-knit relations, avoiding the spotlight to foster stability.[49] Rodgers resided in Sussex during the mid-2010s, as noted in contemporary profiles, before relocating to Cobham in Surrey for her final years, where she maintained a low-profile existence surrounded by family until her passing on April 18, 2025.[49][50] This shift to Surrey aligned with a retreat from public life, emphasizing private familial bonds over professional engagements.[48]Illness and death
Onset of health issues
In early 2022, Clodagh Rodgers commenced a protracted health struggle that persisted for three years, as confirmed by her son Sam Sorbie in his public announcement.[2][51] The precise diagnosis remained undisclosed, with family statements emphasizing a private battle against the illness without elaboration on medical specifics.[52] This reticence aligned with Rodgers' longstanding approach to personal matters, prioritizing discretion over public disclosure and underscoring her resilience in facing adversity away from the spotlight.[53]Final years and passing
Rodgers lived quietly in Cobham, Surrey, during her later years following retirement from performing and public appearances around 2015, with no new recordings, tours, or media engagements reported.[11][54] She died on 18 April 2025 at her home in Cobham, at the age of 78.[2][3][1] Her family confirmed the death the following day, stating she passed away peacefully surrounded by loved ones, and notified media outlets including the BBC and Sky News.[44][2]Public tributes
Her son, Sam Sorbie, announced Rodgers' death on Facebook on April 19, 2025, describing her as "the rock of this family" who had "devoted her life to her children and grandchildren" and lived an "incredible life."[2] He noted that she passed peacefully surrounded by family after a three-year illness.[55] Obituaries from major outlets praised her contributions to 1970s British pop and television. The BBC highlighted her fourth-place finish at the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest with "Jack in the Box," noting her role as a prominent UK representative.[2] The Guardian obituary emphasized her chart successes, including "Come Back and Shake Me," and her resilience amid IRA threats during the Eurovision selection.[3] The Telegraph described her as a "glamorous singer from Co Down" whose career bridged music and advertising, such as her Bisto endorsements.[11] Fans and local communities expressed widespread admiration online and in regional media. Social media reactions recalled her "lovely voice" and hits like "Lady Marmalade," with condolences shared on platforms including Facebook groups dedicated to 1960s-1970s music. In Paignton, Devon—where she once resided—residents hailed her as a "true legend" for her community ties and performances.[56] YouTube channels uploaded tributes, including piano covers of her songs, garnering views shortly after her passing on April 19, 2025.[57] Radio stations and music pages also commemorated her visibility in UK pop culture. Boom Radio posted a farewell message on April 19, 2025, sharing archival footage of her 23rd birthday celebration to evoke her era's vibrancy.[58] While no high-profile celebrity statements emerged prominently, peer-adjacent accounts like the Dusty Springfield official page expressed sorrow, remembering early sightings of Rodgers in the 1960s scene.[59]Legacy and reception
Achievements and cultural impact
Rodgers achieved three top 10 singles on the UK Singles Chart, including "Come Back and Shake Me" peaking at number 3 in 1969 and spending 14 weeks in the chart, "Goodnight Midnight" at number 4 in 1970, and "Jack in the Box" at number 4 in 1971.[4][4] These successes positioned her as one of the leading female pop artists in the UK during the late 1960s and early 1970s, with a total of six chart entries contributing to her commercial prominence.[14] In 1971, she represented the United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin with "Jack in the Box", finishing fourth overall with 98 points, marking a high-profile international achievement amid her domestic hits.[60] This performance, following her internal selection by the BBC and a national song contest, amplified her visibility across Europe and reinforced her role in British light entertainment.[21] Rodgers was recognized as the best-selling female artist in the UK for 1969, driven by her chart performance and sales of singles like "Come Back and Shake Me".[13] She also garnered public acclaim for her image, being voted "Miss Golden Legs" and "Miss Mini Skirt" in British show business, with the latter award presented as a life-sized gold-leaf-covered leg trophy, highlighting her appeal in an era emphasizing accessible, glamorous female pop personas.[6] Her longstanding role as the face of Bisto gravy in television advertisements from the 1970s onward cemented her in British cultural nostalgia, associating her vivacious persona with everyday family branding and evoking fond recollections of post-war light entertainment traditions.[3] Frequent appearances on programs like Top of the Pops further embedded her in the fabric of UK television variety, influencing the performative style of subsequent female entertainers through her blend of upbeat pop and charismatic stage presence.[4]Critical assessments and limitations
