* En anglais uniquement
Jim Post was a member of a Canadian folk group called the Rum Runners when he met Cathy Conn, who was part of a dance company appearing at the same state fair that he was playing. She gave up dancing and married
Post, and he taught her enough about singing so that the two made a credible duo on stage. They lacked Ian & Sylvia's delicate interweaving of voices, but Conn could really belt out a chorus, and
Post had a pleasing tenor. Billing themselves as
Friend & Lover, they played clubs while developing a sound and a repertory, and cut their debut single, "If Tomorrow," produced by
Joe South, for ABC-Paramount. It failed to chart, and though they were good enough to rate support act status with
the Buckinghams and even
Cream, the duo seemed to be going nowhere until Jerry Schoenbaum, the head of MGM/Verve, became impressed with
Post's song "Reach Out of the Darkness." An upbeat, ebullient song that crossed midway between
Spanky & Our Gang and the early
Jefferson Airplane, it was ideal for the summer of 1968, a point when the last, lingering glow of the previous year's psychedelic summer was still visible' if only through eyes clouded by nostalgic longing amid the worsening political strife of the period. The song itself was a distant cousin to
the Byrds' "Renaissance Fair,"
David Crosby's stunningly beautiful musical memory of the first San Francisco Be-In; in this case, the inspiration was
Post's having attended a love-in in New York City, and the sense of freedom that was in the air. The record struck a responsive chord, making number ten on the national charts, but the duo was never able to follow it up with any success, despite two singles and an LP issued in their wake. They played out their Verve contract, losing a lucrative offer from Columbia Records in the process when Verve wouldn't let them go, and then moved to Cadet Records as Jim & Cathy. The couple later divorced, ending the duo's history, and
Post has since recorded for a multitude of labels and ventured into playwriting and theatrical production. ~ Bruce Eder