Gerry and the Pacemakers were an English beat group prominent in the 1960s Merseybeat scene. In common with the Beatles, they came from Liverpool, were managed by Brian Epstein and recorded by George Martin.[1] Their early successes helped make popular the Merseybeat sound and launch the wider British beat boom of the mid-1960s
Gerry Marsden led the group on and off through the years until his retirement in 2018. Since his death in 2021 his bandmates, from his final lineup of the band, have returned to touring as Gerry's Pacemakers,[3] as Marsden requested before he retired.
History
Marsden formed the group in 1956 with his brother Fred, Les Chadwick, and Arthur McMahon.[1] At the time, Gerry had been working for British Rail as a deliveryman.[4] They rivalled the Beatles early in their career, playing in the same areas of Liverpool.[1] McMahon (known as Arthur Mack) was replaced on piano by Les Maguire around 1961.[1] The group's original name was Gerry Marsden and the Mars Bars,[5] but they were forced to change this when the Mars Company, producers of the chocolate Mars bar, complained.[6]
The band was the second to sign with Brian Epstein (becoming one of his favourite artists.[citation needed] Epstein later signed them to Columbia Records (a sister label to the Beatles' label Parlophone under EMI).[1] They began recording in January 1963 with "How Do You Do It?", a song written by Mitch Murray.[7] The song was produced by George Martin and became a number one hit in the UK, the first by an Epstein-managed Liverpool group to achieve this on all charts.[8] "How Do You Do It?" was also reluctantly recorded by the Beatles (they eventually convinced Martin to let them release their song "Love Me Do"[9] as a single instead). Both the Pacemakers' and Beatles' versions of "How Do You Do It?" were recorded at Abbey Road Studios.[10]
Gerry Marsden was quoted as saying:
The Beatles and ourselves (The Pacemakers)—we let go, when we get on-stage. I'm not being detrimental, but in the south, I think the groups have let themselves get a bit too formal. On Merseyside, it's beat, beat, beat all the way. We go on and really have a ball.[11]
Gerry and the Pacemakers' next two singles, Murray's "I Like It" and Rodgers and Hammerstein's "You'll Never Walk Alone", both also reached number one in the UK Singles Chart,[12] the latter recorded instead of the Beatles' "Hello Little Girl". "You'll Never Walk Alone" had been a favourite of Marsden's since seeing Carousel when he was growing up. It quickly became the signature tune of Liverpool Football Club and, later, other sports teams around the world.[13][14] The song remains a football anthem.[15] The group narrowly missed a fourth consecutive number one when "I'm the One" was kept off the top spot for two weeks in February 1964 by fellow Liverpudlians The Searchers' "Needles and Pins".
Gerry and the Pacemakers had the distinction of being the first act to have their first three recordings go to number 1 in the UK charts.[16] Although they never had a number 1 in the United States, they were the second-most successful group from Liverpool, after the Beatles, to have hits on the United States Billboard pop charts.
Despite this early success, Gerry and the Pacemakers never had another number one single in the UK. Marsden began writing most of their songs, including "I'm the One", "It's Gonna Be All Right" and "Ferry Cross the Mersey", as well as their first and biggest US hit, "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying" (Laurie 3251), which peaked at No. 4.[1]
In the US, their recordings were released by the small New York City record label Laurie in 1963, with which they issued four singles without success. When the Beatles broke through in January 1964, Laurie's next regular single release of "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying" (Laurie 3284) became a big hit and, during 1964, Laurie coupled "How Do You Do It?" with "You'll Never Walk Alone" (Laurie 3261), and "I Like It" with "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)" (Laurie 3271), with some success. They appeared in the landmark concert filmT.A.M.I. Show, released in December 1964, performing alongside Chuck Berry, The Beach Boys, James Brown and The Rolling Stones.
