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1
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well, you can tell by the way
I use my walk
2
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music loud
3
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kicked around
4
00:00:55,181 --> 00:00:57,513
and now it's all right, it's ok
5
00:00:57,641 --> 00:00:59,802
and you may look the other way
6
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we can try to understand
7
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the "New York times" ' effect on man
8
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ah, ha, ha, ha
9
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stayin' alive...
10
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How did you people get back here?
Come on. Sorry.
11
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You can't come in here.
Get them out.
12
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You can't come in here!
This is a private session!
13
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Barry: Thank you very much.
Good evening to all of you.
14
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Thank you.
15
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I can think of younger days
16
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when living for my life
17
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was everything a man could want to do
18
00:02:03,832 --> 00:02:10,044
I could never see tomorrow
19
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no one said a word
20
00:02:13,008 --> 00:02:16,250
about the sorrow
21
00:02:17,680 --> 00:02:19,295
hey...
22
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how can you mend
23
00:02:22,142 --> 00:02:24,554
a broken heart?
24
00:02:26,772 --> 00:02:29,889
how can you stop
the rain from falling down?
25
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how can you stop
26
00:02:35,447 --> 00:02:37,563
the sun from shining?
27
00:02:38,158 --> 00:02:42,151
what makes the world go round?
28
00:02:42,830 --> 00:02:46,573
dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah
29
00:02:47,543 --> 00:02:49,909
dah-dah-dah-dah-dah-dah
30
00:02:51,088 --> 00:02:53,670
dah-dah-dah-dah
31
00:02:53,799 --> 00:02:56,541
dah-dah-dah
32
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please help me mend
33
00:03:00,472 --> 00:03:03,214
my broken heart
34
00:03:04,393 --> 00:03:08,102
and let me live again
35
00:03:09,732 --> 00:03:12,189
dah-dah dah-dah-dah
36
00:03:12,735 --> 00:03:15,067
dah-dah-dah-dah
37
00:03:17,031 --> 00:03:20,774
dah-dah-dah-dah-dah
38
00:03:20,909 --> 00:03:22,774
dah...
39
00:03:40,929 --> 00:03:45,013
Barry: I am beginning to recognize
the fact that nothing is true.
40
00:03:46,310 --> 00:03:47,390
Nothing.
41
00:03:48,270 --> 00:03:49,885
It's all down to perception.
42
00:03:51,732 --> 00:03:53,643
My immediate family's gone.
43
00:03:53,776 --> 00:03:55,266
But that's life.
44
00:03:56,320 --> 00:03:59,687
It's the same thing with every family,
that someone will be left in the end.
45
00:04:02,660 --> 00:04:06,824
And this time of life,
I have fantastic memories.
46
00:04:06,955 --> 00:04:09,412
But everybody's memory is different.
47
00:04:09,541 --> 00:04:11,702
So they're just my memories, you know?
48
00:04:13,712 --> 00:04:18,081
I know that Maurice and Robin would have
had a different kind of memory.
49
00:04:24,682 --> 00:04:26,138
Maurice: I remember Barry saying
50
00:04:26,266 --> 00:04:28,757
that one day
we were gonna be really famous.
51
00:04:28,894 --> 00:04:31,806
And we said, "oh, yeah," you know.
"Whatever you say."
52
00:04:31,939 --> 00:04:33,645
He's the big brother, you know.
53
00:04:36,068 --> 00:04:39,652
Robin: We saw ourselves as triplets
rather than me and Maurice being twins.
54
00:04:39,780 --> 00:04:42,146
And we always had
the same goals growing up,
55
00:04:42,282 --> 00:04:46,070
that it became impossible
to see each other as normal brothers.
56
00:04:47,037 --> 00:04:50,746
Barry: My ninth Christmas, there was
an acoustic guitar at the end of my bed.
57
00:04:50,874 --> 00:04:54,287
Robin and Maurice started to collaborate
and pretend to sing with me,
58
00:04:54,420 --> 00:04:57,378
and we started doing gigs
as a teenage act.
59
00:04:59,049 --> 00:05:02,633
Robin: We emigrated our whole family
from england to Australia.
60
00:05:02,761 --> 00:05:05,127
Barry: All three of us
had the same understanding
61
00:05:05,264 --> 00:05:07,926
that we were going to be famous
come hell or high water.
62
00:05:08,058 --> 00:05:10,891
J you know I love getting up
in the morning
63
00:05:11,019 --> 00:05:15,058
j when the sun first
strikes the trees
64
00:05:15,190 --> 00:05:17,977
Barry: Our father had his own band,
but it didn't work out,
65
00:05:18,110 --> 00:05:20,567
so he became our manager,
and it was a team.
66
00:05:20,696 --> 00:05:23,187
There was us three and dad,
and mum, of course.
67
00:05:23,907 --> 00:05:26,114
Maurice: My mother,
she was always the person
68
00:05:26,243 --> 00:05:28,199
who kept the calm between dad and us.
69
00:05:28,829 --> 00:05:30,945
Very strong, very loyal.
70
00:05:33,000 --> 00:05:35,833
The Beatles have just arrived
for the first time in our country.
71
00:05:35,961 --> 00:05:37,826
Maurice: When the Beatles
came on the scene,
72
00:05:37,963 --> 00:05:40,705
it was like,
"that's what we've been trying to do."
73
00:05:40,841 --> 00:05:43,173
Robin: They turned pop music
into an art form,
74
00:05:43,302 --> 00:05:45,418
singing three-part Harmony like we did.
