Two further singles followed in 1981, before Ashley left, with Gouldthorpe taking over on vocals and Simon Hinkler (formerly of TV Product) joining on keyboards and guitar.
Two further singles followed in 1962, "I Ain't Mad At You" and "The Boll Weevil Song", but they were not hits.
Further singles followed in 1990 and 1991 before Jenssen abandoned the Bleep moniker and took a distinct change in artistic direction.
Two further singles followed in 1972 and her last commercial release was "Hey Mama, Sing Me a Song" in 1974.
Two singles, "Boys & Girls" (May 2000) and "1-2-3-4" (May 2001), of which neither charted followed.
Together with her husband Niklas Worgt aka Dapayk, she released various singles followed by their first album Close Up on Mo's Ferry Prod.
It included three singles: a cover of John Waite's "Missing You", followed by "Beer Thirty", both of which peaked in top 20 on the country charts.
Barker had hit singles with "Shocks of a Mighty" and "Spinning Wheel" (with Melanie Jonas), followed in 1970 by his debut album Prisoner of Love.
This song was the first of three singles from her self-titled debut album, followed by "Under the Light of the Texaco" (which failed to chart) and "Drive Time".
After their first full album as a band, the band took a more traditional approach to recording, releasing two singles, followed by an album.