Other early members of the group included Terry Lewis (born in Baltimore, Ohio), Jerry Ferguson, and Wade Davis.
[3][4] In March 1968, in New York City, the group recorded "Breakin' Down the Walls of Heartache", a song written and produced by Randell and his regular partner Sandy Linzer.
17 in the Melody Maker Pop 30 chart that the group were to undertake a five week tour of Britain commencing at the end of the month.
[4] Their recording career continued through the 1970s, with a 1971 LP Soul Survivor, produced by Macaulay, as well as subsequent, less successful singles that year including "Sally Put Your Red Shoes On" and a cover version of the Bob Dylan song, "Mr Tambourine Man", on the Bell label.
[citation needed] Johnson had not been well for several years, and diminishing commercial success and the pressures of touring during the early 1970s took a heavy toll.
[1] Group member William Bradley became a community worker and minister active in the International Missionary Outreach Society of New York.