John Macleod (songwriter)


John Macleod is a Canadian-born English songwriter and musician.

Career

He moved to Britain in the 1940s, and lived in the Halifax area with his wife before moving to Brighton. In the 1950s, he was a member of the vocal group the Maple Leaf Four, with his brother, baritone Norman, Alan Harvey as tenor and Joe Melia as second tenor. The group made regular appearances on British TV, and released at least two albums, Home on the Range and Old Familiar Favourites.
By the early 1960s, Macleod worked on writing advertising jingles. In the 1960s and early 1970s, Macleod co-wrote songs with Tony Macaulay. They had major success with The Foundations, when they recorded "Baby Now That I've Found You", and it topped the UK Singles Chart in November 1967. This was followed by Long John Baldry's "Let the Heartaches Begin", Paper Dolls' "Something Here in My Heart " and Pickettywitch's "That Same Old Feeling".
The full list of songs that Macleod wrote with Macaulay are:
Song titlePerformerPeak UK chart positionDate of appearance on chart
"Baby Now That I've Found You"The Foundations123 September 1967
"Let The Heartaches Begin"Long John Baldry128 October 1967
"Back on My Feet Again"The Foundations1820 January 1968
"Something Here in My Heart "Paper Dolls119 March 1968
"Any Old Time "The Foundations481 May 1968
"Mexico"Long John Baldry1512 October 1968
"In the Bad Bad Old Days "The Foundations812 March 1969
"Heaven Knows I'm Missing Him Now"Sandie Shaw
"My Little Chickadee"The FoundationsNote: US release only
"That Same Old Feeling"Pickettywitch521 February 1970
"Baby Take Me in Your Arms"Jefferson 23, 15 20 December 1969
" Sad Old Kinda Movie"Pickettywitch16June 1970

In the early 1970s, Macleod presented a series of easy listening instrumental albums comprising cover versions of chart hits, on the Pye label. In 1975 he worked again with his brother Norman, and brother-in-law actor Bill Pertwee, on the music for the Dad's Army stage show, producing an EMI single "Get Out And Get Under The Moon", and writing the B-side number "Hooligans!" – after Bill Pertwee's character Warden Hodge's catch phrase.

Discography