Clem Curtis, original singer with the Foundations

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This was published 6 years ago

Clem Curtis, original singer with the Foundations

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Clem Curtis, who has died aged 76, was the original singer with the Foundations, best remembered for the 1967 pop-soul hit, Baby Now That I've Found You, the first of six British chart entries.

He was born Curtis Clements in Trinidad on November 28, 1940; his mother was well-known nationally as a jazz singer. Yet he showed little interest in becoming an entertainer until the family's emigration in the mid-1950s to London, where the black teenager encountered racism – most tangibly when he and two white friends were charged with theft. Only Curtis received a custodial sentence.

Clem Curtis (centre front) was the only original member of the Foundations when they toured Australia in 1975.

Clem Curtis (centre front) was the only original member of the Foundations when they toured Australia in 1975.Credit: Barry James Gilmour

In 1966 he became backing vocalist in the Ramong Sound, an octet that purveyed, as Curtis recalled, "a type of English Tamla [Motown] sound". Before the year was out, he was fronting the group – now renamed the Foundations – after a period sharing the spotlight with Arthur Brown, who in 1968 would have success with the million-selling psychedelic hit Fire. "I'd never sung lead publicly," Curtis remembered, "and I was dead scared, but having Arthur there gave me more confidence."

Following Arthur Brown's departure during 1967, the outfit undertook successive round-Britain tours headlined by the Toys and Edwin Starr. The attendant press releases emphasised that, as well as an age range from 37 to 18, all manner of Commonwealth territories – Barbados, Ceylon, Jamaica, Trinidad and Dominica as well as Britain – were represented within the Foundations.

Clem Curtis (left) was taken in handcuffs from a jet on a warrant from the NSW state police on an assault charge in 1975.

Clem Curtis (left) was taken in handcuffs from a jet on a warrant from the NSW state police on an assault charge in 1975.Credit: Antony Matheus Linsen

By then the combo had landed a recording deal with Pye Records through the producer Tony Macaulay, who presented them with two of his own compositions, Let The Heartaches Begin (later a hit for Long John Baldry), and then Baby Now That I've Found You for consideration as a maiden single.

After it spent a fortnight at No.1, bringing appearances on Top of the Pops, the Foundations went on a promotional visit to the US, where Baby Now That I've Found You peaked at No.11. The follow-up, Back On My Feet Again, broke into the domestic Top 20, but a third single, Any Old Time, was a comparative flop.

Curtis then recorded many solo releases, among them a disco remake of Baby Now That I've Found You, before resurrecting a line-up of the Foundations – which included his percussionist brother Derek (soon to join Hot Chocolate) – in direct competition with both an unconnected combo using the same name, and another group led by Colin Young. Curtis' repertoire now took in Build Me Up Buttercup, the 1968 hit originally recorded by Young.

The revived group's touring schedule included a troubled expedition to Australia during which Curtis found himself in a police cell on a trumped-up charge of assault.

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In the mid-1970s the band nearly reappeared on Top of the Pops again, when the Foundations were asked to record one of Britain's Song for Europe entries. Where Were You (When I Needed Your Love) was a favourite to be selected, but a technicians' strike just before the group's television broadcast ensured the victory of Lynsey de Paul and Mike Moran's Rock Bottom.

He is survived by his wife, the jazz singer and pianist Elena Safonova, and a daughter and five sons from previous relationships.

Telegraph, London

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