After the demise of
Oh Boy! in May 1959, he began touring with his own all-black band, The Embraceable Four, including tenor saxophonist
Winston Whyte, with whom he supported
The Platters on their 1960 UK tour, and released a second single, a cover of
Chuck Berry's "Too Pooped To Pop". In 1961 he became the lead singer with The Redcaps, with whom he released a single, "Sitting in a Train". Originally known as Red-E-Lewis and the Redcaps (named after
Gene Vincent's The Blue Caps), original lead singer Reddy Lewis (Edward Stubbs) had left to form the Red Cats, with
Jimmy Page on guitar. The Redcaps comprised
Mick Green, Vic Cooper, Frank Farley, Johnny Patto and Johnny Spence, and from May to July 1961, Lewis returned, but Dudley remained lead vocalist. Farley, Patto and Spence left to become
The Pirates, backing
Johnny Kidd (who had the same manager as Dudley), when the original Pirates left. Green, The Redcaps other guitarist, joined the Pirates later, when Patto left. By 1963-64, Dudley had rejoined pianist Iggy Quail and recorded some of the first bluebeat and
ska tracks outside Jamaica. Dudley and Quail formed a trio with Clyde Davies (bass), who accompanied comedians such as
Tommy Trinder and
Bob Monkhouse and had a residency at the Kingfisher Club. Dudley released several singles on
Piccadilly, as well as more for Oriole. He retired from the music business in the mid-1960s. == Death ==