Fifty years ago, from left to right : Denis, Dave, Mike, Rick and Lenny as they were then.
Dave was born in Tottenham, North London and left school without qualifications at the age of 15. He became a film stuntman, performed in over 40 films and in his late teens in the late 1950s, bought himself a set of drums, taught himself to play and formed a skiffle group to raise funds so that his football team could travel to the Netherlands.
He saw the group become 'The Dave Clark Five' with him as leader, co-songwriter, manager and producer and grow in popularity to the extent it unseated the Beatles "I Want to Hold Your Hand" from its number one spot in the British singles chart in January 1964 and replaced it with "Glad All Over" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=11m23s
They followed the Beatles to the USA in 1964, were on The 'Ed Sullivan Show' more times than any other English group and achieved 15 consecutive Top 20 hits including :
'Any way You Want It'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AH1JEI79emU&feature=related
'Bits and Pieces'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoRLIJJSG4o
'Do You Love Me'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=14m42s
And in the summer of 1965 they inspired a group of school leavers with their hit 'Catch Us if You Can' at a huge secondary school, built to house 2,500 post Second World War, South London, baby boomers, called Eltham Green Comprehensive School.
That Summer the Headmaster, Mr Davies, had planned his usual 'Farewell to the Sixth Formers Assembly' speech in the school hall and a tradition had grown up that the leavers would do something to disrupt it in front of the thousand pupils in attendance and relayed by the tanoi broadcasting system to the rest of the school, seated in their form rooms.
It had all been fairly mediocre stuff in the early 1960s, like planting alarm clocks in cupboards in the hall, timed to go off when the Old Man was into his speech or chaining the exit doors, so no one could get out at the end of the Assembly.
It had all been fairly mediocre stuff in the early 1960s, like planting alarm clocks in cupboards in the hall, timed to go off when the Old Man was into his speech or chaining the exit doors, so no one could get out at the end of the Assembly.
This year it would be in a different league, because five of the lads in the sixth form, had a drink in the local 'Yorkshire Grey' pub the night before and, after closing time, dressed in dark clothing, had climbed over the school gates and made their way to the hall, where, by chance, they found an exit door open.
Once inside the darkened hall the tick of the clock startled them. They put their plan into effect. Billy stood on tables and chairs and placed an old fashioned loud speaker, out of sight, on the wooden sounding board (seen on the right) and way up above the stage. They then ran a single wire room the speaker, down the wall, through a door opening and along the wall of the corridor behind the hall and into one of the small music rooms. The wire was fed into an old fashioned reel-to reel tape recorder and a pre-recorded tape placed on the deck. The lads then made their exit from the school.
After lunch the next day, the hall began to fill up. First the younger kids downstairs and then the Sixth Form in the balcony. It was at this point that Frank had been delegated to make his way to the music room to switch on the tape which was timed to play blank for 20 minutes. He noticed that the indicator light was on and so placed the leather bag of one music teachers against it and a tray of glasses on top for good measure. He then made his exit and went to the balcony.
The Old Man was well into his speech with the usual stuff about 'torch bearers' when the first blast of music came out of the hidden speaker :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5ya_Gq8d4Q
The Headmaster sat down angry and perplexed. Teachers ran around like blue-arsed flies, trying to find from where the blast of music was coming and were unsuccessful. The kids were collapsed in laughter.
Two and a half minutes later Peter Cook and Dudley Moore's "Goodbye" finished. It was then that the Old Man made his big mistake. He got to his feet and resumed his speech saying that the perpetrators would be found out.
Unbeknown to him or anyone in hall or school, except the lads on the balcony, the tape played blank for another few minutes and then :
Here they come again, mmmm-mm-mm,
Catch us if you can, mmmm-mm-mm,
Time to get a move on, mmmm-mm-mm,
We will yell with all of our might.
Catch us if you can ......
Now we gotta run, mmmm-mm-mm,
No more time for fun, mmmm-mm-mm,
When we're gettin' angry, mmmm-mm-mm,
We will yell with all of our might.
Catch us if you can .....
Here they come again, mmmm-mm-mm,
Catch us if you can, mmmm-mm-mm,
Time to get a move on, mmmm-mm-mm,
We will yell with all of our might.
Catch us if you can.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJYgNqOFBLk
With no guarantee of protection from unending interruptions, the Headmaster left the stage. He got the police in, but they could find nothing, since the lads had not forced an entry and caused no damage to school property.
The story of the lads' ruse spread to all South London school kids year and doubtless teachers, that year. Somehow they were doing what youth and the Dave Clark Five did in the 1960s when they shouted :
"We will yell with all of our might."
And beyond 1965, in addition to managing the band, Dave began directing and producing for tv and in 1968 made 'Hold On, It's the Dave Clark Five' which was followed by the break up of the band in 1970 and his ending his drumming in 1972, after breaking four knuckles in a tobogganing accident.
In 1986 at the age of 44, he wrote a science fiction stage musical, 'Time' which played for two years in London's West End, starring Cliff Richard and later by David Cassidy and featuring Laurence Olivier's huge holographic image.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1h29m33s
He became a successful entrepreneur and a multi-millionaire, with property in West London, with revenues from his rights to all the Dave Clark Five music and episodes of the '60s tv music show, 'Ready, Steady Go!'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1h25m33s
He was a close friend of 'Queen' lead singer Freddie Mercury whom he had known since 1975 and had taken over the bedside vigil of Freddie when he died in November 1991 and informed his parents about his death.
In 2008, at the age of 66 and marking the 50th anniversary of the founding of this band, was inducted into the USA's 'Rock and Roll Hall of Fame' and made a rare public appearance with, the then, two other surviving band members and accepted the award on behalf of the group. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKTtGjYl5yU&t=13m11s
In 2015 he appeared in and part presented the 115-minute documentary 'GLAD ALL OVER The Dave Clark Five and Beyond'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1m00s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1h29m33s
He became a successful entrepreneur and a multi-millionaire, with property in West London, with revenues from his rights to all the Dave Clark Five music and episodes of the '60s tv music show, 'Ready, Steady Go!'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1h25m33s
He was a close friend of 'Queen' lead singer Freddie Mercury whom he had known since 1975 and had taken over the bedside vigil of Freddie when he died in November 1991 and informed his parents about his death.
In 2008, at the age of 66 and marking the 50th anniversary of the founding of this band, was inducted into the USA's 'Rock and Roll Hall of Fame' and made a rare public appearance with, the then, two other surviving band members and accepted the award on behalf of the group. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKTtGjYl5yU&t=13m11s
In 2015 he appeared in and part presented the 115-minute documentary 'GLAD ALL OVER The Dave Clark Five and Beyond'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyP4E48S5zg&t=1m00s
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