Can't You See That She's Mine
"Can't You See That She's Mine" is the fourth single released in the United States by The Dave Clark Five. Written by Dave Clark and Mike Smith, it reached number four on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week of 18 July 1964. It was The Dave Clark Five's fourth Gold Record. The middle four bars start with the lyric "People talk and try to break us up. Well we know they don't understand", which is a direct lift from the 1960 Ray Charles song "Sticks And Stones". The B-Side "No Time To Lose" was taken from the previous Dave Clark Five album "Glad All Over".
previous work
subsequent work
primaryTopic
Can't You See That She's Mine
"Can't You See That She's Mine" is the fourth single released in the United States by The Dave Clark Five. Written by Dave Clark and Mike Smith, it reached number four on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week of 18 July 1964. It was The Dave Clark Five's fourth Gold Record. The middle four bars start with the lyric "People talk and try to break us up. Well we know they don't understand", which is a direct lift from the 1960 Ray Charles song "Sticks And Stones". The B-Side "No Time To Lose" was taken from the previous Dave Clark Five album "Glad All Over".
runtime (m)
has abstract
"Can't You See That She's Mine ...... rk Five album "Glad All Over".
@en
b side
"No Time to Lose"
genre
previous work
producer
runtime (s)
subsequent work
Wikipage page ID
15,681,349
Wikipage revision ID
741,483,784
released
This single
"Can't You See That She's Mine"
subject
comment
"Can't You See That She's Mine ...... rk Five album "Glad All Over".
@en
label
Can't You See That She's Mine
@en
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Can't You See That She's Mine
@en