‘You’ll Never Walk’ singer Gary Mars died in ’78


Gary Marsden, lead singer of the British group Gary and Pacemakers of the 1960s, has died. He was 78 years old.

The band was known for their hit songs such as “Fairy Cross the Mercy” and the song for the Liverpool Football Club, “You Never Walk.”

His family said Marvidan died on Sunday that “soon after his illness he was in no way associated with COVID-19” and that his wife, daughters and grandchildren were “disastrous”.

The singer died after a brief illness involving a heart attack, his friend Pete Price said on Instagram after talking to Mercedon’s family.

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He said, “I send all the love in the world (to his wife) Pauline and her family.” “You can never walk alone.”

Mercedon was the band’s lead singer who rose to fame in the Mercybeat scene in the 1960s. Despite another Liverpool band – The Beatles – reaching the superstardom, “You never walk, not Yuri cum.” Gary and pacemakers will always find a place in the consciousness of the city.

“I thought what a beautiful song. I would tell my band that we would play that song,” Marsden told the Associated Press, recalling when he first heard the song in cinemas in 2018. “So I went back and told my colleagues that we were doing a ballad called ‘You Never Walk Alone’.”

Rogers and Hammerstein was a musical in 1956 which became a feature film in 1956. “The cover version of Pacemakers was released in October 1963 and became the band’s third No. 1 hit on the British singles chart.

Gary Marsden, British singer and lead singer of Gary and Pacemakers, who helped turn the song into the Rogers and Hammerstein musical.

Gary Marsden, the British singer and lead singer of Gary & Pacemakers, who used Rogers and Hammerstein’s musical “Carousel” to turn the song into one of the greatest songs in the world of football, has died. He was 78 years old.
(AP, file by Matthew Fierron / PA

It was adopted by soccer club Liverpool fans and is sung with spine-tingling enthusiasm before every home game of the 19-time English champion – matches were played in many empty stadiums before the coronavirus ban.

Singer Elvis Costello, referring to Liverpool’s stadium, said: “I am deeply saddened by the death of Gary Marsen. His voice will always be heard at Anfield during celebrations or mourning.”

The lyrics of the song, showing solidarity and perseverance through adversity – including “Hold your head when you go through a hurricane, and don’t be afraid of the dark” – have been a cry for a Liverpool believer, and the title of the song is Liverpool Club Christ.

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The song has also been adopted by supporters of Celtic Scotland and Borussia Dortmund in Germany.

Liverpool Tweeted Mars Resden’s voice was “with our biggest night” and his “national anthem, players, staff and fans from all over the world are in bondage, helping to make something really great.”

Gary Mercedon jumps on his band, Pacemakers.

Gary Mercedon jumps on his band, Pacemakers.
(AP, PA by file)

The song was adopted at the start of the coronavirus epidemic last spring when the cover of the song featuring World War II’s P te Tom Moore reached number one. Moore captivated the British 100 false pedestrians in his garden in England until his 100th birthday in April to raise about 33 333 million for the National Health Service.

Liverpool’s Kever Club, the music venue that housed the Beatles’ many early jigs, described Mercedon as a “legend” and a “very good friend”.

In 1962, Beatles manager Brian Epstein signed on to the band, and his first three releases reached No. 1 in 1963 – “How do you do it?” And “I Like It” as well as “You’ll Never Walk.” Later hits include “Fairy Cross the Mercy” and “Don’t Cry Don’t Cry.” The group split in 1967 and Merceden took a solo career a few years later before reforming the band.

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The Beatles’ Paul Paul Ccarni said Mersden was “a partner in our early days at Liverpool” and his group was “our biggest rival” on the local scene.

He said, ‘His unforgettable performances of‘ You Never Walk ’and‘ Fairy Cross the Mercy ’live in the hearts of many as a memory of the happy times of British music.

Marsden’s family is followed by his wife, Pauline, whom he married in 1965. The couple had two daughters.

The Associated Press contributes to this report.