[1] After running a reggae sound system, he joined Hott Wax (which evolved into Brit funk pioneers Hi-Tension after he left).
Fearon first conceived Galaxy as a band of "four or five white guys" that he would manufacture and write and produce for, while he remained behind the scenes.
After a quiet period, Fearon returned to the top 10 for the last time with a revival of Tony Etoria's "I Can Prove It" in 1986 (also a minor US R&B hit).
"[5] After his diversion with SAW, Fearon continued to run a production company from his home making commercial dance records.
Similar to the RAH Band, Galaxy was not a true group of musicians but a front for an individual producing all the music in a studio environment, with two female backing singers to supplement the recording sound (Dorothy Galdes and Julie Gore).
Galaxy's popularity waned in the late 1980s, with the trend moving towards acid house, though a later single, a cover version of the Showstoppers' "Ain't Nothin' But a Houseparty", was an early example of this genre.