Home » Sport » Gerry Marsden, interpreter of the most popular version of ″ You′ll Never Walk Alone ″, dies | Europe up to date | DW

Gerry Marsden, interpreter of the most popular version of ″ You′ll Never Walk Alone ″, dies | Europe up to date | DW

British singer Gerry Marsden, who made the song popular in 1963 You’ll Never Walk Alone With his band Gerry and the Pacemakers, he passed away this Sunday at the age of 78.

The popular version of the piece, composed by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein almost two decades earlier, was adopted as an anthem by fans of the English team Liverpool FC.

In a statement, the club said it was “deeply saddened by the passing of Gerry Marsden.”

Likewise, Liverpool recalled that “the group’s third single, a version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, became famous around the world as the Liverpool anthem and is sung moments before the start of every home game at Anfield.”

“Sung in times of celebration and commiseration, Gerry’s performance of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ will always be tied to the club he loved,” lamented the squad.

The Gerry and The Pacemakers version was adopted by Liverpool fans starting in 1963 and later became one of the most famous anthems in football. Other clubs such as Celtic Glasgow, Feyenoord and Borussia Dortmund also opted for it.

Marsden re-recorded the song in April 2020 as a tribute to the British National Health Service during the onset of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

Paul McCartney, mythical ex-member of The Beatles, who coincided with Marsden and his group in the 1960s in Liverpool, paid tribute to him on his Twitter account: “Gerry was a companion of our beginnings in Liverpool. He and his group were our elders rivals on the local scene. ” (efe / afp / reuters)

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