www.classicpopmag.com Open in urlscan Pro
188.114.97.3  Public Scan

URL: https://www.classicpopmag.com/2022/07/the-bee-gees/
Submission: On March 26 via api from FI — Scanned from NL

Form analysis 3 forms found in the DOM

GET https://www.classicpopmag.com/

<form role="search" method="get" class="search-form form" action="https://www.classicpopmag.com/">
  <label class="sr-only">Search for:</label>
  <div class="input-group">
    <input type="search" value="" name="s" class="search-field form-control" placeholder="Enter Keyword" required="">
    <span class="input-group-btn">
      <button type="submit" class="search-submit btn btn-primary btn-effect"><span>Search</span><span><i class="icon icon-search"></i></span></button>
    </span>
  </div>
</form>

GET https://www.classicpopmag.com

<form action="https://www.classicpopmag.com" method="get"><label class="screen-reader-text" for="cat">Categories</label><select name="cat" id="cat" class="postform">
    <option value="-1">Select Category</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="310">Charts</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="606">Competitions</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="758">Features</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="2076">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Album by Album</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="2143">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Artist Features &amp; Interviews</option>
    <option class="level-2" value="2141">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Artist Features</option>
    <option class="level-3" value="2657">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Duran Duran</option>
    <option class="level-3" value="2666">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pet Shop Boys</option>
    <option class="level-2" value="309">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Interviews</option>
    <option class="level-3" value="2140">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Classic Pop Q&amp;A</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="2996">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Classic Album</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="689">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lost &amp; Found</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="926">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One Hit Wonders</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="760">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Lowdown</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="763">Magazine</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="3">News</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="62">Playlists</option>
    <option class="level-0" value="1076">Reviews</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="679">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Live Reviews</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="2136">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;New albums</option>
    <option class="level-1" value="2137">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Reissues</option>
  </select></form>

GET https://www.classicpopmag.com/

<form role="search" method="get" class="search-form form" action="https://www.classicpopmag.com/">
  <label class="sr-only">Search for:</label>
  <div class="input-group">
    <input type="search" value="" name="s" class="search-field form-control" placeholder="Enter Keyword" required="">
    <span class="input-group-btn">
      <button type="submit" class="search-submit btn btn-primary btn-effect"><span>Search</span><span><i class="icon icon-search"></i></span></button>
    </span>
  </div>
</form>

Text Content

Subscribe


 * Shop
 * News
 * Features
   * Artist Features & Interviews
   * Album by Album
   * Classic Album
   * The Lowdown
   * Lost & Found
   * One Hit Wonders
 * Reviews
   * New releases
   * Reissues
   * Live Reviews
 * Interviews
   * Classic Pop Q&A
   * The Godfathers of Pop
   * The Godmothers of Pop
 * Competitions
 * Quizzes
 * Subscribe To Classic Pop magazine
 * Sign up to the newsletter
 * Magazine
 * About
   * Our friends
   * Contact us
   * Advertise with Classic Pop
 * Log In

Classic Pop may earn commission from the links on this page, but we only feature
products we think you will enjoy.
 * 


THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO THE BEE GEES

By Classic Pop | July 29, 2022

 * 
 * 
 * 

Inarguably the Isle of Man’s most successful pop act of all time – shifting more
than 220 million records worldwide – the Bee Gees first found fame in the 60s,
before going global at the height of the disco boom the following decade… By
David Burke



The brothers Gibb – Barry, Robin and Maurice – cut their musical teeth as The
Rattlesnakes on the Manchester skiffle scene of the mid 50s, having relocated to
the north of England metropolis from their native Isle of Man. But it was
another move – this time to Australia – that birthed the Bee Gees, and the
beginning of a glorious career spanning seven decades.

Early triumphs down under included Wine And Women and Spicks And Specks, They
returned to Blighty in 1967, at the behest of impresario Robert Stigwood, who,
describing them as the year’s “most significant new talent”, signed them to
Polydor Records. 



Stigwood’s faith in the siblings was validated almost immediately, as New York
Mining Disaster 1941 and To Love Somebody both made the lower reaches of the UK
chart. Then came Massachusetts, their first No.1, repeated with I’ve Gotta Get A
Message To You in 1968.

