The sea change from ska to the slower rocksteady rhythm brought with it a huge shift in the Gaylads' approach -- no longer restrained by the demands of uptempo material, they were free to attempt more complex and sophisticated harmonies, resulting in a number of 1967 hits including Love Me with All Your Heart, How Can I Go On, and I Am Free (all later included on the trio's debut LP, The Soul Beat). Upon completing the follow-up, Sunshine Is Golden, the Gaylads parted ways with Dodd, signing on with producer Sonia Pottinger for the fine It's Hard to Confess." The quality of the Gaylads' work with Pottinger remained high over the sessions to follow, with efforts like A.B.C. Rocksteady and Over the Rainbow's End ranking with the group's very best work. However, in late 1968, Stewart left the trio to mount a solo career; Seaton and Roberts forged ahead as a duo, collaborating with a number of producers during 1969 (most notably Lee Scratch Perry, with whom they scored with Room for Rent and I Wear My Slanders).
As the decade drew to its close, the Gaylads signed with producer Leslie Kong, immediately notching the smash There's a Fire." Under Kong, the group (replacing Stewart with either ex-Paragon Howard Barrett or Ricky Grant) enjoyed one of their most fruitful periods, recording renditions of everything from Tommy Edwards' It's All in the Game to Nina Simone's Young, Gifted and Black; a cover of James Taylor's Fire and Rain even served as the title track of their third LP. 1971 began promisingly with the hits My Jamaican Girl and People Crying, but that August, Kong suffered a fatal heart attack; the devastated Gaylads tapped producer Rupie Edwards to helm their next smash, Can't Hide the Feeling." By this time, Seaton was also performing as a member of the Conscious Minds alongside Ken Boothe; with Lloyd Charmers and Pete Weston, he also co-founded the Splash and Soul Beat labels. Each project drew him further away from the Gaylads, and after recording a few final records including The Guy Next Door, You Can't Get Away, and Seven in One, Seaton left the group.
Roberts, the lone remaining original member, selected brothers Randell and Hopeton Thaxter to carry on the Gaylads name; the new lineup never matched the success of its predecessor, however, and after releasing the album Love and Understanding as the Gaylads, Roberts dropped any reference to the moniker whatsoever and rechristened the trio the Psalms, landing as backing vocalists for Bunny Wailer. The founding duo of Seaton and Stewart re-formed for the first time in over two decades for an appearance at the 1991 Studio One concert, and two years later, Roberts joined them for a performance at the Rocksteady Reunion in Kingston. Seaton -- who began his solo career in 1973 with the album Thin Line Between Love and Hate and enjoyed success throughout the years to follow -- subsequently relocated to London to helm his revived Soul Beat imprint. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi