Concrete and Clay

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"Concrete and Clay"
Single by Unit 4 + 2
B-side "When I Fall In Love"
Released February 1965
Format 7" 45rpm
Genre Folk pop/rock
Length 2:20
Label Decca (UK), London (US and Canada)
Writer(s) Tommy Moeller/Brian Parker
Producer(s) John L. Barker
Unit 4 + 2 singles chronology

"Sorrow and Pain"
(1964)
"Concrete and Clay"
(1965)
"You've Never Been In Love Like This Before"
(1965)

Concrete and Clay is a 1965 #1 hit single recorded by the UK pop group Unit 4 + 2. The song was written by group members Tommy Moeller and Brian Parker.

Recorded with the help of session musicians and featuring ("+2") Russ Ballard and Bob Henrit,[1] "Concrete and Clay" details the indestructible love of the singer and his lover:

"The sidewalks in the street, the concrete and the clay
Beneath my feet begins to crumble, but love will never die
Because we'll see the mountains tumble, before we say goodbye"

The arrangement has a pronounced Latin influence, using acoustic guitars and a baion beat. These distinctive elements helped boost "Concrete and Clay" to the #1 position on the UK Singles Chart in April 1965.

American record producer Bob Crewe, best known for his work with the Four Seasons, had heard the Unit 4 + 2 hit version of "Concrete and Clay" while on a trip to the UK. As a result, Crewe had a cover version of "Concrete and Clay" cut by Eddie Rambeau, a staff writer at Crewe's music publishing firm, which was the inaugural release for Crewe's own DynoVoice Records. Although the Rambeau version's release pre-dated the US release of the Unit 4 + 2 version by one week, both singles debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 8 May 1965; Unit 4 + 2 at #96 and Rambeau at #98, with both singles making an essentially equal chart ascent over the next four weeks. The Hot 100 dated 29 May 1965 showed the Unit 4 + 2 version making its Top 40 debut with an eleven position rise to #38, while the Rambeau version showed signs of stalling with a six position ascent to #45. The subsequent Hot 100, dated 5 June 1965, showed the Rambeau version rising into the Top 40 at #35, while the Unit 4 + 2 version rose to #29. However on the Hot 100 dated 12 June 1965 the Rambeau version remained at #35 while the Unit 4 + 2 version rose one position to #28. Both singles dropped off the Hot 100 over the next three weeks.

The success of "Concrete and Clay" in 1965 resulted in international cover versions that same year, with renderings in Swedish - "Du för mig" recorded by Lill Lindfors; in Finnish - "Tunti Vain" recorded by Johnny; in French - "Comment Elle-Fait" recorded by Richard Anthony; and in German - "Ein Fremder kam vorbei" recorded by Horst Wiegand.

Featured on albums by Gary Lewis and the Playboys (A Session with Gary Lewis and the Playboys/ 1965) and Cliff Richard (Kinda Latin/ 1966), "Concrete and Clay" was remade by Randy Edelman for his 1976 album release Farewell Fairbanks which otherwise comprised Edelman originals. Issued as a single, Edelman's "Concrete and Clay" became a UK hit reaching #11 in March 1976.

In 1986 a remake of "Concrete and Clay" by Martin Plaza, co-lead vocalist of the group Mental as Anything, reached #2 in Australia. That same year a remake by Hong Kong Syndikat reached #26 in Germany, and also reached #12 in France in 1987. Former Dexys Midnight Runners singer Kevin Rowland released a version in 1999. Pete Byrne also covered the song on his 2001 solo album The Real Illusion. They Might Be Giants attempted a version of the song in 1990. The uncompleted track was released as an MP3 in 2001.

The 1967 album Music to Watch Girls By by the Bob Crewe Generation features instrumental versions of several several Bob Crewe produced hits, including "Concrete and Clay".

The song also appeared in the motion picture Rushmore and was included on its accompanying soundtrack album. "Concrete and Clay" also featured in a Signal White NOW toothpaste commercial.

In 28 October 2011 a new version of "Concrete And Clay" by original singer and co-writer Tommy Moeller was released on the Chance MUSIC record label based in Sydney Australia, 47 years after his original version in 1964.

The Tommy Moeller album Time is dedicated to "Concrete And Clay" co-writer Brian Parker (1939 - 2001) and includes three other songs by Moeller and Parker. The cover of the album shows Tommy Moeller at age 19 when he first sang "Concrete And Clay", and in 2011 when the new version by Chance MUSIC was released.

Source

  1. "Concrete and Clay: Song review". Allmusic.com. Retrieved 2007-12-03. 

See also

  • UK No.1 Hits of 1965
  • List of number-one singles from the 1960s (UK)
Preceded by
"The Last Time" by The Rolling Stones
UK number one single
8 April 1965 (1 week)
Succeeded by
"The Minute You're Gone" by Cliff Richard
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