Dave Berry
Born David Holgate Grundy in Beighton near Sheffield in 1941,
Berry started out singing in Yorkshire clubs as half of an
Everly Brothers-type duo.
In 1961 he assumed his stage surname when invited to front
The Cruisers, who had risen from the ashes of another local
combo, The Chuck Fowler R 'n' B Band.
In parochial venues such as the Esquire and Mojo clubs, Dave
Berry and The Cruisers flogged a predominantly Chicago blues
repertoire, from Muddy Waters to Dave's idol (and namesake),
Chuck Berry. Other influences were John Lee Hooker, Billy Boy
Arnold and Champion Jack Dupree (who, incidentally, took up
permanent residence in nearby Halifax, Yorkshire, in 1962).
Berry's big break came when Mickie Most - then a freelance
talent scout - saw him perform in a Doncaster club and
supervised a demo recording session for submission to Decca
recording manager, Mike Smith.
Smith signed Berry and The Cruisers and occupied the
producer's chair himself to record a cover version of Memphis
Tennessee with the anxious Yorkshire boys (and a session
drummer replacing Cruiser Pete Thornton). The session took over
eight hours, much to Smith's disgust. It had, after all, only
taken The Beatles 14 hours to record their entire debut LP!
Despite the fact that Memphis Tennessee reached
Number 19 in the charts, all future recordings featured
session musicians, with The Cruisers left to learn the songs off
the records for their live work.
Amongst the session musicians favoured for Berry singles were
future Led Zep alumni, Jimmy Page on guitar and harmonica and
John Paul Jones on bass, along with backing vocalists The
Breakaways.
By 1964, a trio led by former Sheffield City Hall employee
(and owner of a twin-necked Gibson), Frank White, had supplanted
the original Cruisers, bar one (Alan Taylor).
The follow-up single (a grisly re-working of Arthur Crudup's My
Baby Left Me) stalled at Number 37, while his version of
the Burt Bacharach weepie, Baby It's You, fared
slightly better and made it to Number 24.
The next two singles - The Crying Game and its twin,
One Heart Between Two, were tailor-made for Dave's
cartoon spookiness. His stage presence was almost
unclassifiable, and it was not enough for him to simply stand
and sing a song.
He made a point of appearing from behind pillars (it may take
a full five minutes for him to emerge completely) and staring
straight ahead while making strange beckoning arm-movements.
These abstract hand-ballets would have seemed sinister were it
not for the subtle merriment in his oriental eyes. Berry
also maintained he would be reincarnated as a snake . . .
The Crying Game took Berry into the Top Five in
September 1964, while One Heart Between Two battled
to Number 41 three months later. A cover of Bobby Goldsboro's Little
Things restored Dave to the UK Top 10, but - apart
from a disinclined 1966 recording of the sentimental Mama -
this was his last bite of that particular cherry.
Berry continued to enjoy considerable success in Holland,
where his single This Strange Effect (written by Ray
Davies of The Kinks) was Holland' s biggest selling disc ever.
It was also in Holland that Dave met his future wife, Marti,
with whom he settled down in Chesterfield in the Peak district
in 1968.
Dave switched from Decca to CBS in 1970 but henceforth
derived his living primarily from the cabaret and nostalgia
circuit.
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