They originally formed in 1964 without a "Jill" under the name "The Nevadas". Subsequently, they became the first group in South Africa to wear their hair long and they changed their name to "The Zombies" (different from the
well-known British group). Later they added lead singer Glenys Lynne and changed the group's name to "Four Jacks and A Jill". The group included Clive Harding (bass guitar), Keith Andrews (rhythm guitar and organ), replaced by the late Mark Poulos (guitar and organ) during 1966–1967 and subsequently Till Hanneman who joined in 1967 (rhythm guitar, organ and trumpet), Bruce Bark (lead guitar, harmonica and saxophone), Tony Hughes (drums) and Glenys Lynne (lead vocal and organ). In South Africa, they had a hit song, "Timothy". In 1968 they cracked the American charts with the song "
Master Jack", hitting the
Billboard Hot 100 at No. 18 and reaching No. 3 on the
Adult Contemporary chart. The song also reached No. 10 on
Cashbox and went to No. 1 in South Africa,
Canada,
Australia,
New Zealand,
Malaysia, and
Rhodesia (now
Zimbabwe). The follow-up single, "Mr. Nico", peaked at No. 98 in the
United States. That was their last hit in the U.S., but the group continued to score hits in their native country. They have recorded and produced albums for a range of sing-along educational story books for various South African charities. ==Members==