Product Details
The Hits

The Hits
The Dave Clark Five

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Track Listing

  1. Do You Love Me
  2. Glad All Over
  3. Bits And Pieces
  4. Can't You See That's She's Mine
  5. Everybody Knows (I Still Love You)
  6. Don't Let Me Down
  7. Any Way You Want It
  8. Wild Weekend
  9. Catch Us If You Can
  10. Because
  11. I Like It Like That
  12. Reelin' And Rockin'
  13. Over And Over
  14. Come Home
  15. You Got What It Takes
  16. Try Too Hard
  17. Everybody Knows
  18. I'll Be Your's My Love
  19. Nineteen Days
  20. Look Before You Leap
  21. Til The Right One Come Along
  22. All Night Long
  23. Good Old Rock 'n' Roll Medley
  24. Sha Na Na Hey Kiss Him Goodbye
  25. Here Come Summer
  26. Put A Little Love In Your Heart
  27. Universal Love

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1596 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-10-13
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .27 pounds

Editorial Reviews

CD Description
As one of the only potential rivals to the might of The Beatles at the height of their British Invasion powers, the Dave Clark Five (under the leadership of Tottenham-born drummerDave Clark) released a slew of big-selling hits throughout the 60s, many of which are collected here. At the top of thelist is the ubiquitous 'Do You Love Me', a cover of a song intended initially for The Temptations. The band's first UK no.1 single, 'Glad All Over' also makes a spirited appearance alongside other top ten entries such as 'Catch Us If You Can' and 'Bits And Pieces'.


Customer Reviews

Catch 'em If You Can.4
As a collection this hits all the DC5 buttons for UK and US fans. Most of the really major hits and more are here. Before I do details on the music, some background that may be of interest to newcomers.

Uniquely (so far as I know) amongst the 1960s biggest pop stars Dave Clark retained (or regained) complete control over his band's output and has controlled its re-issue very tightly in the subsequent years, with only very sporadic availability of their hits. This has had two effects: First, the band's output has been somewhat under-represented on "Classic Hits" radio stations around the world and perhaps diminished the memory of just how big they were, though it has to be said they were rather bigger in the USA than they were in their homeland UK. Second, there has been a healthy trade in used copies of the few re-releases that have happened, as well as, of course, a somewhat feverish 2nd hand market for the original hit singles and albums.

As a business strategy, keeping the market wanting more is based on a simple premise - namely that the demand would persist until one day a release like this one came along. Both Mr Clark, and we the great unwashed, are about to find out whether that strategy has worked. Your reviewer has always sensed a certain arrogance inherent in this strategy which leaves a bad taste, but that's just a personal feeling. There is no rule that says that a hit record becomes a commodity that should always be available - much as that is mostly the defacto case.

Anyway, enough of the business background, to the music!

For newcomers: This is mostly pop-rock music. Probably the kind of stuff that Bruce Springsteen would have been doing if he'd been a star in the 1960s. Highly percussive stuff, often accompanied by call-response vocals - stadium rock if you like. Think Beatles version of "Twist and Shout" with added drum depth, and sometimes brass too and you're in the ballpark.

The CD is beautifully packaged (I like it, others seem to decry its simplicity) and is full of interesting liner and inlay notes. Photos of each band member adorn the booklet and there's lots to read in there too. The music has all been digitally remastered from the original tapes - and on some of the tracks the sound quality is a revelation.

For me the highlights are:

Their biggest UK hits:

Do you Love Me, Bits and Pieces, Glad All Over, Can't You See She's Mine, Catch us if you Can, Good Old Rock 'n' Roll, Everybody Knows.

However some of their UK hits are missing:
No One Can Break A Heart Like You, Red Balloon are notable absences. As a niggle, "Good Old Rock 'n' Roll" came in two parts, not quite all of it is provided here. "Reelin' and Rockin" from Part 2 is provided here, "Memphis" is not.

The DC5 version of Jerry Keller's hit "Here Comes Summer" is a belter, and should be part of all radio stations spring cycle of Beach Boys and summer songs.

Inclusion or not in this collection seems to be bit arbitrary, not being overtly tied to chart placings (i.e not all these were top 10 hits). A double CD release would have eased this problem, but my guess is we're in for a "more gold" sequel release if enough of you buy this one 8-)

Now to that sound quality thing...

Some tracks don't sound to me significantly better than they did on Vinyl. What follows is an explanation of that, not a criticism.

During the early part of the band's career they were recording on 2 or 4 track tapes. To get that powerful sound I would guess that they recorded as many elements of the backing as possible on each track, and then did overdubs. This technique often meant that the bringing together of the production elements involved playing one or two already recorded tapes, whilst adding live overdubs to them and simultaneously recording the whole thing onto yet another recorder.

Tape to tape copying always involved some degree of quality loss, though this and other defects, were seldom apparent when listening to the resulting tracks on vinyl (one thinks of the famed squeaky bass drum pedal on The Searchers' "Needles and Pins", for just one example - pretty much inaudible on mono Vinyl, but painfully obvious on stereo CD release). After overdubbing, it was often only the resulting composite tape that was retained as the master, the element tapes were often discarded, having served their purpose.

Some of these tracks seem to have been the victim of this process, meaning that the individual crispness of many of the deeper music elements can never be regained. "You Got What It Takes" - the prime example here - is a massive, joyous sound with a big band sound and Mike Smith doing vocals that do some amazing dancing around the offbeat. However, the backing is rather muddy sounding and doesn't sound all that different when compared to my old 45 RPM single. I surmise that the number of overdubs needed in 1967 to get that massive sound is to blame. Having said all that, the track is still a classic (Marv Johnson eat your heart out!) and I'm in love with it all over again and will no doubt listen to it periodically for the rest of my life - explanation not criticism.

