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'''Python Lee Jackson'''
== Australian period ==
Python Lee Jackson
With Roy James on bass guitar, Python Lee Jackson played the underground circuit. In early 1966, Kennington was deported to the UK, and former [[
In June, the quartet added former [[Wild Cherries]]' Melbourne-born singer, Malcolm McGee (1 November 1945{{spaced ndash}}17 May 2012), and opened Rhubarb's club in Sydney's [[Liverpool Street, Sydney|Liverpool Street]]. McGee described how Python Lee Jackson is "the ultimate name. Group names are becoming more and more ridiculous – PLJ is the name to end all names."<ref name="Lewes">{{cite news | url = http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article44025118 | title = Clothes Help on the (L)Adder to success | last = Lewes | first = Jackie Lee | newspaper = [[The Australian Women's Weekly]] | volume = 34 | issue = 25 | date = 16 November 1966 | accessdate = 22 May 2017 | page = 61 | via = [[National Library of Australia]] }}</ref>
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In 1972, David Bentley, Mick Liber, and David Montgomery made recordings with new members Gary Boyle (guitar) and former [[The Easybeats]]' member Tony Cahill (bass). These tracks subsequently appeared on the band's only album (also titled ''In a Broken Dream'') alongside the earlier Rod Stewart recordings from 1969. This resulted in the release of the song and the subsequent charting. The song was popular in Europe and appeared on the [[soundtrack]] of [[film]]s and documentaries (including the art house [[film|movie]] ''[[Breaking the Waves]]'') and became the subject of many cover versions. [[Rod Stewart]] included the [[song]] on two anthologies of previously recorded work and in 1996 an English band, [[Thunder (band)|Thunder]], delivered a high-octane rendering that propelled it into the [[United Kingdom|UK]] chart for the second time. In 2004, a cover of the song appeared on ''[[Relations (album)|Relations]]'', recorded by British [[singer]] [[Kathryn Williams]]. In 2009, [[Half A Cow]] released ''[[Sweet Consolation (album)|Sweet Consolation]]'', a 24 track anthology of the band's work. Meant to be a definitive collection, it does not contain "In A Broken Dream" as the producers were unable to obtain the required licences needed to include their most famous song.<ref>{{cite web|title=Sweet Consolation|url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-consolation-r1697276/review|publisher=www.allmusic.com|accessdate=1 December 2011}}</ref> Cahill was replaced on bass by Chris Belshaw shortly before the band dissolved.{{citation needed|date=June 2014}}
Following the dissolution of the band, Montgomery
== Members ==
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