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Brothers Barry and twins, Robin and Maurice Gibb comprised the group the Bee Gees. They introductory performed when Barry was eight years old and Robin and Maurice were six, in 1955. When the family moved to Australia in 1958, they performed as The Rattlesnakes, Wee Johnny Hayes and the Bluecats, The Gibbs, The BG’s and at long last the Bee Gees. Despite general belief, their name is not short for Brothers Gibb. It was in truth developed by DJ Bill Gates by taking Barry’s initials and racetrack promoter Bill Goode’s mother Barbara’s initials. Goode was responsible for introducing the Gibbs to Gates. Their father, Hugh Gibb, sent demo tapes to Beatles manager Brian Epstein, who passed them on to Robert Stigwood. Stigwood signed the Bee Gees to a five-year contract with Polydor Records in 1967. The primary single to be released, “New York Mining Disaster 1941″ went top 20 on the Billboard weekly charts. Their second single, “To Love Somebody” was in the first place written for Otis Redding and has since been covered by such artists as Rod Stewart, Janis Joplin and Michael Bolton, likewise went top twenty; as did their third single “Holiday.”
It is said that the Bee Gees had two distinct musical successes; their soft rock amount of time of the late 1960′s and early 1970′s and the leaders of a rejuvenated disco era in the late 1970′s. The Bee Gees composed the soundtracks for “Saturday Night Fever” and “Staying Alive” and they even did a lot of acting in the 1978 film, “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” On the charts, the Bee Gees traveled to the weekly Billboard Top 40 charts almost 30 times, hitting the #1 spot nine times. Here’s a look at the Bee Gees 20 greatest hits, according to the Billboard charts:
The Bee Gees were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 1997. Their younger brother, Andy, was a successful solo artisan with three successive #1 singles. Andy passed from physical life in 1988 at the age of 30. With the sudden death of Bee Gees member, Maurice, in 2003, it looked like the Bee Gees would never record or carry out again. In 2009, Robin and Barry consorted to reform the Bee Gees and they appeared that year on ABC TV’s “Dancing With The Stars” and in 2010, they made a surprise aspect on the season finale of “American Idol.”
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