Downtown/I Know a Place

Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Mid-priced reissue of 2 original albums on 1 CD by the beloved English pop vocalist. 'Downtown' (1964) and 'The NewPetula Clark Album' (aka 'I Know A Place' (1965). Includes 7 bonus tracks 'I Will Follow Him', 'Darling Cheri', 'Forgetting You', 'Saturday Sunshing' 'You'd Better Love Me', 'JackAnd John' and The Sound Of Love'. 2000 release. Standard jewel case. --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Downtown/I Know a Place, Music, Petula Clark
Petula Clark Greatest Hits
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Petula Clark Greatest Hits

    Manufacturer: Vogue
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    British InvasionBritish Invasion | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
    Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B000HY5IAG

    Product Description

    20 Songs on this CD. 1. This is My Song, 2. I Know A Place, 3. A Sign of the Times, 4. Call Me, 5. Happy Heart, 6. Don't Sleep in the SUbqway, 7. The Windmills of Your Mind, 8. My Love, 9. Hello Dolly, 10. The Song of My Life, 11. Kiss Me Goodbye, 12. Baby Lover, 13. Sailor, 14. I Will Follow Him, 15. Strangers in the Night, 16. Romeo, 17. Two Rivers, 18. Colour My World, 19. The Good Life, 20. Downtown
    Downtown/I Know a Place
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • "Downtown": the single and the two albums it spawned
    • American breakthrough for Petula
    • FIRST TWO U.S. LP RELEASES ON ONE CD
    Downtown/I Know a Place
    Petula Clark
    Manufacturer: Import [Generic]
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Oldies | Pop | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Easy Listening | Pop | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Vocal Pop | Pop | Styles | Music
    British InvasionBritish Invasion | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
    Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
    Broadway & VocalistsBroadway & Vocalists | Imports | Stores | Music
    Classic RockClassic Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
    RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
    PopPop | Imports | Stores | Music
    Similar Items:
    1. Colour My World/the Other Man's Grass Is Always...
    2. My Love/I Couldn't Live Without Your Love
    3. Petula/Portrait
    4. Sings the International Hits//These Are My Songs

    ASIN: B00004TRGA
    Release Date: 2001-06-12

    Tracks:

    1. True Love Never Runs Smooth
    2. Baby It's Me
    3. Now That You've Gone
    4. Tell Me (That It's Love)
    5. Crying Through A Sleepless Night
    6. In Love
    7. Music
    8. Be Good To Me
    9. This Is Goodbye
    10. Let Me Tell You
    11. You Belong To Me
    12. Downtown
    13. Dancing In The Street
    14. Strangers And Lovers
    15. Everything In The Garden
    16. The 'In' Crowd
    17. Heart
    18. You're The One
    19. A Foggy Day
    20. Gotta Tell The World
    21. Every Little Bit Hurts
    22. Call Me
    23. Going Out Of My Head
    24. I Know A Place
    25. I Will Follow Him
    26. Darling Cheri
    27. Forgetting You
    28. Saturday Sunshine
    29. You'd Better Love Me
    30. Jack And John
    31. The Sound Of Love

    Album Description

    Mid-priced reissue of 2 original albums on 1 CD by the beloved English pop vocalist. 'Downtown' (1964) and 'The NewPetula Clark Album' (aka 'I Know A Place' (1965). Includes 7 bonus tracks 'I Will Follow Him', 'Darling Cheri', 'Forgetting You', 'Saturday Sunshing' 'You'd Better Love Me', 'JackAnd John' and The Sound Of Love'. 2000 release. Standard jewel case.

    Album Details

    Two Original 60's Albums Reissued on One CD with Bonus Tracks. 'i Know a Place' Was also Called 'The New Petula Clark Album'.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars "Downtown": the single and the two albums it spawned.......2003-05-09

    The logic behind putting these two early Petula Clark albums together on one CD is that these were both released by Warner Brothers in 1964 and 1965 respectively (she was signed with Atlantic, Pye Records in England). Petula Clark had been a child stage in Britain, trained to sing by her mother and hosting her own show "Pet's Parlour," singing patriotic songs during World War II, when she was but 11 (you can see her in a bit part in the film "I Know Where I'm Going"). In 1964 she suddenly had the number one song on the charts on both sides of the Atlantic with "Downtown," becoming the first British woman to do so in the U.S. This meant an album had to be produced as quickly as possible; fortunately they would not have to worry about a title.

