Allan initially went back to college for a brief period of time, but continued performing. In 1967, he was chosen to host
CBC Television's weekly music program ''
Let's Go. Coincidentally, the house band chosen for the show was The Guess Who. The show lasted two seasons before being cancelled. Allan, still under contract to Quality Records (signed in 1963), released a number of singles. The first solo attempt by Allan after leaving The Guess Who was first issued as Looking Through Crystal Glass''. In the summer of 1968, producer Bob McMillan began recording tracks with Allan, Karen Marklinger & Corrine Cyca for CBC Television's lineup of music shows. The trio sounded great together and he approached the Birchmount label to repackage the album under the group name The Metro-Gnomes
. The album was reissued in late 1969. In 1971, Allan reconnected with former Guess Who bandmate
Randy Bachman to form
Brave Belt. The band released two country-rock albums for
Reprise Records. While Allen sang lead for most of the tracks on the first, self-titled Brave Belt album, the arrival of bassist/vocalist
Fred Turner for
Brave Belt II (1972) reduced Allan's involvement. He sang lead on only two of the album's 11 tracks. Shortly after the release of
Brave Belt II, Allan left the band. In 1973, he released his second solo album,
Sequel, on GRT Records of Canada. Allan was also chosen to play the lead character in a musical adaptation of the Old English poem
Beowulf, which was released on album in 1974. Allan co-composed the theme song for the 1976 children programming called ''Let's Go
unrelated TV series of the same title. In 1977, Allan moved to Vancouver, British Columbia. In 1978, he released a compilation album called Shakin' All Over'' - it was distributed by a Greek label named Seagull and made in that country. Allan pursued many musical endeavours including gospel music, hosting a children's television show in Winnipeg, and forming his own record label, Seabreeze Records, from which he released several singles and an album that didn't fare well. For a number of years, starting in 1982, he taught songwriting at
Kwantlen University College in Surrey, British Columbia. Allan appeared on a CBC special called ''It's Only Rock & Roll'' starring Ralph Benmergui, interviewing
Neil Young,
Burton Cummings, and
Randy Bachman in a 1987 reunion in Winnipeg. In 1992, Allan released a Christian rock album called
Zoot Suit Monologue. In January 2007, Regenerator Records issued a
CD consisting of four rare studio tracks and a live concert recording entitled
Chad Allan and the Reflections — Early Roots. A limited-edition double-vinyl LP set of the collection (minus the four studio cuts) was released in Spring 2008. Regenerator has also remastered
Sequel and
Zoot Suit, and they are available for download on iTunes. In 2015, he was made a member of the
Order of Manitoba "for his contributions to the Canadian music industry including the pivotal role he played in the creation of two legendary Winnipeg rock bands: The Guess Who and Bachman-Turner Overdrive." On August 27, 2017, it was reported by the CBC that Allan had suffered a "serious stroke" four days earlier (August 23) and was recovering in a British Columbia hospital. Publicist Jamie Anstey told the CBC that the singer was "responding" and "We're really praying for him; we're really rooting for him to make it through this." He died on November 21, 2023, at the age of 80. ==Discography==