[3][4] Boettcher had originally worked with drummer Ron Edgar for a brief time in the folk group The GoldeBriars.
After The GoldeBriars dissolved, Edgar joined the group The Music Machine, which also featured Doug Rhodes on organ.
Lee Mallory had worked as a songwriter and solo performer, and Boettcher had produced some of his recordings, including a cover of Phil Ochs' "That's The Way It's Gonna Be".
Boettcher went on to make several attempts at recording solo albums (only one was released during his lifetime, There's An Innocent Face), as did Salisbury and Joey Stec.
Michael Fennelly would end up in the early 1970s group Crabby Appleton, who signed with Elektra Records and released two albums, scoring a Top 40 hit with the single "Go Back".