The group were also establishing themselves in the United States; I Started A
Joke climbed to No.6 on the Billboard chart. The first half of the 70s was a
relatively fallow period at home, although they did secure pole position in the
US with How Can You Mend A Broken Heart. 

The advent of disco was reflected on their albums Main Course and Children Of
The World, both of which featured further American chart-toppers in Jive Talkin’
and You Should Be Dancing. But even this was merely a preamble to the
tour-de-force that was Saturday Night Fever.

This was the biggest-selling soundtrack of all time, and with good reason, too,
given the matchless majesty of Stayin’ Alive, More Than A Woman and How Deep Is
Your Love. It was the apogee of a movement that would soon be reduced to ashes,
literally, as disco records were publicly burned in the US. In the 80s, You Win
Again gave the Bee Gees their fifth and final UK No.1 (after Night Fever and
Tragedy).



Barry Gibb remains the sole surviving member, following the deaths of Maurice in
2003, and Robin nine years later.


THE MUST-HAVE ALBUMS


MAIN COURSE, 1975

It was Eric Clapton who encouraged the Bee Gees to work on Main Course at
Criteria Studios in Miami. Barry Gibb recalled: “Eric said, ‘I’ve just made an
album called 461 Ocean Boulevard in Miami. Why don’t you guys go to America and
do the same, and maybe the change of environment will do something for you?’ I
think it was really good advice.”

With Arif Mardin producing, the Bee Gees infused their sound with influences
absorbed from Miami’s contemporary dance-music scene and clocked up three US
hits, among them a second No.1, Jive Talkin’.

“We decided that it was our big chance to get serious about our music again,”
said Maurice. Reputedly, Main Course was the album that marked the debut of
Barry’s trademark falsetto.




CHILDREN OF THE WORLD, 1976

No Arif Mardin this time out, so the Bee Gees – after a false start under
Richard Perry – decided to helm their own production with the assistance of
engineer Karl Richardson and musical adviser Albhy Galuten, a triumvirate that
would oversee the group’s halcyon period in the latter half of the decade.

It certainly proved an astute move on Children Of The World, as the first
single, You Should Be Dancing, topped the Billboard chart and was hailed by
Rolling Stone magazine as “an impossibly propulsive track” that “rocks KC & The
Sunshine Band’s Shake Your Booty right off the turntable (or dancefloor)”.

They also ramped up the disco vibe with the likes of You Stepped Into My Life,
Boogie Child and Subway.


SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, 1977

According to the late Robin Gibb, the Bee Gees were initially dismissive when
Robert Stigwood commissioned them to write the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.
“We were recording our new album in the north of France,” he recalled, “and we’d
written and recorded about four or five songs when Stigwood rang from LA and
said: ‘We’re putting together this little film, low budget, called Tribal Rites
Of The New Saturday Nights – would you have any songs on hand?’



We said: ‘Look, we can’t, we haven’t any time to sit down and write for a
film,’” Well, they found the time, and the album went on to sell more than 45
million units, staying on the Billboard chart for some three years and spending
18 weeks at No.1 in the UK.


SPIRITS HAVING FLOWN, 1979

How do you follow an album like the Platinum-heavy Saturday Night Fever? With an
album that puts you on a par with The Beatles, of course.

Spirits Having Flown spawned three American No.1 singles – Too Much Heaven,
Tragedy and Love You Inside Out – thus replicating the performance of Saturday
Night Fever’s How Deep is Your Love, Stayin’ Alive and Night Fever, making it
six consecutive chart-toppers, an unbroken run which equalled a record set by
the Fab Four.

This despite problems in the Gibb camp. Maurice was battling alcoholism and back
pain, which reduced his contributions. Robin, too, found himself marginalised as
a vocalist, with Living Together his only lead, the first time that was the case
since 1970’s Cucumber Castle.


 * Read more: 80s movie soundtracks


AND THE REST…


E.S.P., 1987

E.S.P. was the first Bee Gees album after a six-year sabbatical, during which
each of the Gibb brothers had embarked on solo projects and writing for other
artists.

Barry had even worked on several songs for Staying Alive, the sequel movie to
Saturday Night Fever. On a new label, Warner Bros, they were reunited with Arif
Mardin, though largely without their usual Midas touch.

