Formed by members of the band Tiny Hearing Aid Company, Clover's sound moved on from Bay Area
psychedelia to the burgeoning country rock sound, similar to
Creedence Clearwater Revival. The original line-up was based out of San Francisco, and was a quartet consisting of Alex Call (lead vocals, guitar), John McFee (guitar, pedal steel), John Ciambotti (bass) and Mitch Howie (drums). 1970 saw their debut self-titled album released on
Fantasy Records. A 1971 follow-up titled
Niner appeared on the same label. Later the band moved to the UK, and the line-up was shuffled somewhat. By late 1976, Clover's new drummer was Micky Shine. The group added
Huey Lewis (then billing himself as Huey Louis) as a second lead vocalist and harmonica player, and
Sean Hopper was keyboard player. This sextet (Call, Louis, McFee, Hopper, Ciambotti and Shine) signed to the UK's Vertigo label, and worked with producer
Robert John "Mutt" Lange on Clover's 1976 non-LP single "Chicken Funk", and the group's early 1977 album entitled
Unavailable. Later that year, McFee, Ciambotti, Hopper and Shine (but not Louis or Call) backed Elvis Costello on his debut album
My Aim Is True. These musicians were not credited on the release for contractual reasons; some contemporary publicity for the album identified Costello's backing band as "The Shamrocks". Clover's
Unavailable album was retitled
Clover for North American release. Later in 1977, Micky Shine left the group. For the group's second album of 1977,
Love on the Wire, session drummer Tony Braunagel was employed, but was not an official member of the band. This album was also produced by Lange, who co-wrote a few songs. However, as with all other Clover releases, the album spun off no hits and did not chart. Clover toured as the support group for
Lynyrd Skynyrd,
Thin Lizzy and
Graham Parker and
the Rumour in the UK during the late 1970s. ==After Clover==