    The album "Downtown" (1964) was put together taking Clark's recent singles and recording some songs to make up the balance. The fact that none of the other songs were in the distinctive style of the hit title song did not bother too many people, because the album received a Grammy nomination (it was a very popular hit song). Still, we are talking hit and miss here in terms of the results. Clark's version of the Bacharach-David song "True Lover Never Runs Smooth" is pretty good as is "Be Good to Me." But the second best track would be "This Is Goodbye," which she co-authored with Tony Hatch (writer of "Downtown"). The album mixes old songs, such as "In Love" and "Let Me Tell You," with new numbers, like "Tell Me (That It's Love)."

    With "I Know a Place" Clark and Tony Hatch, her main producer and songwriter, took the time to make the album they presumably would have made if they had not been in a time crunch the first time around. Hatch wrote several decent tunes on the album, with the title song being the best of the bunch, but "Call Me" is pretty good, as are a couple of songs co-written with Clark, "Heart" and "You're the One." That last one was later a gold record for the Vogues, but there is something to be said for this original version, which does not exactly square with Clark's good girl image. However, her covers of "The 'In' Crowd," "Going Out of My Head," and "Dancing in the Street" probably come off a little bit better and are certainly more in the style that made "Downtown" a mega-hit. Clark even trots out the old Gershwin tune "A Foggy Day" and tries a little bit of soul with "Every Little Bit Hurts." There obviously is not a song as good as "Downtown" on this album, good as the title track happens to be, but the album "I Know a Place" is a the stronger one of the pair and probably the best of her career.

    This reissue makes up for any shortcomings by adding seven bonus tracks including her 1963 recording of "I Will Follow Him" (original done in French with its original title of "Chariot") and the previously unreleased "The Sound of Love." Of the others "Round Every Corner" and "You'd Better Love Me" are the ones that most fits the Petula Clark sound. I would probably rate each album at 4 stars individually, but put them together and add some bonus tracks and the entertainment value goes up overall. For most music lovers a solid Petula Clark greatest hits album is going to provide you every one of her songs you really need to hear. But if you go beyond that, this pair of albums, which defined the Pet Clark sound in the middle-Sixties, would be the first choice on the list.

    Ironically, Hatch originally wrote "Downtown" hoping the song would be recorded by the Drifters (think of it as being in the same spirit as "Up on the Roof"). Amazing what difference one song can make it someone's music career when it is the right song for the right person. The result was the most commercially successful female singer in British chart history and these albums were the beginning of that journey.

    5 out of 5 stars American breakthrough for Petula.......2002-07-14

    Despite the title of the previous review, Downtown was not the first LP released in America - it's just that anything released before that sank without trace. Petula had some of her music released in America back in the fifties, including at least one LP.

    The Downtown LP was something of a mixture, as Petula didn't have time to record an album to go with the single. Some new tracks were recorded, but mostly the album is made up of various pre-Downtown singles, B-sides and other tracks that hadn't appeared on any European album. Despite that, the LP was of a remarkably high quality, but overall it didn't show the new Petula sound.

    The New Petula Clark Album LP (titled I know a place in America) showed the new sound in all it's glory, with strong Motown influences (including outstanding covers of Dancing in the street and Every little bit hurts), which would characterise Petula's music for the next few years. Actually, this new Petula wasn't as new as the British public thought at the time - Petula had been rocking and rolling in France since 1961, but her English language recordings had not followed that pattern until now.

    The seven bonus tracks are more pre-Downtown singles, B-sides and odd tracks, but of a very high quality. Among these is I will follow him. Beginning life as a Paul Mauriat instrumental, with words added it became a million selling French hit for Petula with the title Chariot. With different English lyrics (not translated from the French), Petula had her second number one hit in Singapore (the first had been her French version of Cotton fields, the Leadbelly classic), but failed to chart in Britain (where she was out of fashion) or America (where she was still virtually unknown). Little Peggy March topped the American charts and also hid the British hit.

    Other songs which made their debut here were Call me and You're the one, both covered by other singers who had hits with them before Petula could release her version of either as an American single, though she did chart with these songs in other countries. It didn't do Petula's career any harm, and may have given her extra credibility as a provider of hits (she wrote You're the one herself).

