An equal love for rock ‘n’ roll and rhythm & blues is what guided The Pretty Things in 1963 when they first formed. Guitarist Dick Taylor, previously a member of Little Boy Blue & The Blue Boys with pals Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, met Phil May at art school and quickly joined forces. They recruited the rest of the original Things over the next year and went on to sign a record deal with Fontana. While U.S. audiences didn’t embrace these British invaders, European audiences did. In fact, it was David Bowie who first enlightened America about the Pretty Things phenomenon with covers of both Rosalynand Don’t Bring Me Down in 1973. Another milestone for the band was 1968’s S. F. Sorrow. The first rock opera was a huge influence for Pete Townshend who went on to create Tommy a year later.