Skip Bifferty was a psychedelic pop band that immediately found an enthusiastic audience at the Marquee Club, got Don Arden as manager (which led to a contract with RCA-UK), and were regular guests on John Peel's Top Gear. A series of singles followed, among them the hard-rocking On Love (their debut), but they redefined themselves more in the direction of flower power with their next few records, starting with Happy Land. Although none of their singles charted, RCA allowed them to cut a full LP, which contained some notable psychedelic and experimental tracks. Their final single, Man in Black, was taken off the album and was produced by Ronnie Lane and arranged by Steve Marriott.
A dispute with Arden caused the band to walk out en masse, and they next appeared together under the pseudonym Heavy Jelly, cutting an eight-minute single (I Keep Singing That Same Old Song) that charted in a few European countries and ended up on the multi-artist sampler LP Nice Enough to Eat. They abandoned the name, however, when they learned of a Jackie Lomax-fronted outfit organized by John Moorhead that was already using it. Bell, Gallagher, and Turnbull worked together in Bell Arc, and Gibson passed through Snafu, while Gallagher was a member of Frampton's Camel and subsequently played with Turnbull in Loving Awareness, which evolved into Ian Dury's Blockheads in the late '70s. Skip Bifferty's lone album was reissued on compact disc in the mid-'90s. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi