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Hatfield and the North
Hatfield and the North
band
1
Roy Babbington
Roy Babbington
British bassist
2
Pip Pyle
Pip Pyle
British drummer
3
Matching Mole
Matching Mole
band
4
Laurie Allan
Laurie Allan
English drummer
5
Richard Sinclair
Richard Sinclair
British bassist
6
Phil Miller
Phil Miller
British musician
7
Khan
Khan
British rock group
8
Hugh Hopper
Hugh Hopper
English bass guitarist
9
In Cahoots
In Cahoots
band
10
Dave Sinclair
Dave Sinclair
British musician
11
Steve Hillage
Steve Hillage
British guitarist
12
Soft Machine
Soft Machine
English rock band
13
Lol Coxhill
Lol Coxhill
English free improvising saxophonist and raconteur (1932-2012)
14
Caravan
Caravan
English band from the Canterbury area
15
Pierre Moerlen
Pierre Moerlen
French musician
16
Caravan of Dreams
Caravan of Dreams
17
Patrice Meyer
Patrice Meyer
French electric guitarist
18
Bill MacCormick
Bill MacCormick
British musician
19
Gong
Gong
French-British progressive/psychedelic rock band
20
Dave MacRae
Dave MacRae
New Zealand musician
21
Alan Gowen
Alan Gowen
British musician
22
Carol Grimes
Carol Grimes
British singer
23
National Health
National Health
band
24
Jan Schelhaas
Jan Schelhaas
British musician
25
Dave Stewart
Dave Stewart
English keyboardist and composer
26
Lady June
Lady June
Poet, singer (1931-1999)
27
Didier Malherbe
Didier Malherbe
French saxophonist
28
Steve Miller Band
Steve Miller Band
American rock band
29
Richard Coughlan
Richard Coughlan
musician
30
John Greaves
John Greaves
British musician and composer
31
Tony Coe
Tony Coe
British jazz musician
32
The Wilde Flowers
The Wilde Flowers
British band
33
Robert Wyatt
Robert Wyatt
English recording artist; musician, songwriter, singer
34
Wishbone Ash
Wishbone Ash
British rock band
35
Kevin Ayers
Kevin Ayers
English singer-songwriter, record producer
36
Andy Pyle
Andy Pyle
British musician
37
Gilgamesh
Gilgamesh
British jazz fusion band
38
Mike Cooper
Mike Cooper
British guitarist
39
Elton Dean
Elton Dean
British saxophonist
40
Paul Rudolph
Paul Rudolph
Canadian musician
41
Soft Heap
Soft Heap
band
42
Centipede
Centipede
British musical group
43
Mike Wedgwood
Mike Wedgwood
British musician
44
Theo Travis
Theo Travis
British saxophonist
45
Pierre Moerlen's Gong
Pierre Moerlen's Gong
Instrumental jazz fusion band led by French drummer Pierre Moerlen
46
Sophia Domancich
Sophia Domancich
French pianist
47
Larry Taylor
Larry Taylor
American musician
48
The Fabulous Thunderbirds
The Fabulous Thunderbirds
American band
49
Henry Cow
Henry Cow
English avant-rock group
50
Juicy Lucy
Juicy Lucy
blues-rock band
51
Daevid Allen
Daevid Allen
Australian musician
52
Three Dog Night
Three Dog Night
American band
53
Mike Ratledge
Mike Ratledge
British musician
54
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Lynyrd Skynyrd
American rock band
55
Quasi
Quasi
American indie rock band
56
Gary Husband
Gary Husband
British musician
Intro
prog rock band
Members, past and present

Delivery was a British blues/progressive rock musical group, formed in the late 1960s. The band was one of the wellsprings of the progressive rock Canterbury scene.

Founded in 1966 as Bruno's Blues Band by guitarist Phil Miller, his elder brother, pianist Steve Miller, drummer Pip Pyle and bassist Jack Monck, the band gigged around London for a few years. In 1968, saxophonist Lol Coxhill joined them, and the band's name was changed to Steve Miller's Delivery. In 1969, the band teamed up with blues singer Carol Grimes and bassist Roy Babbington replaced Monck. The resulting line-up recorded and released one album: Fools Meeting. Although Grimes wanted to appear as a band member, the record company released the album under "Carol Grimes and Delivery". In 1971, Pyle left the band to join Gong and was replaced by Laurie Allan (who would himself also later join Gong). They would disband shortly thereafter.

Phil Miller went on to found Matching Mole with Robert Wyatt and Dave Sinclair, but a new Delivery line-up was assembled in the spring of 1972 consisting of the Miller brothers, Pyle and Richard Sinclair (bass and vocals), then Steve Miller's bandmate in Caravan. The band played a few live shows in August/September that year, but with Steve Miller being replaced by Dave Sinclair (from Matching Mole and Caravan), the band changed its name to Hatfield and the North. A final Delivery performance took place in November 1972 for the BBC's Radio One In Concert series, with an unusual line-up bringing together the Miller brothers, Pyle, Babbington, Coxhill, and Sinclair (who provided only vocals).

Steve Miller went on to release two shared (rather than "duo") albums with Coxhill for Virgin's Caroline budget label in 1973/74.

Roy Babbington, who had played with the Keith Tippett Group and Nucleus in 1971-73, went on to join Soft Machine from 1973-76. Laurie Allan rejoined Gong a couple of times, most notably appearing on 1973's Flying Teapot, and later Barbara Thompson's Paraphernalia.