Petula Clark - Petula Clark’s Greatest Hits, Vol.1 (1968) Vinyl
Artist: Petula Clark
Title: Petula Clark’s Greatest Hits, Vol.1
Year Of Release: 1968
Label: Warner Bros
Genre: Pop, Sunshine Pop
Quality: Flac (tracks, 16/44,1) / Flac (tracks, 24/96)
Total Time: 33:23
Total Size: 234/763 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Petula Clark’s Greatest Hits, Vol.1
Year Of Release: 1968
Label: Warner Bros
Genre: Pop, Sunshine Pop
Quality: Flac (tracks, 16/44,1) / Flac (tracks, 24/96)
Total Time: 33:23
Total Size: 234/763 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
Side One:
A1 Downtown (03:01)
A2 You'd Better Come Home (02:56)
A3 Round Every Corner (02:42)
A4 Two Rivers (02:26)
A5 A Sign Of The Times (02:53)
A6 Color My World (02:54)
Side Two:
B1 My Love (02:40)
B2 Who Am I (02:22)
B3 Call Me (02:43)
B4 I Couldn't Live Without Your Love (02:55)
B5 You're The One (02:24)
B6 I Know A Place (02:41)
Born November 15, 1932, in Epsom, Surrey (England).
Petula Clark began as a singing child prodigy. Promoted and tutored by an enthusiastic father, she had started singing professionally at the age of seven and she became a familiar singing voice on wartime radio. By the end of the 1940s she was an established singing artist and she also appeared as an actress in several films of the era.
She was still a youthful artist when she made her first hit record, 'The Little Shoemaker' in 1954. A series of UK chart hits followed. This was matched by her popularity in France where she made many concert appearances and recorded in French. By the end of the 1950s she had made a decision to live and work mainly in France (680 Route de Rochebrune - 7410 Megève) because she still suffered from her pre-pubescent image in the UK. She was soon to marry Frenchman, Claude Wolff an executive at the Vogue record company.
Petula Clark began as a singing child prodigy. Promoted and tutored by an enthusiastic father, she had started singing professionally at the age of seven and she became a familiar singing voice on wartime radio. By the end of the 1940s she was an established singing artist and she also appeared as an actress in several films of the era.
She was still a youthful artist when she made her first hit record, 'The Little Shoemaker' in 1954. A series of UK chart hits followed. This was matched by her popularity in France where she made many concert appearances and recorded in French. By the end of the 1950s she had made a decision to live and work mainly in France (680 Route de Rochebrune - 7410 Megève) because she still suffered from her pre-pubescent image in the UK. She was soon to marry Frenchman, Claude Wolff an executive at the Vogue record company.