So, the music is great, but don't attach too much to the "remastered" tag. By contrast "Good Old Rock 'n' Roll" - for one example - sounds far better than it ever did on Vinyl (I would guess they had got onto 8 or 16 track recorders by then, so all the original recorded elements survive).

So, a superb retrospective of the DC5 for those of us that were there (as a kid I used to walk past Dave Clark's rehearsal place in Philip lane, Tottenham - so I was there, sorta...) and a brilliant intro for those who are wondering what all the hoopla was about. Four stars rather than five because of the omissions mentioned and perhaps just a tiny bit of grouchiness that this has taken so long to appear 8-)

2½ minute pop songs at their best.4
Now this is unexpected. Dave Clark is very protective of everything he's been involved in and it was a bit of a shock to see this in the schedules. A greatest hits package that can best be grouped into three sections: the bad, the good and the 'blimey, this is a surprise'

To get the negatives out of the way first: the sleeve is nothing but a disgrace. This isn't some sort of cheap K-Tel type budget release; it's from a man who keeps rigorous control over anything associated with the group and all those involved should be thoroughly ashamed by allowing this to pass quality control. The other negative is that this compilation contains songs that shouldn't be included and misses out on others that should. The accompanying booklet is OK but I would have preferred a bit more information on the tracks themselves. The title is also a bit of a misnomer, but more of that later.

Twenty three of the songs on here are identical to those of the long deleted `Glad All Over Again' package from 1993 but, with the improvement in technology over the preceding 15 years, and considering much of this was recorded on, by today's standards, anitiquated analogue machines, the quality is much improved. What isn't improved is the sequencing of tracks; they aren't in any chronological order, jumping from `Good Old Rock `n' Roll' (Dec 69) to `Sha-Na-Na Kiss Him Goodbye' (Oct 73) then back to `Here Come Summer' (Jul 70). The earlier songs fair no better with `Because' May 64) coming after `Catch Us If You Can' (Jul 65). There may very well be a reason behind this seemingly haphazard order but I can't think of one.

Anyway, to the good bits. This CD is a `tub-thumping' joy. Amongst many, `Glad All Over', `Bits And Pieces', `Catch Us If You Can' and `Wild Weekend' are sing-a-long tunes at their best; `All Night Long' is an instrumental that, had it been recorded by The Stones or Yardbirds, would be staple diet for any blues based groups; turn up the volume for `Any Way You Want It' 30 years ahead of its time, being the forerunner of thrash metal; `Nineteen Days' is pop at its finest, whilst `Everybody Get Together' is the DC5's `lighters in the air' song. In fact, if you want to sample The Dave Clark Five, this is the only place to do it, other than the 50 track USA `History Of', which is why this review gives 'The Hits' a four star rating

So, to the misleading title. `Don't Let Me Down', 'I Like It Like That' and 'Til The Right One Comes Along' were never issued on singles over here whilst 'Try Too Hard', 'Put A Little Love In Your Heart', and the aforementioned 'Nineteen Days' and 'Sha-Na-Na' failed to trouble the charts but are all included. `Thinking Of You Baby' (a #26), `The Red Balloon' (#7), 'No One Can Break A Heart Like You' (#28) and `Live In The Sky' (#39) did but aren't anywhere to be seen. We can be grateful, however, that `Tabatha Twitchit' failed to make the final list.

What other reviewers have failed to mention is the surprise. Track 28, is a previously unreleased song called `Universal Love', which sounds as if it's from the early 1970's Dave Clark And Friends sessions. Being a plea to end our differences with planetary peace, whilst it's not the greatest song you'll ever hear, its mere inclusion on here suggests that Clark is no longer reticent in allowing unissued material to see the light of day. Hopefully, this may be the start of a campaign to finally issue The Dave Clark Five's UK and US albums on legal CDs, all with bonus material.

hits and pieces3
WERE THE DC5 AS GOOD AS THE RECENT ARTICLES I HAVE READ SUGGEST?
WERE THEY THE NEXT BEST THING TO THE BEATLES AT THE TIME?
ER NO!! AS THIS RELEASE PROVES.
LIKE MANY I REMEMBER THE MAIN HITS, BITS AND PIECES, GLAD ALL OVER AND CATCH US IF YOU CAN, AND THEY WERE GREAT POP SONGS. BUT AFTER THAT I REMEMBER VERY LITTLE AND I DID GROW UP IN THE SIXTIES. THIS RELEASE PROVES WHY. IT CONTAINS A NUMBER OF AVERAGE COVER VERSIONS AND SOME MEDIOCRE ROCK AND ROLL COVERS THAT LACK THE PASSION OF THE REAL THING. THE SOUND IS AVERAGE, THE COVER IS TERRIBLE AND THERE IS A C.D. BOOKLET THAT PAYS HOMAGE TO DAVE CLARK, I.E. DAVE DID THIS, DAVE DID THAT, BUT PAYS LITTLE ATTENTION TO THE REST OF THE BAND. VERY LITTLE BAND HISTORY, NO RELEASE DATES AND NO U.K./U.S.A. CHART POSITIONS.
THIS COULD, AND AFTER ALL THIS TIME SHOULD, HAVE BEEN A FAR BETTER PRODUCT.