In 1969, Melouney produced the debut single "Maiden Voyage" by Ashton, Gardner and Dyke with George Harrison visiting a session at Apple Studios. The b-side, "See The Sun in My Eyes" is actually a Melouney solo recording (originally recorded for
Apple Records,) written, performed and produced by Melouney and donated to Ashton, Gardner and Dyke. Due to restructuring at Apple, the single was released by Melouney's former label,
Polydor Records. In 1970, Melouney signed a solo deal with Kapp/MCA Records and used this opportunity to form and produce the short-lived group,
Fanny Adams, with
Doug Parkinson on lead vocals, Teddy Toi on bass, and Johnny Dick on drums who recorded one eponymous album
Fanny Adams. Also in 1970, Melouney discovered American singer Donna Gaines (who would eventually become Donna Summer) in Germany and brought her to London where he produced a single "
Sally Go 'Round the Roses" b/w "So Said The Man" (written by Melouney and Doug Parkinson.) This single was released in 1970 by MCA Records in the UK via Melouney's production arrangement with the label. In the summer of 1976, he met up with former Bee Gees bandmate
Barry Gibb and they wrote "Let It Ride" and "Morning Rain", but neither song was recorded. Melouney eventually recorded "Let It Ride" in early 2023 with his band Tall Poppy Syndrome, it was released as a digital single on 19 May 2023. He rejoined The Bee Gees for the "One Night Only" concert in Sydney, playing to an audience of 66,000 fans at Stadium Australia on 27 March 1999 and later reunited with Billy Thorpe and the original Aztecs for the successful "Long Way to the Top" tour in 2002 and 2003. After finishing that tour, he completed his first solo album, released with the title
Covers which had ten cover versions of songs, including "
Poison Ivy", "
Come Together", and "
Over The Rainbow". Melouney's influence was
the Band, through their album
Music from Big Pink, as he explained: "I am influenced to the extent that I can see what they are doing and I respect that. I've let their ideas augment my ideas". In 2020, Melouney released his version of his friends the
Easybeats' song "Women (Make You Feel Alright)", which was produced by
Shel Talmy. "Women" features Melouney on vocal and lead guitar, joined by Clem Burke of Blondie on drums, Jonathan Lea of The Jigsaw Seen on additional guitars,
Alec Palao on bass and Paul Kopf on backing vocals. Palao and Kopf are members of the San Francisco-based band, Strangers in a Strange Land, and also play in the current version of the veteran garage rock band,
the Seeds. He appears in the internationally successful 2020 documentary
The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend A Broken Heart, in newly filmed interview segments and archival footage. This documentary was nominated for six
Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Documentary Special. In 2021, he collaborated with Strangers in a Strange Land on the Bee Gees' 1967 rarity "Ring My Bell." Like "Women," Melouney is joined on this track by Clem Burke of Blondie on drums and Jonathan Lea of The Jigsaw Seen on additional guitar and Mellotron. "Ring My Bell" was also produced by Shel Talmy. These five musicians (Melouney, Paul Kopf, Lea, Alec Palao and Burke) then formed the group Tall Poppy Syndrome, releasing their version of Robin Gibb's song "Come Some Christmas Eve (Or Halloween)" later that year. In 2021, the Bee Gees' track "Whisper Whisper" (including Melouney) was included in the soundtrack of the Disney film
Cruella. Melouney co-wrote the foreword for the book
The Bee Gees in the 1960s by Andrew Mon Hughes, Grant Walters and Mark Crohan, published by Sonicbond in 2021. Melouney occasionally tours Europe performing a solo spot in the musical
Massachusetts, with former member of The Bee Gees' backing band, keyboard player
Blue Weaver. == Discography ==