Tarney/Spencer Band formed as a rock
music duo in London in 1975 with Spencer on drums and percussion and backing vocals; and Tarney on lead vocals, guitars (lead, rhythm and bass), synthesisers and keyboards. Their first album,
Tarney and Spencer, was released in 1976 in the UK only, on the
Bradley's Records label, and was co-produced with
Dave Mackay. It features the Shadows' future member, Cliff Hall, on keyboards. The album was re-released on CD in 2003 by Sanctuary Records/Castle Communications with four bonus tracks. In 1976, Tarney/Spencer's first UK single, "I'm Your Man Rock and Roll", was released but did not reach the top 30 on the national chart. To promote the track, in April, they appeared on BBC1's
Top of the Pops, introduced by
Tony Blackburn. The appearance was repeated in April 2011 on BBC4's series of
Top of the Pops re-runs. In July 1976, "I'm Your Man Rock and Roll", reached No. 71 on the US
Cashbox top 100 singles chart. In 1978 they signed with
A&M Records for the US market. In 1978 another single, "Takin' me Back", reached No. 7 on the South African singles charts. The band's second studio album, ''Three's a Crowd'', was released in 1978; it was recorded in London and produced by
David Kershenbaum. For the album Spencer also provided synthesisers; guest lead vocalists included Stuart Calver and Tony Rivers. Members of UK's
Climax Blues Band, Colin Cooper, John Cuffley, Peter Filleul,
Pete Haycock and
Derek Holt, guested on this album. It featured packaging with rounded corners, shaped like an American-style café menu card. Tracks received airplay on US
AOR radio stations and the album reached No. 174 on the
Billboard 200. Its single, "It's Really You", hit No. 86 on the
Billboard Hot 100. In Europe the album and related singles failed to chart. The British/European packaging had conventional square corners. The third studio album,
Run for Your Life, was recorded in the US, and again it was produced by Kershenbaum, which appeared in 1979. With airplay on AOR radio, the album reached No. 181 on the
Billboard 200. Its lead single, "No Time To Lose", rose to No. 84 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The album cover was manufactured with one of four slightly different sleeves each with the title in: red, green, silver or gold, with a library of paper-back novels as an artwork theme. The British version is different, depicting a female's leg, wearing a stiletto shoe, and avoiding an oncoming red car. In 1979, after the release of a non-album single "
Cathy's Clown", a cover version of
The Everly Brothers' 1960 hit, which was produced by
Bruce Welch, the band were released from their contract with A&M and discontinued the Tarney-Spencer Band. "Cathy's Clown" single received airplay on London's Capital Radio (95.8FM/194 mW) but it missed the national chart. It did chart in the Netherlands however. Two years after the band broke up, "No Time to Lose", was resurrected in 1981; when MTV was launched, it occasionally aired the track's music video. A&M then reissued the single, which charted a second time on the Hot 100, reaching No. 74. ==Later work==