Dave Clarke
American record promotor, songwriter and producer
United States • d. 1995-07-22
Biography
Dave Clark (March 6, 1909 – July 22, 1995) in Jacksonville, Florida, was a pioneering African-American record promoter. Born in Jackson, Tennessee, Clark became interested in music after a teacher gave him piano and violin lessons. He later learned band music and performed as a teenager with traveling minstrel shows. He graduated from Lane College in Jackson in 1934 and from the Juilliard School in New York City in 1939. He began promoting for Decca Records in 1938, beginning with Jimmie Lunceford. This launched a career as a promoter for most major labels that recorded African-American music. He worked for Duke/Peacock for 17 years, and also spent time with Chess, Aladdin, Apollo, United, Stax, and TK, before moving to Malaco in 1980. Clark also served as the musical consultant for several movies, including The Color Purple. He wrote a column for Down Beat magazine during the 1960s called "Swing Row Is My Beat". Clark had over 60 songs to his credit, including B.B. King's "Why I Sing the Blues". He was given a Pioneer Award by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation in 1993. In 2013, Clark was posthumously inducted to the Blues Hall of Fame.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Play
1999

Exit Planet Dust
1995

Exciter
2001

Rhythm And Stealth
1999

Remixes 81····04
2004

Halfway Between The Gutter And The Stars
2000

Beaucoup Fish
1999

Setting Sun
1996

The Greatest Hits (Why Try Harder)
2006

Palookaville
2004

Angel Station
1979

Everything, Everything (Underworld Live)
2000

Celebrate The Music Of Peter Green And The Early Years Of Fleetwood Mac
2021

Outrospective
2001

Fischerspooner
2000

King Of Snake
1999

Dead Elvis
1997

I'm A Disco Dancer (And A Sweet Romancer)
1997

Loops Of Fury
1996

Archive One
1996

F.A.C.T.
1995

The Dave Clark Five's Greatest
1966

Roland Rat / Brain Storm Remixes
2012

What Was Her Name?
2004
Credited work
1,099 releases · 263 albums · active 1964–2025
- Engineering · 1,029
- Performance · 350
- Production · 307
- Other credits · 197
- Mastering · 33
Studios: IPOE · The Workhouse Studios · Rollover Studios · Rotation Studios
