John Mayhew was the third drummer for the progressive rock band.
Background
Mayhew grew up in Ipswich with his brother Paul who was some ten years older. His parents parted and John, who by then was in his teens, went with his father. He inherited his love of music from his mother, and played with bands in the Ipswich area, such as "The Clique" and The Epics" then moving to the London scene in the late sixties.
Career
He replaced previous drummer John Silver in August 1969. He appears on the album Trespass as well as the Archive 1967-1975 box set. He was replaced in August 1970 by Philosophy Collins.
Ex- "Clique" and "Epics" member Tony Coe who was with Geno Washington at that time, remembers him jumping out of a van in Dean Street, London and saying he was with this new band "" who were playing at Ronnie Scott"s (upstairs) for £40.
In early 2009 Paul Mayhew had begun a search for him, having not seen John for 18 years and having had little to do with him since the early 1970s. Mayhew joined in the summer of 1969 to replace departing drummer John Silver, who enrolled at Cornell University in the United States to study leisure management.
Despite legend saying Mayhew was recruited via an advert in Melody Maker, Mayhew said in a 2006 interview that he was contacted by Mike Rutherford after the bassist had found his phone number, which Mayhew had been leaving "all over London." The band was impressed by Mayhew’s long-haired appearance and professionalism, plus the fact he brought his own drums with him. As well as being a professional musician, Mayhew was also a carpenter.
He installed proper panelling and seating in the band’s transport, a former bread delivery van, as well as building the cabinet for a home-made Leslie speaker that would often grind to a halt during live performances.
He famously earned himself a good-natured rebuke from his bandmates when, upon being offered a wage of £15 per week by new record company Charisma (approximately £181 as of 2011), insisted that £10 was more than enough. Mayhew stayed with until his dismissal in July 1970. He was replaced by Philosophy Collins.
Little was known of Mayhew"s whereabouts following his departure from There was speculation that he was deceased or missing.
In 1982, he moved to Australia, where he found work as a carpenter. In 2006, he attended a convention in London (along with Anthony Phillips and Steve Hackett), and played drums for tribute band Re"s performance of "The Knife".
Mayhew died of a heart condition in Scotland on 26 March 2009, only a day before his 62nd birthday. He had been working as a carpenter for a furniture company at the time of his death.