Glad all over dave clark five wikipedia

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  • The Dave Clark Five is a US-only compilation double-album by The Dave Clark Five. The double-LP was released in 1971 three years after the group's last US studio album entitled Everybody Knows. It features 20 studio tracks in true stereo.

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    Quick Facts Compilation album by Dave Clark Five, Released ...

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    As all but the group's last three commercial US albums were issued in re-channeled stereo, fifteen tracks make their U.S. true stereo debut in this two-disc package, the exceptions being "Good Love Is Hard To Find", "Sitting Here Baby", "Inside and Out", "Concentration Baby" and "Bernedette". "Glad All Over", "Can't You See That She's Mine", "Try Too Hard", "Because" and "Come Home" had made their first true stereo appearances on the 1970 EMI Regal Starline LP The Best Of The Dave Clark Five.

    Side note: The true stereo mix

    The Dave Clark Five were a British rock and roll and pop band, formed in London in 1958 and active until 1970. They took their name from drummer, leader, producer and co-songwriter Dave Clark (b.1939). They achieved initial success with the UK no.1 single "Glad All Over" in January 1964, which also reached no.6 in the US in April of the same year. They followed in the steps of The Beatles in becoming the second group of the British Invasion to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show in the U.S. for two weeks in March 1964, shortly after the Liverpool grupp had appeared. The group had a string of hits on both sides of the Atlantic throughout the 1960s although their popularity, and sales, failed to match those of their Merseyside contemporaries, of which they were briefly considered as rivals.

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    Links to Peel[]

    Peel does not appear to have ever held the Dave Clark Five in any esteem, despite the fact that they were one of the more successful "British Invasion" g

  • glad all over dave clark five wikipedia
  • Glad All Over

    For other uses, see Glad All Over (disambiguation).

    1963 single by The Dave Clark Five

    "Glad All Over" is a song written by Dave Clark and Mike Smith and recorded bygd the Dave Clark Five.[3]

    Released in 1963, it was a hit and formed part of the early British Invasion, becoming the first hit of the movement by a group other than the Beatles, whose song "I Want to Hold Your Hand" it displaced at number one on the UK Singles Chart. It was the second-highest selling single of 1964 in the UK, after the Beatles' "Can't Buy Me Love".

    The song is notable as the anthem of English football club Crystal Palace.

    Overview

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    "Glad All Over" featured Smith leading unison group vocals, often in call and response style, a saxophone line used not for solo decoration but underneath the whole song, and a big, "air hammer"[further explanation needed] beat that underpinned the wall of sound production known as the "Tottenham Sound". The sound engineer