The Remo Four
English rock band / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Remo Four were a 1950s–1960s rock band from Liverpool, England. They were contemporaries of The Beatles, and later had the same manager, Brian Epstein. Its members were Colin Manley (born Colin William Manley, 16 April 1942, in Old Swan, Liverpool, Lancashire; died 9 April 1999) (lead guitar/vocals), Phil Rogers (rhythm guitar/bass guitar/vocals) (born Philip Rogers, 5 March 1942, in Liverpool; died 14 January 2020), Don Andrew (born Donald M. Andrew, 14 July 1942, in Liverpool) (bass guitar/vocals), and Roy Dyke (drums) (born 13 February 1945, in Liverpool). Andrew and Manley were in the same class at school (Liverpool Institute for Boys) as Paul McCartney.[1]
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The Remo Four | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Liverpool, England |
Genres | Beat, rock and roll |
Years active | 1959–1970 |
Labels | Pye Records, Piccadilly Records, Star-Club Records |
Members | Colin Manley Don Andrew Keith Stokes Harry Prytherch Roy Dyke Phil Rogers Tony Ashton |