
Mike Forde – lead vocals
Jimmy Collins – lead guitar
Geoff Chinnery – bass guitar/vocals
John Turner – rhythm guitar/vocals
Lindsay Bex – drums
This west London band was formed in April 1961 and were originally called Mike Forde & The HiFi’s but were renamed the following year as Mike Forde & The Fortunes.
Over the next few years, the group played many well-known venues in west London and Middlesex, including Eel Pie Island in Twickenham, Botwell Hall in Hayes, the Clay Pigeon in Eastcote and the Ealing Club.

On 27 October 1962, they backed singer Frankie Vaughan at Southbourne School in Eastcote.

Forde also remembers that the group was due to play in the interval for The Beatles at a show at Botwell House in February 1963 but the show was cancelled at short notice. Despite the setback, they were rebooked about three weeks later at the venue to support Gerry & The Pacemakers.
Sometime in the latter half of 1963, an interested party named Gordon Eddie showed an interest in managing the band. However, Forde and Eddie couldn’t agree on how to take the group forward and Forde announced that he was leaving.
Auditions for a new singer were held and three singers turned up for an audition session held at John Hassell Studios in Nassau Road, southwest London, which usually specialised in recording classical music. A four-track acetate was cut at the session.
The identify of two of the singers (on the tracks “Little Queenie”, and “Ain’t Necessarily So”,) is not known but apart from Mike Forde who sang on one track, “Sweet Little Rhythm & Blues”, the final recording (“Send Me Some Loving”) featured Roger Peacock. Forde’s recording was later featured on Rev-Ola’s Fab Gear compilation.
After Peacock got the job, the group continued until the end of the year and Bex recalls that one of the final shows took place in Southend on a bill that also featured singer Paul Raven (aka Gary Glitter).
When the group split up, Peacock subsequently fronted The Cheynes, The Mark Leeman Five and Dave Antony’s Moods among others.
Bex joined The Tridents (before Jeff Beck joined but played some gigs with him), a group that Chinnery managed. He then worked in Germany with The Redcaps and The Kathy Sampson Set before Chinnery asked him to replace the drummer in The Dave Martin Group (the latest group he was managing) who morphed into The Magic Roundabout.
Turner meanwhile later played with The Derek Savage Foundation.
Thanks to Mike Forde, Lindsay Bex and John Turner for information.