#1169: Give All Your Love To Me by Gerry And The Pacemakers

Peak Month: September 1965
6 weeks on Vancouver’s CFUN chart
Peak Position #11
Peak Position on Billboard Hot 100 ~ #68
YouTube.com: “Give All Your Love To Me
Lyrics: “Give All Your Love To Me”

In September 1942, Gerry Marsden was born in Liverpool, UK. His interest in music began at an early age. During World War II Marsden recalls standing on top of an air raid shelter singing “Ragtime Cowboy Joe.” Passers by applauded. Marsden formed the group in the late ’50s, calling themselves, The Mars-Bars, a nod to the Mars Bar candy bar and the first syllable of Marsden’s surname. The band consisted of Marsden as frontman and guitarist, Fred Marsden on drums, Les Chadwick on bass, and Arthur Mack on piano. The latter left in ’61 to be replaced by Les McGuire (who also played saxophone). Along with the Beatles, the group now known as Gerry and the Pacemakers, toured clubs in Liverpool and in Hamburg, Germany. In 1961, The Beatles and Gerry & the Pacemakers merged to become the Beatmakers, for a one-off performance in Litherland Town Hall. The line-up comprised Gerry Marsden, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Les Chadwick, Pete Best, Freddy Marsden and Les Maguire, plus vocalist Karl Terry from the local Liverpool band The Cruisers. In Liverpool in the early 60s they were as popular as the Beatles. Beatles manager, Brian Epstein, signed up the band with EMI/Columbia Records and they released their first single in ’63 called “How Do You Do It?” The song had been offered to the Beatles who also recorded the tune. However, the Beatles didn’t consider the song in keeping with their emerging sound and objected to releasing it as a single. Luckily, Gerry and the Pacemakers version quickly climbed to #1 in the UK in April ’63.

Gerry and Fred Marsden’s father was a railway clerk who entertained the neighbours by playing the ukulele. With the vogue for skiffle music in the mid-’50s, he took the skin off one of his instruments, put it over a tin of Quality Street and said to Freddie, “There’s your first snare drum, son.” Gerry sang in a church choir by the age of twelve. In 1957 the brothers appeared in the show Dublin To Dingle at the Pavilion Theatre in Lodge Lane. Studies meant little to either of them. Freddie left school and worked for a candle-maker earning £4 a week, and Gerry’s job was as a delivery boy for the railways. Their parents did not mind and encouraged their musical ambitions. After they formed The Mars-Bars the Mars Company objected and the band was renamed Gerry and the Pacemakers. They were featured on a beat show with Gene Vincent at Liverpool Stadium in 1960.

The Pacemakers sound was bouncy, catchy and memorable. They mostly recorded upbeat tunes, though three of their biggest hits were ballads. Their guitar-dominated pop got them a second #1 hit in the UK called “I Like It” in June ’63, written by Marsden. Their third UK #1 hit was in September ’63 with the pop ballad “You’ll Never Walk Alone”. Marsden wrote a lot of the Pacemaker’s tunes. These included the following hits: “It’s All Right”, “I’m The One”, “Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Cryin’”,  and “Ferry Cross the Mersey”. Another one of their successful hits in Vancouver was “Give All Your Love To Me”.

Give All Your Love To Me by Gerry And The Pacemakers

The song offers a cascade of similes to evoke the permanence of a lasting love. Seas are expected to always have water, flowers are depended on to bloom, the sun to shine, stars to remain in the night sky, winds to blow and the moon to glow. In the same way, the suitor in this song entreats his beloved to give all of (her) love.  The single missed the UK singles charts and peaked at #68 on the Billboard Hot 100. But in Vancouver the song peaked at #11. This may not be surprising given the Pacemakers successes on the Vancouver charts. They’d had six consecutive Top Ten hits between May 1963 and March 1965, and were very much in vogue. “Give All Your Love To Me” was one of three Top 20 singles in addition to their first six releases here making the Top Ten.

Like the Beatles, Gerry & the Pacemakers got to star in their own film, Ferry Cross the Mersey. The group were featured on scooters for the film Ferry Cross The Mersey (1965), which was written by the creator of Coronation Street, Tony Warren. Although the plot is trite, the film offers invaluable views of Merseyside sights and clubs of the ’60s.In 1966 the group had their last American Top 40 hit, “Girl On A Swing”. In 1968 Gerry Marsden replaced Joe Brown in the West End musical, Charlie Girl, and effectively broke up the group.

Pacemaker drummer, Freddie Marsden, became a telephone operator for £14 a week but later opened the Pacemaker driving school in Formby. Although he was always courteous to his fans, he never returned to music and got rid of his drum set. In 1973, Pacemaker bass guitarist Les Chadwick moved to Sydney, Australia, where he set up an employment agency. Les Maguire briefly fronted the Mississippi blues band, Hog Owl in 1970, and later teamed up with the Pacemakers for occasional reunion performances. In 1989 Gerry Marsden was featured along with Paul McCartney, Holly Johnson (of Frankie Goes to Hollywood) and the UK band the Christians, in a charity release of “Ferry Cross the Mersey“. At the Hillsborough Football Stadium on April 15, 1989, 96 soccer fans were crushed and died, and another 766 fans were injured. The 1989 single release of “Ferry Cross the Mersy” spent three weeks on the top of the UK singles chart from May 20th to June 3. The Pacemakers  1963 hit “You’ll Never Walk Alone” is the anthem for the Liverpool soccer team (and it’s fans). Subsequently, the Pacemakers cover of the song has been adopted by the Scottish Football (soccer in North America) team Celtic. It has also been adopted by three soccer teams in the Netherlands, ten German soccer teams, and teams in Belgium, Japan, Spain and New Zealand. In 1993 Gerry Marsden published his biography, I’ll Never Walk Alone.

February 24, 2017
Ray McGinnis

References:
Bill Harry, Meet The Singer: Gerry Marsden, Mersey Beat, Liverpool, UK, January 3, 1963
Alan Clayson, Freddie Marsden: Drumming Elder Brother at the Heart of Merseybeat Boom, Guardian, London, UK, December 20, 2006
Nik Brumsack, Hillsborough 25th Anniversary: The Story of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone,’The Independent, London, UK, April 14, 2014
Nicole La Marie, Star Interview: Gerry Marsden, Northampton Chronicle and Echo, Northampton, UK, November 19, 2012
Richard Webber, Legend Gerry Marsden Loves Touring but this Time he is Setting the Pace, Daily Express, August 15, 2014
Tour Dates – Gerry and the Pacemakers, Gerry and the Pacemakers.co.uk.
C-FUNTASTIC FIFTY,” CFUN 1410 AM, Vancouver, BC, September 25, 1965.

For more song reviews on this website visit the Countdown.


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