    This is a very interesting twofer from Petula which demonstrates that she could do many different types of song (something that is even more apparent on Downtown to Sunset Boulevard).

    5 out of 5 stars FIRST TWO U.S. LP RELEASES ON ONE CD.......2000-10-11

    Petula Clark, with a 25-year career in Britain and Europe already behind her, was just another voice emanating from the "British Invasion" when "Downtown" premiered in the U.S. in November 1964. By January '65, she was at the top of the charts, and it was obvious that this was one voice that was destined to outlast most of the others coming to our shores in the wake of the Beatles. The unexpected success of "Downtown" prompted demand for a quick release of a similarly-titled album to capitalize on the single's phenomenal popularity. With her schedule allowing no time to spend in a recording studio, Clark - together with composer/arranger/producer Tony Hatch (the Bacharach to her Warwick) - gathered together a collection of tunes from 1963-65 for her American LP debut. The result was a pleasant collection of MOR tunes that was more a revelation of where she had been musically prior to "Downtown" rather than a suggestion of what the Clark/Hatch team was on the verge of developing. This was an album one could actually play for one's parents, if they were not putting it on the turntable themselves. It wasn't until the follow-up "I Know A Place" (released in the U.K. as "The New Petula Clark Album"), for which Clark earned her second Grammy, that listeners were made aware of what the post-"Downtown" Petula was capable of accomplishing. "I Know A Place", in terms of both content and performance - is very possibly the best work she ever released in conjunction with Hatch, whose appreciation of the "Motown" sound is apparent in tracks such as "Dancing in the Street" and "The In Crowd". Clark's interpretations of "Every Little Bit Hurts" and "Goin' Out Of My Head" were no mere cover versions, but rather fresh approaches that obliterated any memory of the originals. Two Clark standards associated with others - "Call Me" (Chris Montez) and "You're The One" (the Vogues) - made their debut here, and in a tribute to her homeland, the Gershwins' "A Foggy Day" was given a brassy arrangement to which Clark added a bold, big-band vocal. The seven bonus tracks are primarily from her pre-"Downtown" period (few realize that "I Will Follow Him", originally recorded by Clark in French, was a huge hit in Europe prior to the English version released by Peggy March here in the States), although "The Sound of Love", originally intended as the flip-side of "You'd Better Come Home" but not unearthed until nearly 30 years later, was clearly an attempt to further promote the "pop with a beat" image Hatch was forging for the star. Die-hard fans already have this material from other sources, but will appreciate the extensive liner notes and photographs included. Casual fans can probably do no better than this as an introduction to the style Clark successfully developed and nobody ever duplicated in the mid-"swinging" 60s.
    Downtown/I Know a Place
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • "Downtown": the single and the two albums it spawned
    • American breakthrough for Petula
    • FIRST TWO U.S. LP RELEASES ON ONE CD
    Downtown/I Know a Place
    Petula Clark
    Manufacturer: Msi
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Oldies | Pop | Styles | Music
    British InvasionBritish Invasion | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
    Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
    Broadway & VocalistsBroadway & Vocalists | Imports | Stores | Music
    Classic RockClassic Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
    Similar Items:
    1. Colour My World/the Other Man's Grass Is Always...
    2. My Love/I Couldn't Live Without Your Love
    3. Petula/Portrait
    4. Sings the International Hits//These Are My Songs

    ASIN: B00004U0QJ
    Release Date: 2000-07-11

    Tracks:

    1. True Love Never Runs Smooth
    2. Baby It's Me
    3. Now That You've Gone
    4. Tell Me (That It's Love)
    5. Crying Through A Sleepless Night
    6. In Love
    7. Music
    8. Be Good To Me
    9. This Is Goodbye
    10. Let Me Tell You
    11. You Belong To Me
    12. Downtown
    13. Dancing In The Street
    14. Strangers And Lovers
    15. Everything In The Garden
    16. The 'In' Crowd
    17. Heart
    18. You're The One
    19. A Foggy Day
    20. Gotta Tell The World
    21. Every Little Bit Hurts
    22. Call Me
    23. Going Out Of My Head
    24. I Know A Place
    25. I Will Follow Him
    26. Darling Cheri
    27. Forgetting You
    28. Saturday Sunshine
    29. You'd Better Love Me
    30. Jack And John
    31. The Sound Of Love

    Album Description

    Mid-priced reissue of 2 original albums on 1 CD by the beloved English pop vocalist. 'Downtown' (1964) and 'The NewPetula Clark Album' (aka 'I Know A Place' (1965). Includes 7 bonus tracks 'I Will Follow Him', 'Darling Cheri', 'Forgetting You', 'Saturday Sunshing' 'You'd Better Love Me', 'JackAnd John' and The Sound Of Love'. 2000 release. Standard jewel case.

