CARTER-LEWIS & THE SOUTHERNERS

 

Formed in the early sixties by Ken Lewis and John Carter, Carter-Lewis & the Southerners became a showcase for their own songs—often recorded with London’s top session musicians.

Jimmy Page and Viv Prince joined in 1963, and a photo of the group together is among the most well-known early pictures of Page.

As a session man, Jimmy Page had already played on the band’s 1962 single, but by 1963 he was almost a full-time member, though never official, performing on a series of singles (such as “Your Momma’s Out Of Town” and “Somebody Told My Girl”) and BBC radio sessions with the group.

Many of these broadcasts—recorded for BBC Light Programme’s Easy Beat and Saturday Club—are still sought after by collectors and potentially preserved in the BBC archives.

The Southerners lineup (besides Carter, Lewis and Page) included names like Viv Prince (drums), Micky Keene (guitar), Rod Clark and Dave Wintour (bass), and Bobby Graham (drums), marking the band as a hotbed for future British rock talent.