Thank You Very Much (album)

Thank You Very Much is an album of the March 1978 reunion concerts at the London Palladium by English singer Cliff Richard and the group that backed him in the 1950s and 1960s The Shadows. It was released in February 1979 on the EMI label and reached No. 5 in the UK Albums Chart.

Thank You Very Much
Live album by
ReleasedFebruary 1979
Recorded4 March 1978
VenueLondon Palladium, London
GenrePop
LabelEMI, Columbia/CBS USA
ProducerBruce Welch
Cliff Richard chronology
Green Light
(1978)
Thank You Very Much
(1979)
Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile
(1979)
The Shadows chronology
Tasty
(1977)
Thank You Very Much
(1979)
String of Hits
(1979)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

The concert had sections with Richard and The Shadows playing together, The Shadows playing alone and Richard playing more recent material with his own band. There was also an acoustic section credited as Cliff, Hank and Bruce.

The material played spans from the 1958 debut single "Move It" to tracks from Richard's gospel album Small Corners released only a month before the concert (although only "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music" made the original album). Although "Please Don't Tease" was originally a number one hit for Cliff Richard and The Shadows in 1960, the version played here is the rearranged version from the B-side of the 1978 single "Please Remember Me" and is played by Cliff's band. The album closes with a cover of Dennis Wilson's "End of the Show" (the closing track from his Pacific Ocean Blue album). The repeated refrain of that song is where the album title Thank You Very Much comes from.

The original album only contains fifteen tracks. A CD version released in 2004 adds three more tracks but the entire concert has never been released.[2] A video version of the concert with the same title features clips and interviews.

Track listing

Side One

  1. "The Young Ones" (Sid Tepper, Roy C. Bennett) - Cliff and the Shadows
  2. "Do You Wanna Dance" (Bobby Freeman) - Cliff and the Shadows
  3. "The Day I Met Marie" (Hank Marvin) - Cliff and the Shadows
  4. "Shadoogie" (Marvin, Bruce Welch, Jet Harris, Tony Meehan) - The Shadows
  5. "Atlantis" (Jerry Lordan) - The Shadows
  6. "Nivram" (Marvin, Welch, Harris) - The Shadows
  7. "Apache" (Lordan) - The Shadows
  8. "Please Don't Tease" (Welch, Peter Chester) - Cliff Richard
  9. "Miss You Nights" (Dave Townsend) - Cliff Richard

Side Two

  1. "Move It" (Ian Samwell) - Cliff and the Shadows
  2. "Willie and the Hand Jive" (Johnny Otis) - Cliff and the Shadows
  3. "All Shook Up" (Otis Blackwell, Elvis Presley) - Cliff, Hank and Bruce
  4. "Devil Woman" (Terry Britten, Barry Authors) - Cliff Richard
  5. "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music" (Larry Norman) - Cliff Richard
  6. "End of the Show" (Dennis Wilson, Gregg Jakobson) - Cliff and the Shadows

Additional (previously unreleased) live tracks from the concert (2004 re-issue):

  1. "Up In Canada" (Norman) - Cliff Richard
  2. "Yes He Lives" (Britten) - Cliff Richard
  3. "Let Me Be the One" (Paul Curtis) - The Shadows

Personnel

  • Cliff Richard – lead vocals
The Shadows
Cliff Richard's Band
  • Terry Britten – guitar
  • Dave Christopher – guitar
  • Graham Murray – guitar
  • Mo Foster – bass guitar
  • Graham Todd – keyboards
  • Clem Cattini – drums
  • Graham Jarvis – drums
  • Tony Rivers – backing vocals
  • Stuart Calver – backing vocals
  • John Perry – backing vocals

Technical personnel

  • Producer – Bruce Welch (The Shadows solo tracks also produced by Hank Marvin)
  • Engineer – Tony Clark (on the RAK Mobile)
  • Re-mixing – Tony Clark, Peter Vince (at Abbey Road Studios)

Credits from the album's sleeve notes

Charts and certifications

gollark: You should, if you care, probably at least run it through an obufscator for .NET.
gollark: > 5. .net platform is cracker / hacker friendly Any program running on the client can INEVITABLY be reverse-engineered. Do not rely on it not experiencing that, because you will fail.
gollark: > 4. XAML - the incredibly messy UI technologyPerhaps, but this is not a *language* thing.
gollark: > 3. Garbage collector and memory leak detection tools?Again, not sure if anyone actually runs into this sort of issue in practice.
gollark: > 1. Performance penalties.> [some rambling about C++].NET is generally pretty much *fast enough*. If your application somehow hits performance bottlenecks, rewrite the slow bits in native code, don't just immediately take a development speed hit.> 2. Need to interoperate with C++ / Native (Windows) API’sI don't know how often you actually need to bind to a native API not wrapped by .NET or a third-party library, but you can do it, it's just annoying - but probably less than using C++ for everything!

References

  1. Thank You Very Much: London Palladium Reunion Concert at AllMusic. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
  2. Thank You Very Much at Amazon.co.uk
  3. "Cliff Richard | Artist | Official Charts". UK Albums Chart.
  4. "British album certifications – Cliff Richard and The Shadows – Thank You Very Much". British Phonographic Industry. Select albums in the Format field. Select Gold in the Certification field. Type Thank You Very Much in the "Search BPI Awards" field and then press Enter.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.