Wayne Fontana

Wayne Fontana
Wayne Fontana

 

Wayne Fontana was born in 1945.   Fontana was born in ManchesterLancashire, and took his stage name from Elvis Presley‘s drummer, D.J. Fontana. In 1963 he formed his backing group, the Mindbenders, and secured a recording contract, coincidentally, withFontana Records. He remained under contract to the label after parting with the Mindbenders. He soldiered on alone, using musicians working under the name of the Opposition, notably Frank Renshaw (lead guitar) (born 22 June 1943, WythenshaweManchester); Bernie Burns (drums); Roy “Rossi” Henshall (bass); Rod Gerrard (guitar, ex-Herman’s Hermits), and Phil Keane (drums), among others. Sometimes the band was billed as the Mindbenders, sometimes just as the Wayne Fontana Band. Fontana’s most successful solo single release was also his last, “Pamela, Pamela”, which reached No 11 in the UK Singles Chart early in 1967.   Sadly Wayne died in August 2020.

Obituary in “Daily Telegraph”

Wayne Fontana, who has died aged 74, was the founder and former lead singer of Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, a Manchester-based band who shot to fame in 1965 with The Game of Love, which topped the charts in the US and went to No 2 in the UK.

Due to “musical differences” with other members, however, Fontana abruptly left the group in the middle of a concert in October 1965. Subsequently the more concisely named Mindbenders released Groovy Kind of Love, which went to No 2 on both sides of the Atlantic, while Fontana struggled to achieve further chart success as a solo artist.

His real name was Glyn Geoffrey Ellis and he was born on October 28 1945 at Levenshulme, Manchester. After leaving school he worked in a record shop where, in 1962, he teamed up with Terry Morton, Stuart Sirett, Bob Lang and Ian “Skin” Lucas and changed his name to Wayne Fontana (in tribute to Elvis Presley’s drummer DJ Fontana) to form Wayne Fontana and the Jets.

In 1963 the band secured an audition at Manchester’s Oasis Club to which only Fontana and Lang turned up, so at the last moment two bystanders at the bar, guitarist Eric Stewart (later of 10cc) and drummer Ric Rothwell, were drafted in.

Although their performance was dire, the talent scout saw enough potential to get them a recording contract and they became Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders – Mindbenders after a Dirk Bogarde horror movie they had just seen.

Their first hit in Britain was the curiously titled Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, released in 1964. It reached No 5 in the charts and led to a tour with the American singer Brenda Lee. Then came The Game Of Love (“The purpose of a man is to love a woman/ And the purpose of a woman is to love her man/ So come on baby … let’s play/ The game of (love) love (love) love”) in February 1965.

By the middle of the year, however, disagreements had begun to show. “One night on stage, I decided to sing Save the Last Dance for Me and I could hear the band mumbling, ‘Why are we always doing the slow ones?’,” Fontana recalled. In October 1965, midway through a live show, he walked off stage and out of the band.

He struggled to achieve chart success as a solo artist, though his Pamela, Pamela, written by Graham Gouldman – another future member of 10cc – reached No 11 in the UK in early 1967.

“I continued recording and moved to Spain – and later America for three years, where I also toured,” Fontana told the Express in 2017. “I did shows aboard the cruise liners then returned to England, where I got a contract to write and record new songs. Then I went into self-retirement, drank too much and didn’t know where I was half the time.”

From 1977 he toured regularly with the The Solid Silver 60s Show, recalling that he was often asked to sing A Groovy Kind Of Love: “I couldn’t because that was the Mindbenders’ hit after I’d left.”

His later years were punctuated by brushes with the law. In 2005, he overturned a bankruptcy order made against him in error but was arrested after police were called by bailiffs who had gone to his home in Glossop, Derbyshire, to speak to him about an unpaid congestion charge bill. Fontana had poured petrol on the bonnet of their car and set it alight with the bailiffs still inside.

Remanded in custody in May 2007, he later appeared at Derby Crown Court dressed as the Old Bailey’s Lady of Justice, complete with a sword, scales, crown, cape and dark glasses, claiming “justice is blind”.

“I’m sick of living under this New World Order,” he wrote on his blog. “Let’s claim our country back. We could make it a fancy-dress protest against our fascist government’s inhumanity to its fellow man, woman and families.”

He was subsequently sentenced to 11 months for setting fire to the car but was freed because he had served the term while being detained under the Mental Health Act.

In March 2011 Fontana was arrested at the Palace Theatre, Manchester, after failing to appear in court in Wakefield over an unpaid speeding fine.

Wayne Fontana’s marriage to Suzanne Davis was dissolved. He is survived by a long-term partner and three children.

Wayne Fontana, born October 28 1945, died August 6 2020

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