Dave Miller (New Zealand musician)

Their cover version of "Mr Guy Fawkes" (July 1969) peaked in the top 30 on the Go-Set national singles chart.

[2][5] The group broke up in 1966, Collier went to Hamilton, Dunster left for Australia, Ringrose returned to Christchurch, and Miller relocated to Sydney.

[2][4] From April 1966 Miller worked as a compere, DJ and sometime solo vocalist at various Sydney music venues, including The Bowl, which were owned by talent manager and label owner, Ivan Dayman.

[2][4] Late in that year Dayman revamped the venue as the Op-Pop Disco and Miller was asked to find a house band.

[1] At the end of 1967 Miller organised for the group to undertake a gig on a cruise ship for ten days visiting Fiji, Nouméa and New Zealand.

[1] Their repertoire moved to heavy rock and they released their fourth single, "Mr Guy Fawkes" (July 1969), with Pat Aulton producing.

[1] Corbett, McCormac and Robinson formed another rock band, Blackfeather, with Neale Johns on vocals.

[1] Later that year Miller and Corbett worked on an album, Reflections of a Pioneer, with McCormac supplying drums on some tracks.

[9][10] Ian Canty of Louder Than War described how, "[he] played around with Beat, Psych and Harder Rock modes but always added something else to them and he continued to expand his musical vista on his solo album... [thus it] still sounds fresh and surprisingly contemporary.