The one exception was You Win Again, which claimed top spot in the UK, Ireland,
Switzerland, Germany, Austria and Norway. While the brothers shared
compositional duties, vocally it’s Barry who dominates, anchoring eight tracks,
including Live Or Die (Hold Me Like A Child).


ONE, 1989

The Bee Gees were in the early stages of recording One in 1988, when the
youngest Gibb brother, Andy, suddenly died as a result of myocarditis, an
inflammation of the heart muscle. The sessions were subsequently shelved until
November.

What the grieving siblings eventually delivered was a melancholic collection,
not least on Wish You Were Here, dedicated to Andy. There are moments of
peerless pop, too, of course, such as Bodyguard and Tokyo Nights, while One
“brought us back to US radio”, declared Barry, adding, “a leading paper recently
stated: ‘The Bee Gees are capable of at least one more hit’. I don’t believe
that – I believe we could have at least two!”


SIZE ISN’T EVERYTHING, 1993

After three albums on Warner Bros, the Bee Gees were back at Polydor. And
despite personal difficulties – Maurice was a recovering alcoholic, Barry’s wife
and prematurely born new daughter were suffering ill health, while their dad had
also died – the brothers managed to create their best work of the decade.

There’s a dance music reboot on Paying The Price Of Love, while the influence of
ethereal Irish chanteuse Enya runs through Heart Like Mine. Barry reckoned Blue
Island, dedicated to the children of the former Yugoslavia, was the “nicest
track” they’d ever written.

But the standout is For Whom The Bell Tolls, which gave the Bee Gees a Top Five
hit in four successive decades.


STILL WATERS, 1997

A roll call of heavyweight producers was drafted in for Still Waters, the likes
of Russ Titelman (Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, George Harrison), David Foster
(Celine Dion, Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole), Hugh Padgham (Phil Collins,
Sting) and the inimitable Arif Mardin.

This multiplicity of cooks did crowd the kitchen somewhat, serving up mostly
bland fare. The exceptions are Alone, No.5 in the UK; the Christmassy Miracles
Happen and the poignant ballad, I Will, overseen by Mardin.

This is the Bee Gees on autopilot augmented by bells and whistles but as Rolling
Stone pointed out, “Those close-knit brotherly harmonies still quaver and quake
after all of these years.”

 * Read more: The story of MTV


THE ESSENTIAL SINGLES


HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE, 1977

Voted the UK’s favourite Bee Gees song by viewers of ITV, How Deep Is Your Love
was supposedly earmarked for Yvonne Elliman, but she plumped for If I Can’t Have
You instead. Although he doesn’t get a credit, keyboard player Blue Weaver had
“a tremendous amount of input”, claimed co-producer Albhy Galuten. Weaver
suggested the strings and created the electric-piano part that forms the basis
of the track. Barry admitted that “a lot of the textures were added on” and the
final mix was “a little different than the way we wrote it”.








STAYIN’ ALIVE, 1977

Seldom has the compound of sound and vision been more dynamic than in the
opening sequence of the movie Saturday Night Fever, as John Travolta confidently
struts his stuff through a run-down neighbourhood while Stayin’ Alive plays over
the credits. It’s a defining moment in cinema and possibly the defining moment
of the disco era. But don’t be fooled by the pulsating rhythm – this is a song
with a dark undercurrent “about survival in the streets of New York”, Robin Gibb
asserted. “People crying out for help – desperate songs. Those are the ones that
become giants.”








NIGHT FEVER, 1977

The sixth single from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack became the Bee Gees’
first simultaneous No.1 on both sides of the Atlantic. Robert Stigwood
approached the Gibbs to pen a song for a film he was producing at the time with
the working title Saturday Night but since the Bee Gees already had Night Fever,
they convinced Stigwood to commit to that – and even change the name of the
movie to Saturday Night Fever along the way. The song’s string intro was
inspired by Percy Faith’s Theme From A Summer Place, which had been released way
back in 1959.