Rodgers' output during her commercial peak has been characterized by detractors as emblematic of bubblegum pop's formulaic structure, featuring repetitive hooks, simplistic chord progressions, and lyrics prioritizing catchiness over substance, which limited its artistic longevity amid evolving 1970s tastes toward more complex genres like glam rock and progressive music.[61] Contemporary assessments, such as those labeling "Jack in the Box" as "bouncy [and] banal," underscored perceptions of her material as lightweight and derivative, failing to innovate beyond teen-oriented frivolity. Rodgers herself critiqued the track as "a dog of a song," acknowledging its inferiority even to comparably dismissed Eurovision entries like Sandie Shaw's "Puppet on a String."[13] Post-1971, her career evidenced a sharp plateau, with singles like "The Loco-Motion" peaking at No. 21 and "Til I Can't Take It Anymore" at No. 41, contrasting her prior top 10 successes such as "Come Back and Shake Me" (No. 3 in 1969), "Goodnight Midnight" (No. 4 in 1970), "Lady Love Bug" (No. 9 in 1970), and "Jack in the Box" (No. 4 in 1971), signaling genre exhaustion as bubblegum's novelty waned.[4] This sales drop-off, totaling just six UK chart entries overall with 59 cumulative weeks predominantly pre-1972, reflected broader market shifts away from her style, though proponents countered that its unpretentious entertainment value sustained niche appeal without necessitating evolution.[4] By the late 1970s, following personal disruptions including divorce, Rodgers curtailed new recordings, underscoring the unsustainability of a career tethered to transient pop trends.[3]Discography
Studio albums
Clodagh Rodgers issued five studio albums between 1969 and 1977, primarily through RCA Records, reflecting her transition from mid-1960s singles to full-length pop releases amid rising chart success with bubblegum and novelty tracks. These works emphasized commercial appeal, incorporating hit singles and producer-driven arrangements by figures like Kenny Young, whose involvement from 1969 onward shaped her sound toward upbeat, accessible pop rather than artistic experimentation, as evidenced by modest album sales despite strong single performance.[62][18] Her output remained limited, with no further studio LPs after 1977, aligning with a career pivot away from recording.[63] The eponymous debut Clodagh Rodgers (RCA SF8033), released in 1969, reached number 27 on the UK Albums Chart and included early singles like "Believe Me I'm No Fool," marking her initial foray into album format with a focus on vocal-driven pop.[64] Later that year, Midnight Clodagh (RCA SF8071) followed, featuring the hit single "Goodnight Midnight" (UK singles chart peak #4) alongside covers such as "Mr. Bojangles" and originals like "Paradise Alley," produced with orchestral arrangements emphasizing her light, melodic style.[65][66] In 1971, Rodgers & Heart (RCA SF8180) capitalized on her breakthrough, incorporating the top-selling single "Come Back and Shake Me" (UK #4), with production by Kenny Young highlighting bubblegum influences and tracks geared toward radio play, though the album itself did not chart prominently.[18] The 1972 release It's Different Now shifted slightly toward more mature pop arrangements but maintained commercial priorities, without notable chart impact or enduring singles.[67] Rodgers' final studio album, Save Me (1977), arrived after a recording hiatus, featuring self-penned material amid attempts to revive her career, yet it failed to achieve commercial traction reflective of her earlier hits.[63]Singles and compilations
Rodgers' early singles, released between 1962 and 1967 on Decca and Columbia labels, included "Believe Me I'm No Fool" b/w "End Of The Line" (Decca F 11534, 1962), "Sometime Kind Of Love" b/w "I See More Of Him" (Decca F 11607, 1963), and "Wanting You" b/w "Johnny Come Home" (Columbia DB 7468, 1965), none of which charted in the UK.[68] Following her signing with RCA Victor in 1968, Rodgers achieved commercial success with a series of pop singles. "Come Back and Shake Me" b/w "I Am A Fantasy" (RCA 1792, 1969) marked her breakthrough, peaking at number 3 on the UK Singles Chart and spending 14 weeks in the Top 40.[4][68] This was followed by "Goodnight Midnight" b/w "Together" (RCA 1852, 1969), which reached number 4 over 12 weeks,[4][68] and "Biljo" b/w "Spider" (RCA 1891, 1969), peaking at number 22 in 9 weeks.[4][68] Her UK Eurovision entry "Jack in the Box," released in multiple configurations including b/w "Someone to Love Me" (RCA 2068, 1971) and "Wind Of Change" (RCA 2069, 1971), entered the charts post-contest and peaked at number 4 over 10 weeks.[4][68] Subsequent releases like "Everybody Go Home The Party's Over" b/w "Joseph I'm Calling You" (RCA 1930, 1970) reached number 47 in 2 weeks,[4][68] while "Lady Love Bug" b/w "Stand By Your Man" (RCA 2117, 1971) peaked at number 28 over 12 weeks.[4][68] Later RCA singles, such as "It's Different Now" b/w "Take Me Home" (RCA 2192, 1972) and "You Are My Music" b/w "One Day" (RCA 2298, 1972), did not chart, nor did post-RCA efforts on Pye, Polydor, and Precision labels through 1981, including "Save Me" b/w "Sleepyhead" (Polydor 2058 804, 1976).[68]| Title | Peak UK Position | Weeks on Chart | Release Year | Label/Catalogue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Come Back and Shake Me | 3 | 14 | 1969 | RCA 1792 |
| Goodnight Midnight | 4 | 12 | 1969 | RCA 1852 |
| Biljo | 22 | 9 | 1969 | RCA 1891 |
| Everybody Go Home The Party's Over | 47 | 2 | 1970 | RCA 1930 |
| Jack in the Box | 4 | 10 | 1971 | RCA 2068/2069 |
| Lady Love Bug | 28 | 12 | 1971 | RCA 2117 |