    Album Details

    Two Original 60's Albums Reissued on One CD with Bonus Tracks. 'i Know a Place' Was also Called 'The New Petula Clark Album'.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars "Downtown": the single and the two albums it spawned.......2003-05-09

    The logic behind putting these two early Petula Clark albums together on one CD is that these were both released by Warner Brothers in 1964 and 1965 respectively (she was signed with Atlantic, Pye Records in England). Petula Clark had been a child stage in Britain, trained to sing by her mother and hosting her own show "Pet's Parlour," singing patriotic songs during World War II, when she was but 11 (you can see her in a bit part in the film "I Know Where I'm Going"). In 1964 she suddenly had the number one song on the charts on both sides of the Atlantic with "Downtown," becoming the first British woman to do so in the U.S. This meant an album had to be produced as quickly as possible; fortunately they would not have to worry about a title.

    The album "Downtown" (1964) was put together taking Clark's recent singles and recording some songs to make up the balance. The fact that none of the other songs were in the distinctive style of the hit title song did not bother too many people, because the album received a Grammy nomination (it was a very popular hit song). Still, we are talking hit and miss here in terms of the results. Clark's version of the Bacharach-David song "True Lover Never Runs Smooth" is pretty good as is "Be Good to Me." But the second best track would be "This Is Goodbye," which she co-authored with Tony Hatch (writer of "Downtown"). The album mixes old songs, such as "In Love" and "Let Me Tell You," with new numbers, like "Tell Me (That It's Love)."

    With "I Know a Place" Clark and Tony Hatch, her main producer and songwriter, took the time to make the album they presumably would have made if they had not been in a time crunch the first time around. Hatch wrote several decent tunes on the album, with the title song being the best of the bunch, but "Call Me" is pretty good, as are a couple of songs co-written with Clark, "Heart" and "You're the One." That last one was later a gold record for the Vogues, but there is something to be said for this original version, which does not exactly square with Clark's good girl image. However, her covers of "The 'In' Crowd," "Going Out of My Head," and "Dancing in the Street" probably come off a little bit better and are certainly more in the style that made "Downtown" a mega-hit. Clark even trots out the old Gershwin tune "A Foggy Day" and tries a little bit of soul with "Every Little Bit Hurts." There obviously is not a song as good as "Downtown" on this album, good as the title track happens to be, but the album "I Know a Place" is a the stronger one of the pair and probably the best of her career.

    This reissue makes up for any shortcomings by adding seven bonus tracks including her 1963 recording of "I Will Follow Him" (original done in French with its original title of "Chariot") and the previously unreleased "The Sound of Love." Of the others "Round Every Corner" and "You'd Better Love Me" are the ones that most fits the Petula Clark sound. I would probably rate each album at 4 stars individually, but put them together and add some bonus tracks and the entertainment value goes up overall. For most music lovers a solid Petula Clark greatest hits album is going to provide you every one of her songs you really need to hear. But if you go beyond that, this pair of albums, which defined the Pet Clark sound in the middle-Sixties, would be the first choice on the list.

    Ironically, Hatch originally wrote "Downtown" hoping the song would be recorded by the Drifters (think of it as being in the same spirit as "Up on the Roof"). Amazing what difference one song can make it someone's music career when it is the right song for the right person. The result was the most commercially successful female singer in British chart history and these albums were the beginning of that journey.

    5 out of 5 stars American breakthrough for Petula.......2002-07-14

    Despite the title of the previous review, Downtown was not the first LP released in America - it's just that anything released before that sank without trace. Petula had some of her music released in America back in the fifties, including at least one LP.

