The Fenmen formed in early 1962 in a suburb in Kent, England, the act originally getting billed as Bern Elliot the Fenmen. With Elliot as frontman, they had a number 14 British hit in late 1963 with the oft-covered Money, and a smaller one with their follow-up, a version of Gary U.S. Bonds' New Orleans. They also did an EP and a couple live tracks on the compilation At the Cavern, their recorded repertoire dominated by covers of American rock and soul songs.
Elliot and the Fenmen separated in 1964, leaving the Fenmen to develop a different style heavily derivative of American pop/rock vocal harmony outfits. A couple flop Fenmen singles for Decca in 1964 and 1965 found the Four Seasons flavor especially strong, including a cover of the Seasons' smash Rag Doll. The move to CBS for a couple of singles in 1966 was no more successful, including a cover of the Mamas the Papas' California Dreamin' and, more impressively, the Wally Waller composition Rejected, which showed the emergence of a more original style building off the group's vocal harmony base.
The Fenmen ended, however, at the beginning of 1967, when rhythm guitarist/singer Waller reconnected with childhood friend Phil May, lead singer of the Pretty Things. After the two wrote The Sun together, May invited Waller to join the Pretty Things, with Fenmen drummer/singer John Povey also joining the Pretty Things lineup. The Sun would appear on the Pretties' 1967 album Emotions, and Waller and Povey would be an important part of the band's transition from an R&B-oriented group to a far more psychedelic one in the late '60s and early '70s. The Fenmen's two Decca singles can be found on the Bern Elliot the Fenmen CD compilation The Beat Years, while three of the four tracks they released on CBS (as well as some BBC sessions and unreleased recordings) are on the Fenmen compilation Sunstroke. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi