Just how popular were the Bee Gees at the height of their fame? This popular: over a 32-week period in 1977 and 1978, a song written or performed by the Gibb brothers was number one on the Billboard ...
Plump new biographies of two different charismatic cult leaders whose Beatles obsessions combined to kill the ’60s dead: murderin’ Family man Charles Manson, and falsettoin’ man-family the Bee Gees!
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 ...
The Bee Gees: The Biography is touted as the first narrative biography of the group "with two years of investigative research". There's a compelling story to be told about this family act, which sold ...
Bonnier’s dedicated music imprint Nine Eight Books has acquired the “definitive” biography of the Bee Gees by Bob Stanley, author of Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Story of Modern Pop and Excavate!: The ...
Robin Gibb, one-third of the Bee Gees, died Sunday after a long battle with cancer, his spokesperson has confirmed via a statement. Gibb was 62 years old. “The family of Robin Gibb, of the Bee Gees, ...
“Stayin’ Alive” is the Bee Gees’ most recognizable song, and arguably one of the most well-known dance tracks ever created. The song was the first track off the hugely successful soundtrack to ...
Stigwood made the leap from music to film and TV production by the early '70s with hits 'Saturday Night Fever' — which included a two-LP soundtrack written by and featuring the Bee Gees — and 'Grease.
Robert Stigwood, manager of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame groups like Cream and the Bee Gees and producer of films like Saturday Night Fever and Grease, passed away. Stigwood was 81. Spencer Gibb, the ...
It's hard to understand why David Meyer wrote this book. Moreover, who is the intended audience for it? The biography is not a tribute to the Bee Gees, which means that fans will have no reason to ...
Plump new biographies of two different charismatic cult leaders whose Beatles obsessions combined to kill the ’60s dead: murderin’ Family man Charles Manson, and falsettoin’ man-family the Bee Gees!
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