The Dennisons
The Dennisons were named after a Liverpool street and managed by
the parents of drummer Clive Hornby - Their lead singer Eddie Parry
was only sixteen when the group first appeared at The Cavern in May
1962.
Eddie and guitarist Steve McLaren wrote (Come On) Be My Girl
while waiting to perform during an all-night session at The Cavern,
and the publicity for the record described the band as "five
17-year-old Aintree storm troopers". Although it entered the
charts in August 1963, it stopped at Number 46.
Walkin' The Dog was recorded on a day off from a tour with Gerry
& The Pacemakers and Ben E King. The B side, You Don't Know
What Love Is, was specially written for them by Ben E King.
Walkin' The Dog reached Number 36 - better than the Rufus
Thomas original which didn't make the charts in Britain at all.
Unfortunately for The Dennisons, The
Rolling Stones released the track on an LP at the same time and
the band lost a lot of sales as a result.
When Eddie Parry left the group in 1965, The Dennisons revised
their line-up and became a soul group, disbanding a year later.
Drummer Clive Hornby went on to achieve national fame in the UK as
Jack Sugden in Emmerdale Farm.
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