The Mods
The Mods were a pop group that formed in late-1963, featuring John Bissett (guitar, keyboards, vocals), Kevin McNeil (bass, vocals), Neil Reynolds (drums) and Wayne Reynolds (guitar, vocals), and added Clive Coulson in 1965.
Coulson moved to Britain in the mid-1960s, becoming road manager for bands such as Free, Bad Company, Human Instinct, Jeff Beck and Rod Stewart. However, the band continued without him, recording two singles. Both singles gained national radio airplay and reached the Top 10 on the Lever's Hit Parade. Throughout the 1960s The Mods supported such artists as Ray Columbus, The Chicks, Mr Lee Grant, Ray Wolfe, Howard Morrison and Shane. The band regularly played at the Starlight Ballroom and The Three Musicians.
The band split up in 1966, with Bisset joining the Action, Wayne and Neil Reynolds Ways and Means, and Kevin McNeil pursued a career in radio as a sports announcer. In 1989 the band released a posthumous mini-album called Doing it for the Music.
Coulson returned to New Zealand in 1999, and the band reformed in 2004 for a 40th anniversary gig played at Revert. The band played again several times after, including the Great Race Ball in August 2006. However, this performance was without Coulson who passed away in early 2006. A tribute concert for Coulson was played in October 2006 at Le Grand Hotel. On 11 October 2009 the band again reformed for their 45th anniversary, playing at The Hog.
Releases
- Love, Love, Love single, 1965
- I'll Be On My Way single, 1966
- Doing it for the Music album, 1989
- It’s in her Kiss and Love, Love, Love appear on the 1992 compilation From Beneath the Earth Came Rock
Published Articles
- Mods-Father Honoured with Concert by Geoff Lewis, Hamilton Press, 27 September 2006, P7
- The Mods celebrate 45th anniversary by {{jeff Neems]], Waikato Times, 10 October 2009