[1] Pilling and his brother Brian then moved to Birmingham, England, where they formed a band called Wages of Sin and made numerous appearances at major venues, eventually spending 1968 touring with Cat Stevens.
[1] Inspired by the then-emerging psychedelic blues rock sound of British acts such as Small Faces, they reunited with Godovitz, and recruited drummer John Andersen and guitarist Mick Walsh to create Fludd.
[1] Instead of recruiting another guitarist, Fludd added classically-trained keyboardist Peter Csanky, and signed a deal with Daffodil Records.
[1] Oldfield's simultaneous recording of Tubular Bells hampered their ability to book time in the studio, and the sessions were eventually scrapped.
[1][18] Bolstered by a controversial cover depicting a pregnant woman's bare belly, that album spawned the top-ten hit single "What an Animal".
[19][1] Due to Brian Pilling's continued health problems, the band was unable to tour to properly support the album, so Waszek, Underhill, and Andersen left to form the band Fingers, while the Pillings carried on as a recording project with bassist Jim Crichton and drummer Ian McCorkle, recording and releasing the single "I'm On My Way" in 1975.
[24][1] As a benefit to raise money for his children, Godovitz put together a band of Toronto musicians, including Bob Segarini, to record a tribute single consisting of "Fortune in Men's Eyes",[25] an unrecorded song he had previously written with Pilling, and a remake of Fludd's song "Homemade Lady".
[1][28] Godovitz and Ed Pilling reunited in 1997, recording an album under the band name No Flies on Frank which is the name of a short story by John Lennon.