TOO MUCH HEAVEN, 1978

Too Much Heaven was the Bee Gees’ offering to the Music For UNICEF Concert: A
Gift Of Song show at the United Nations General Assembly, New York in 1979,
before finding its way onto the Spirits Having Flown album and the top of the US
singles chart. The story goes that Barry, Robin and Maurice wrote this, along
with Tragedy and Andy Gibb’s Shadow Dancing, during an afternoon off from
shooting their Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band movie. The recording
features an astonishing nine layers of three-part harmonies, a memorable 27
voices in all.








TRAGEDY, 1979

The chorus, full of high-pitched intensity, is probably one of the most parodied
entries in the Bee Gees’ oeuvre – and there have been many. The fifth of six US
chart-toppers in a row, Tragedy wouldn’t have sounded out of place on Saturday
Night Fever. No coincidence, then, that it was added to the score of a West End
theatre version. In a 1979 NBC special, Barry revealed the mundane provenance of
the thunderclap effect – he just cupped his hands over a mic and made an
explosion with his mouth.








YOU WIN AGAIN, 1987

“We absolutely thought You Win Again was going to be a big hit. It took us a
month to cut it and get the right mix,” Robin told John Kutner and Spencer Leigh
in the book, 1000 UK Number One Hits. This conviction wasn’t in any way
misplaced – You Win Again gave the Bee Gees their first UK No.1 since 1979.
Warner Bros had tried repeatedly to persuade the Bee Gees to remove the stomps
from the recording, but they weren’t having any of it. “As soon as you hear it
on the radio, you know it’s us. It’s a signal,” said Maurice.








ONLY FOR THE BRAVE…


LIVING EYES, 1981

Only Germany really embraced Living Eyes – an album that failed to make much of
an impression in the rest of the world. The Bee Gees themselves weren’t
particularly impressed either, with Robin describing the album as “a turkey” and
the brothers noting that it was a result of label pressure to put something new
out. 








DID YOU KNOW?

In 1967, Robin and his then wife-to-be Molly survived one of Britain’s
worst-ever train disasters, when a Sunday evening express service from Hastings
to London derailed and hit a bridge. 49 people were killed, but Robin pulled
Molly through a smashed window to safety.

The Bee Gees’ 1970 album, Cucumber Castle, was recorded by Barry and Maurice as
a duo, Robin having quit after a falling out over the previous year’s Odessa.
The siblings kissed and made up for Trafalgar in 1971.

The Bee Gees weren’t even involved in Saturday Night Fever until the
post-production phase. “They weren’t even in the movie in the beginning,” noted
John Travolta, adding that while it was being filmed, “I was dancing to Stevie
Wonder and Boz Scaggs.”

Want more from Classic Pop magazine? Get a free digital issue when you sign up
to our newsletter!

 * the bee gees


CLASSIC POP

Classic Pop magazine is the ultimate celebration of great pop and chart music
across the decades with in-depth interviews with top artists, features, news and
reviews. From pop to indie and new wave to electronic music – it's all here...
Previous Article


THE CURE TO RELEASE DELUXE 30TH ANNIVERSARY BOXSET OF WISH

View Post
Next Article


ACID HOUSE – THE SECOND SUMMER OF LOVE

View Post


YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

View Post

POPSCENE – GOTH

View Post

TOP 20 REMIX ALBUMS

View Post

PEPSI & SHIRLIE INTERVIEW

View Post

LEVEL 42 ALBUMS – THE COMPLETE GUIDE

View Post

MAKING VIENNA – ULTRAVOX

prev
next



SEARCH CLASSIC POP

Search for:
Search



CATEGORIES

CategoriesSelect CategoryChartsCompetitionsFeatures   Album by Album   Artist
Features & Interviews      Artist Features         Duran Duran         Pet Shop
Boys      Interviews         Classic Pop Q&A   Classic Album   Lost &
Found   One Hit Wonders   The LowdownMagazineNewsPlaylistsReviews   Live
Reviews   New albums   Reissues



Privacy Policy – Cookies Policy

 

© Copyright Anthem Publishing 2012 - 2024

Do Not Sell My Personal Information
Change Consent
Search for:
Search

Input your search keywords and press Enter.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok
with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Close

PRIVACY OVERVIEW

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through
the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are
stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic
functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us
analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in
your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of
these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing
experience.
Necessary
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly.
This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and
security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal
information.
Non-necessary
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function
and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other
embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to
procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT