Easy 10
Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Eat The Rich - Aerosmith.
Let's try again,
Heard it through the Grapevine.
Mutual Barrow Boy, that was indeed a BRULLIANT (note the Alex Harvey-like Scots accent there Jimmae) little ditty.
It did however, go a long way to damaging my hearing when it came out - even if I am only anticipating that eventual result. I stuck my head right next to the speakers with volume way too high, like when Led Zep IV came out.
Alex was brother to Les Harvey, the Stone The Crows guitar man who was sadly electrocuted onstage.
If my memory serves me right (doesn't usually!), wasn't he replaced by Jimmy Mculough (i know that's not spelt right), ex Thunderclap Newman. I say that because I was lucky enough to see Jimmy playing lead with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers at the Dome in 1970, Larry Taylor (Canned Heat) was playing base this was the first live concert I'd been to, brilliant.
Spotter's badge! Yes, Jimmy McCullouch started out with his brother in their band 'One In A Million', recording 2 singles, before heading off to join Thunderclap Newman (produced by Pete Townshend, and on the same lable as The WHO). After a brief stint (no musicians seemed to stay too long) with John Mayall, he went over to Stone The Crows - I saw them at The Top Rank Suite at that time period.
His next step up the ladder was Paul and Linda McCartney's Wings. I heard he'd died of drugs use.
edit; - He was briefly in The Small Faces in the 70's, and he died in 1979 of a heart attack brought on by drugs overdose. He was sadly, a junkie, obviously went into the rock and roll lifestyle full tilt!
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_McCullouch (click 'other languages' at bottom left of page)