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Tomorrow

HistoryFilm director Michelangelo Antonioni intended to feature the band in his 1966 film Blowup, but instead used The Yardbirds.
However Tomorrow did appear in the 1967 film Smashing Time under the name of The Snarks.
John "Junior" Wood was ill and was replaced by John Pearce, a clothes dealer.
Again their music was not used in the film.
The rock group sounds used in the film are by Skip Bifferty.The band released two singles, one of which, "My White Bicycle", was later covered by heavy rock act Nazareth, and as a novelty record by Neil the Hippy (Nigel Planer) of The Young Ones TV series.
According to drummer John 'Twink' Alder, the song was inspired by the Dutch Provos, an anarchist group in Amsterdam which instituted a community bicycle program: "they had white bicycles in Amsterdam and they used to leave them around the town.
And if you were going somewhere and you needed to use a bike, you'd just take the bike and you'd go somewhere and just leave it.
Whoever needed the bikes would take them and leave them when they were done."Tomorrow's September 1967 single "Revolution" preceded The Beatles song "Revolution" by a year.
In Joe Boyd's book White Bicycles - Making Music in the 1960s he asserts that the band's performance of the song one night at the UFO Club as the apotheosis of the 60s UK underground.Tomorrow singer Keith West is perhaps better known as a participant in Mark Wirtz's Teenage Opera project that gave him a solo hit single "Excerpt from a Teenage Opera (Grocer Jack)" and brief commercial success.
Guitarist Steve Howe later joined progressive rock band Yes, whilst Twink joined The Pretty Things on their concept album, S.F.
Sorrow, before forming The Pink Fairies.

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