Claudine Clark (born April 26, 1941, Macon, Georgia, United
States) is an American R&B musician, best known as the singer and composer
of the 1962 hit "Party Lights", which reached #5 on the Billboard Hot
100.
Born in Macon, GA, Clark grew up in Philadelphia and
received formal musical training at the local Coombs College, where she earnt a
degree in music composition. She recorded her first single, "Angel of
Happiness," backed by the Detroit Spinners in 1958 for the Herald label,
but it failed to attract much attention, as did a brief stint at Gotham.
Clark subsequently caught on with Chancellor, a label best
known for teen idols like Fabian and Frankie Avalon. Her first single,
"Disappointed," initially flopped, but when DJs started playing the
Clark-penned flip side, "Party Lights," it became a huge hit. Sung
from the point of view of a teenage girl ordered to her room while her friends
were out having a good time, "Party Lights" struck a chord and shot
into the Top Five on both the pop and R&B charts.
Apparently she had recorded Party Lights earlier for another label, with a different tempo - maybe for Herald Records where she also worked briefly, turning out Teenage Blues b/w Angel Of Happiness on Herald 521 in 1958 billed as Claudine Clark & The Spinners. But as it would turn out, Party Lights would be it insofar as a hit single was concerned, which enshrined her in the One-Hit Wonder Club, as two follow-up releases failed dismally - The Telephone Game b/w Walkin' Through A Cemetary (Chancellor 1124 in 1962) and Walk Me Home b/w Who Will You Hurt? (Chancellor 1130 in 1963).
Switching things up, she released a single the following year as Joy Dawn ("Hang it Up"), then in '64 had a couple of singles on the Jamie label, including a remake of The Supremes' "Buttered Popcorn" (it hadn't been a hit for them either when released as their second single in 1961), followed by a couple of others over the next few years.
Clark later attempted to compose a rock & roll operetta,
and also recorded for Swan under the alias Joy Dawn, all to little avail. In
the mid-'70s she gave it another try with a single under the name Sherry Pye,
but she was married by this time and focused on raising a family. Some gospel
recordings followed, and she reportedly continues to sing regularly in church,
while keeping her personal life out of the public eye.
The one smart move
Claudine Clark made, it turns out, was getting her own composition on the
B-side of that first Chancellor single. The radio airplay and many reissues of
"Party Lights" have provided her with the royalty payments through
the years that too many acts with even more than one hit have unjustly had to
do without. (Info edited mainly from All Music & Way Back Attack)
For Claudine Clark – Ask the Grl Who Knows – The Best of 1958-1969 go here:
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1. Party Lights
2. A Sometimes Thing
3. Gimme A Break - Sherry Pye
4. The Telephone Game
5. Buttered Popcorn
6. Goodbye Mama
7. Hang It Up - Joy Dawn
8. Standing On Tip Toe
9. Easy To Love (Too Hard To Forget)
10. Disappointed
11. (The Strength) To Be Strong
12. Ask The Girl Who Knows - Sherry Pye
13. Moon Madness
14. Your Love
15. Foxy
16. Walk Me Home (From The Party)
17. My Turn To Laugh
18. Who Will You Hurt
19. Angel Of Happiness
20. What Kind Of Party
21. Teenage Blues
22. Somebody Else Is In My Place
23. Dancin' Party
24. Walkin' Through A Cemetery
Just amended another of todays birthday posts. Bobby Rydell. Fresh mp3 and photos.
ReplyDeleteCan you re-up? (please)
ReplyDeleteNever mind. Bought it!
ReplyDeleteRemember when Claudine came out with Party Lights I was in high school love thatsong
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