The Bee Gees
The Biography
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The long overdue, definitive narrative biography of one of Australia's legendary bands, The Bee Gees, by the acclaimed award-winning author of Twenty Thousand Roads: The Ballad of Gram Parsons and his Cosmic American Music.
The Bee Gees have outsold everyone: The Who, The Rolling Stones, The Doors and The Kinks, en route to selling more than 225 million records worldwide over their forty-year career. Their numbers are eclipsed only by The Beatles and Michael Jackson.
Between 1967 and 1972 the Bee Gees sold twenty-five million records.
And during those five years The Bee Gees wrote and sang some of the most memorable, iconic songs of their era; songs that were everywhere, in the air, on the radio and in everyone's head; one Top 5 single after another, in America, Australia and the UK. Songs that included: '1941 New York Mining Disaster', 'To Love Somebody', 'Massachusetts', 'Holiday', 'World', 'Words', 'I Gotta Get a Message To You', 'I Started a Joke', 'Lonely Days'... In 1969 they played the Royal Albert Hall in the UK with a 70-piece orchestra and a 100-piece marching band. Standing room only. The Bee Gees were the first band to play and sell out 100,000-seat sports arenas. In 1971 the brothers wrote and sang one of the most beautiful and enduring pop songs of all time: 'How Do You Mend a Broken Heart?' And in 1972 'Run To Me' became the final #1 of the first Bee Gees era.
Pop charts are fickle; pop audiences more fickle still. Bands have always come and gone, bands have always been forgotten. But no band has ever risen as high as The Bee Gees did in 1972 and then fallen as low as The Bee Gees had by 1974.
The Bee Gees' saga is the epic story of three men, three brothers, in a unique musical partnership. Unlike, say, The Jacksons, The Bee Gees always needed one another. Each brought a unique gift to the mix, and the others knew it. From that need grew the reality of having to put up with each other. For forty years... Even wth Barry's ambition, he could not succeed without his brothers. Each brother's personality warrants its story told, and all three are caught in this compelling family dynamic. And as weird, human, tragic and compelling as The Bee Gees are as individual characters, the tensions among them provide the core of their amazing drama.
David Meyer's highly anticipated biography chronicles the life and career of one of the best known, most enduring, most recognisable, and singular bands of the last fifty years. Their story is the story of pop music over the last forty years, of music that was neither rock nor soul nor country, but an individual sound that fit no genre and that no other artist could emulate.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This exhaustive biography takes the same approach to its subject as Meyer's critically acclaimed bio of country-rock legend Gram Parsons (Twenty Thousand Roads): the author is a fan, but he doesn't hesitate to be critical ("Give the Bee Gees a fashion period and they always chose the worst possible options"). Meyer covers the band's entire career from its founding in the late 1950s by eldest "Alpha" brother Barry to the deaths of his younger brothers Maurice and Robin in 2003 and 2012, respectively and is excellent at describing the craft of all three members, especially Barry ("a human jukebox, pouring out material shaped by the sounds of the day or by his perception of what a song-writing client should be singing"). "Their collective singing and beautiful vibrato and their unique solo strengths," says legendary producer Arif Mardin, were the main reasons for the phenomenal success of the Bee Gees' songs on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. Meyer supports Robin Gibb's prediction that while a lot of bad records were made in the disco era, "the Bee Gees' songs hold up and will still be in the clubs in 2050."