    The Downtown LP was something of a mixture, as Petula didn't have time to record an album to go with the single. Some new tracks were recorded, but mostly the album is made up of various pre-Downtown singles, B-sides and other tracks that hadn't appeared on any European album. Despite that, the LP was of a remarkably high quality, but overall it didn't show the new Petula sound.

    The New Petula Clark Album LP (titled I know a place in America) showed the new sound in all it's glory, with strong Motown influences (including outstanding covers of Dancing in the street and Every little bit hurts), which would characterise Petula's music for the next few years. Actually, this new Petula wasn't as new as the British public thought at the time - Petula had been rocking and rolling in France since 1961, but her English language recordings had not followed that pattern until now.

    The seven bonus tracks are more pre-Downtown singles, B-sides and odd tracks, but of a very high quality. Among these is I will follow him. Beginning life as a Paul Mauriat instrumental, with words added it became a million selling French hit for Petula with the title Chariot. With different English lyrics (not translated from the French), Petula had her second number one hit in Singapore (the first had been her French version of Cotton fields, the Leadbelly classic), but failed to chart in Britain (where she was out of fashion) or America (where she was still virtually unknown). Little Peggy March topped the American charts and also hid the British hit.

    Other songs which made their debut here were Call me and You're the one, both covered by other singers who had hits with them before Petula could release her version of either as an American single, though she did chart with these songs in other countries. It didn't do Petula's career any harm, and may have given her extra credibility as a provider of hits (she wrote You're the one herself).

    This is a very interesting twofer from Petula which demonstrates that she could do many different types of song (something that is even more apparent on Downtown to Sunset Boulevard).

    5 out of 5 stars FIRST TWO U.S. LP RELEASES ON ONE CD.......2000-10-11

    Petula Clark, with a 25-year career in Britain and Europe already behind her, was just another voice emanating from the "British Invasion" when "Downtown" premiered in the U.S. in November 1964. By January '65, she was at the top of the charts, and it was obvious that this was one voice that was destined to outlast most of the others coming to our shores in the wake of the Beatles. The unexpected success of "Downtown" prompted demand for a quick release of a similarly-titled album to capitalize on the single's phenomenal popularity. With her schedule allowing no time to spend in a recording studio, Clark - together with composer/arranger/producer Tony Hatch (the Bacharach to her Warwick) - gathered together a collection of tunes from 1963-65 for her American LP debut. The result was a pleasant collection of MOR tunes that was more a revelation of where she had been musically prior to "Downtown" rather than a suggestion of what the Clark/Hatch team was on the verge of developing. This was an album one could actually play for one's parents, if they were not putting it on the turntable themselves. It wasn't until the follow-up "I Know A Place" (released in the U.K. as "The New Petula Clark Album"), for which Clark earned her second Grammy, that listeners were made aware of what the post-"Downtown" Petula was capable of accomplishing. "I Know A Place", in terms of both content and performance - is very possibly the best work she ever released in conjunction with Hatch, whose appreciation of the "Motown" sound is apparent in tracks such as "Dancing in the Street" and "The In Crowd". Clark's interpretations of "Every Little Bit Hurts" and "Goin' Out Of My Head" were no mere cover versions, but rather fresh approaches that obliterated any memory of the originals. Two Clark standards associated with others - "Call Me" (Chris Montez) and "You're The One" (the Vogues) - made their debut here, and in a tribute to her homeland, the Gershwins' "A Foggy Day" was given a brassy arrangement to which Clark added a bold, big-band vocal. The seven bonus tracks are primarily from her pre-"Downtown" period (few realize that "I Will Follow Him", originally recorded by Clark in French, was a huge hit in Europe prior to the English version released by Peggy March here in the States), although "The Sound of Love", originally intended as the flip-side of "You'd Better Come Home" but not unearthed until nearly 30 years later, was clearly an attempt to further promote the "pop with a beat" image Hatch was forging for the star. Die-hard fans already have this material from other sources, but will appreciate the extensive liner notes and photographs included. Casual fans can probably do no better than this as an introduction to the style Clark successfully developed and nobody ever duplicated in the mid-"swinging" 60s.

    Music:

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    2. El Corazón
    3. Flight
    4. Food on the Table
    5. From the Heart
    6. Heart Like A Song
    7. Her Greatest Hits
    8. Here's to Life
    9. How Glory Goes
    10. I Don't Need Another Love [CD-single]

    Music

    Music