'Dear Old Mrs. Bell' has an interesting strings arrangement but the lyrics were just dreadfully 'twee' -much like The Dave Clark Five's absolutely awful 'Tabatha Twitchet' (which has terribly silly lyrics - and a tremendous 'cutting' bass guitar !)
These were 'observational' songs probably inspired by Paul McCartney's 'Eleanor Rigby' and Ray Davies ' Dedicated Follower of Fashion' hits - The Searchers final PYE single; 'Second Hand Dealer' (1967) was a typically Ray Davies style song studying a person etc...
Both DC5 & Shads singles seemed to go over to the other side of the (then massive) Generation gap by picturing elderly ladies - which kids wern't going to 'give a monkeys' about were they...?
so putting 'Mrs Bell' (Ding Dong Ding Dong...)

as 'A' side immediately 'lost' most if not all of the younger audience...and probably made The Shads look as silly as playing 'Wishie Washie Bishie Boshie' or whoever in Aladdin etc in most kids eyes...hence liking them was seen by some as 'naff' by then !
on the other hand Hank's 'Trying To Forget...' was a great production job that surely should have been the 'A' side ?
but then the driving 'Late Night Set' eclipsed by far the enjoyable but hardly Earth shattering or memorable 'I Met A Girl' (1966)
and mere 'B' side; 'Running out of World' by the group was FAR superior to Hank's solo (nice for parents) but pretty 'naff' for most of the rest of us 'London's Not Too Far' (which had zilch chance of charting in truth) that took the 'A' side - and guess what..it flopped !
I was surprised Hank's rather tuneless vocal 'Break Another Dawn' topped the glorious 'Morning Star' as a solo single in 1970 (surely that ought to have been the other way around ?)
so WHO exactly was advising The Shads re their image & their choice of singles 'A' sides around that 1966-69 period ?
talk about loading the gun, taking careful aim...then shooting yourself in the foot !
you really do wonder IF by that time they had got past caring....?
In 1968 Cliff/Shads; 'Don't Forget To Catch Me' (while pleasant) got HAMMERED in the singles reviews of Music papers at that time too !
The Shads often got singles wrong later on too I feel - wouldn't 'God Only knows' (single version), 'Parisienne Walkways', 'Riders of The Range', 'Nights in White Satin', 'Queen of Hearts', 'Dancing in The Dark' (12inch single version) even 'Memory' ....have scored better as 'A' sides than say numbers such as; ' 'Telstar', 'Treat Me Nice', 'Missing', etc which all sank as singles... ?
