The Dave Clark Five - Glad All Over (2024 Stereo Mix)

Details
Title | The Dave Clark Five - Glad All Over (2024 Stereo Mix) |
Author | Stereo Classics |
Duration | 2:45 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=l4XhD80mBoI |
Description
New remaster and remix
"Glad All Over" is a song written by Dave Clark and Mike Smith and recorded by The Dave Clark Five.
"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" beat that underpinned the wall of sound production known as the "Tottenham Sound".
Billboard said of the song that "here's a rocking, romping group vocal effort much akin to the Liverpool sound and the Beatles' school," stating that the song has a "solid beat and echo quality." Cash Box described it as "a happy-go-lucky pounder...that sports that 'Mersey sound with the Liverpool beat.'"
In January 1964, it became the British group's first big hit, reaching No.1 on the UK Singles Chart and promptly kicked off the DC5 vs Beatles rivalry, removing the massively successful "I Want To Hold Your Hand" from the UK No.1. In April 1964, it reached No.6 on the American US Billboard Hot 100 chart, becoming the first British Invasion hit by a group other than The Beatles. It was also No.1 in Ireland, No.3 in Australia and No.2 in Canada. It reached No.4 in the Netherlands and No.16 in Germany.
"Glad All Over" was the No.2 selling single of 1964 in the UK (behind "Can't Buy Me Love" by The Beatles), and also had sufficient UK sales in November and December 1963 to make it the 58th best-selling single of 1963;[10] put together these statistics suggest UK sales for "Glad All Over" of around 1,000,000 units by the end of 1964.