By late 1965, their popularity was rapidly declining on both sides of the Atlantic.[1] They disbanded either in October 1966 or sometime in early-to-mid-1967,[1] (or perhaps in 1969[4]) with much of their later recorded material never released in the UK. Gerry Marsden maintained a low-key (but popular) career on television,[10] including on TV variety shows and as a regular slot on children's television in The Sooty Show.[19][4] He also starred in the West End musical Charlie Girl alongside Derek Nimmo and Anna Neagle.[20][21][4]
While working as a solo artist, Gerry Marsden began working with pianist and musical director Jose McLaughlin in 1970. In 1972, Gerry Marsden and McLaughlin reformed the Pacemakers in 1972 with fellow Liverpool musicians Billy Kinsley (bass) and Pete Clarke (drums).[22] Kinsley had previously been a member of The Merseybeats, the Kinsleys, and Rockin' Horse. (Kinsley would later reunite Rockin' Horse after leaving the Pacemakers and rename his new group Liverpool Express).[23] Clarke had previously been a member of a band called The Escorts. In April 1973, this second version of the group became the only Merseybeat band to ever record for the John Peel Show on BBC Radio. The tracks from that show have now been included on the album Gerry and the Pacemakers Live at the BBC, released on Parlophone Records in October 2018.[24][25][26] Since then, Marsden often toured with various lineups of the band on the oldies circuit. By the mid-1980s, Gerry and the Pacemakers toured nine months every year (in the words of David Fricke of Rolling Stone) "doing lucrative cabaret gigs and nostalgia rock shows in Europe, North America, and Australia."[4]
Gerry Marsden returned to #1 in the UK charts twice during the 1980s with re-recordings of two of his hits with the Pacemakers, with all profits going to charity. In 1985 after the Bradford Football Club stadium tragedy in which 56 were killed,[27] he formed a group called the Crowd, which included other musicians, singers, and radio disc jockeys, to produce a new version of "You'll Never Walk Alone".[17] On 18 April 1989, three days after the Hillsborough disaster in which 97 Liverpool F.C. fans died, he joined forces with Paul McCartney, the Christians, Holly Johnson, and the production trio Stock, Aitken & Waterman on a new version of "Ferry Cross the Mersey".[17][28]
Drummer Freddie Marsden later opened the Pacemaker driving school in Formby[29] after having previously worked for British Telecom during the 1980s.[4] He died on 9 December 2006 in Southport, age 66.[30]
On 15 March 2017, Gerry Marsden collapsed onstage due to a sore knee while performing at a concert in Newport, Wales. After being helped offstage, Marsden did not return but was quoted as saying the incident was "nothing serious".[31]
Gerry Marsden announced his retirement on 29 November 2018, in order to spend more time with family,[32] but, on 6 June 2019, to commemorate Liverpool's win against Tottenham in the Champions League, he surprised Take That fans by singing "You'll Never Walk Alone" at their show at Anfield.[33][17]
Original bass player Les Chadwick died on 26 December 2019.[34] (After the original lineup broke up during the 1960s, Chadwick moved to Australia.[4])
Les Maguire, the last surviving member of the classic 1960s lineup, died on 25 November 2023.[38] (Some time after the original lineup split during the 1960s, Maguire joined the Royal Navy, where he was still serving and employed during 1985.[4])
Liverpool F.C.
Gerry and the Pacemakers song "You'll Never Walk Alone" was adopted by the Liverpool F.C. as an anthem.[39]
The chart-topping song quickly gained popularity within the Liverpool community and became the Reds football anthem shortly thereafter.
Gerry Marsden gave Liverpool manager Bill Shankly a copy of the single during a pre-season trip in 1963, the manager said to have been in awe of the song. Since then, the song has been played prior to every Liverpool home game at Anfield, with the club also eventually adding You'll Never Walk Alone to its coat of arms and using the phrase as an official motto. The sea of red scarves raised by Liverpool fans in The Kop as they blast out their anthem pre-game has become one of the most iconic images in the sport of football.[39]
How Do You Like It? (1963) (UK) / I'm the One (1964) (Canada)
Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying (1964) (US)
Gerry and the Pacemakers' Second Album (1964) (US)
Gerry's Second Album (1965) (Canada)
Ferry Cross the Mersey (1965) (soundtrack album) (with various artists, including The Fourmost, The George Martin Orchestra, and Cilla Black (UK release), as well as The Black Knights, Earl Royce and the Olympics, and The Blackwells (US release); both UK and US releases feature 3 (different) select tracks from other musicians featured in the movie)
I'll Be There (1965)
Girl on a Swing (1966) (US)
Gerry and the Pacemakers...Today! (1967) (Canada)
A Portrait of Gerry and the Pacemakers (1981) (mix of new songs and re-recorded hits)
^ abc"The Band – Gerry's Pacemakers". 26 November 2021. Archived from the original on 26 November 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"John Summerton – Gerry's Pacemakers". Gerry's Pacemakers – continuing the legacy of Gerry & The Pacemakers. 25 February 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
^"The Band – Gerry's Pacemakers". 24 December 2023. Archived from the original on 24 December 2023. Retrieved 26 April 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)