[2] The band soon garnered a large following in the burgeoning San Jose rock scene, performing regularly at the Cocoanut Grove, the Continental Ballroom, and a small club known as Loser's South.
Much of Teddy and His Patches' live setlist was taken from the Yardbirds and the Animals, though Marley also recalls a wide-variety of musical interests ranging from psychedelia, to Roy Orbison, and the post-Rubber Soul Beatles.
The label was spearheaded by local record producer Grady O'Neal, who owed Conway and Marley for the various odd jobs they performed at TIKI Studios.
According to various accounts by the band members, five to ten additional songs were recorded in a more conventional 8-track studio, but were never released because their two singles failed to reach the Billboard Hot 100.
[2] Since its initial distribution, "Suzy Creamcheese" has been compiled on numerous albums including Pebbles, Volume 3, Acid Dreams, and Love Is the Song We Sing: San Francisco Nuggets 1965–1970, among several others.