The Dave Clark Five lyrics
Artist · 228 097 listeners per month
Artist's albums
If Somebody Loves You (2019 - Remaster)
1970 · album
Play Good Old Rock 'N' Roll (2019 - Remaster)
1971 · album
All the Hits (2019 - Remaster)
2020 · album
Can’t you see that she’s mine
2017 · single
5 By 5 (2019 - Remaster)
1967 · album
Everybody Knows (2019 - Remaster)
1967 · album
You Got What It Takes (2019 - Remaster)
1967 · album
The Dave Clark Five Return! (2019 - Remaster)
1964 · album
Glad All Over (2019 - Remaster)
1964 · album
American Tour (2019 - Remaster)
1964 · album
Catch Us If You Can (2019 - Remaster)
1965 · album
Weekend in London (2019 - Remaster)
1965 · album
Coast to Coast (2019 - Remaster)
1965 · album
I Like It Like That (2019 - Remaster)
1965 · album
Try Too Hard (2019 - Remaster)
1966 · album
Satisfied With You (2019 - Remaster)
1966 · album
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Biography
For a time in 1964, it seemed that the biggest challenger to the Beatles' phenomenon was the Dave Clark Five. From the Tottenham area of London, the quintet had the fortune to knock "I Want to Hold Your Hand" off the top of the British charts with "Glad All Over," and were championed by the British press as the Beatles' most serious threat. They were the first British Invasion band to break in a big way in the States after the Beatles. The Dave Clark Five reached the Top 40 17 times between 1964 and 1967 with memorable hits like "Glad All Over," "Bits and Pieces," "Because," and a remake of Bobby Day's "Over and Over," as well as making more appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show than any other English act. The DC5 were distinguished from their British contemporaries by their larger-than-life production, Clark's loud stomping drum sound, and Mike Smith's leathery vocals. They had a solid ear for melodies and harmonies and wrote much of their early material, the best of which endured well. Interestingly, and unusually for that era, bandleader Dave Clark managed and produced the band himself, negotiating a much higher royalty rate than artists of that period usually received. After a couple years of superstardom, the group called it quits in 1970.