75
00:05:45,554 --> 00:05:47,215
Barry: So we made up our own minds
76
00:05:47,347 --> 00:05:49,804
that we were going back
to be part of the British invasion.
77
00:05:49,933 --> 00:05:52,891
Robin: Making music is what we wanted
to do for the rest of our lives,
78
00:05:53,020 --> 00:05:56,387
so we thought, "whatever's going
to happen, we will make happen.�
79
00:06:01,069 --> 00:06:02,559
J where is the sun...
80
00:06:02,696 --> 00:06:06,655
Before we left Australia, we did
an album called spicks and specks.
81
00:06:06,784 --> 00:06:09,116
And they became our best demos.
82
00:06:10,871 --> 00:06:12,782
Jitlss dead...
83
00:06:13,624 --> 00:06:16,707
Barry: Dad and I did the rounds,
met with industry people.
84
00:06:16,835 --> 00:06:19,793
And as we sat in everyone's office,
they would say the same thing.
85
00:06:19,922 --> 00:06:22,459
�No, no, I'm sorry, lads,
we can't help you."
86
00:06:22,591 --> 00:06:25,128
Maurice: My dad, he was very,
"we gotta do this,"
87
00:06:25,260 --> 00:06:28,002
because my dad was really
the most ambitious man, I think,
88
00:06:28,138 --> 00:06:29,469
in the gibb clan.
89
00:06:29,598 --> 00:06:33,090
Barry: We loved the Beatles,
so dad had sent this stuff to nems,
90
00:06:33,227 --> 00:06:35,969
the Brian Epstein offices.
91
00:06:36,104 --> 00:06:39,187
Announcer: Brian Epstein, the man
who built the Beatles into a cult
92
00:06:39,316 --> 00:06:41,307
is now as well known as they are.
93
00:06:42,027 --> 00:06:44,689
Man: I was doing Brian's mail
most of the time.
94
00:06:44,822 --> 00:06:49,816
There was a letter by the father
of these three handsome, cute guys,
95
00:06:49,952 --> 00:06:52,034
who were very proactive
96
00:06:52,162 --> 00:06:53,902
and who had some success.
97
00:06:54,039 --> 00:06:57,531
They came from Manchester,
but they were writing from Australia.
98
00:06:57,668 --> 00:06:59,374
I showed it to him.
99
00:06:59,503 --> 00:07:01,414
Brian said, "yeah, that's very nice."
100
00:07:01,547 --> 00:07:03,333
He said, "well, give it to Robert."
101
00:07:04,716 --> 00:07:08,004
"He's Australian, and he's good
at these kind of things."
102
00:07:08,136 --> 00:07:10,923
Somebody sent you a tape
of these boys from Australia?
103
00:07:11,056 --> 00:07:12,216
Yes, they did.
104
00:07:12,391 --> 00:07:14,097
Oh.
105
00:07:14,768 --> 00:07:18,431
I heard it, and I was
absolutely astounded.
106
00:07:18,605 --> 00:07:22,348
It was the most brilliant Harmony
singing and composing I'd ever heard.
107
00:07:22,484 --> 00:07:24,315
J if this should end
108
00:07:24,444 --> 00:07:26,605
j 1 don't mind
109
00:07:26,738 --> 00:07:28,228
j if this should end
110
00:07:28,365 --> 00:07:32,108
I 1 will find
111
00:07:32,244 --> 00:07:40,157
j what shall I do?
112
00:07:41,712 --> 00:07:44,579
Man: At the time,
Robert was my manager.
113
00:07:44,715 --> 00:07:47,627
Cream was signed to Robert
114
00:07:47,759 --> 00:07:50,000
on what I thought
was an exclusive deal.
115
00:07:50,137 --> 00:07:53,755
I was just surprised
that other bands were coming in.
116
00:07:53,891 --> 00:07:55,301
J if this should end...
117
00:07:55,434 --> 00:07:59,894
Robert was so eccentric.
I mean, absolutely bonkers.
118
00:08:00,022 --> 00:08:03,355
He was Australian, but he spoke
like an english gentleman.
119
00:08:03,483 --> 00:08:05,974
And he would wear
these really big flashy ties
120
00:08:06,111 --> 00:08:08,853
and he had a comb-over
and it was all just...
121
00:08:08,989 --> 00:08:11,025
Well, who is this guy?
122
00:08:11,158 --> 00:08:13,570
Barry: Whoever this man was,
he really believed in us.
123
00:08:13,702 --> 00:08:15,658
He was almost like a parent.
124
00:08:15,787 --> 00:08:17,948
Stigwood: You can't deny talent.
125
00:08:18,498 --> 00:08:21,035
And the talent was so obvious.
126
00:08:26,256 --> 00:08:29,089
Man: Somebody mentioned
that the Bee Gees were in town.
127
00:08:29,217 --> 00:08:31,924
They were good friends of mine
from Australia.
128
00:08:32,804 --> 00:08:35,136
So I phoned them up.
129
00:08:35,265 --> 00:08:37,597
I said, "is Maurice there, then?
Put Maurice on."
130
00:08:37,726 --> 00:08:38,932
And he said,
131
00:08:39,061 --> 00:08:41,768
"we've been signed up
by this guy called Robert stigwood.
132
00:08:41,897 --> 00:08:44,980
We're doing this recording.
Why don't you come and play guitar?"
133
00:08:45,734 --> 00:08:49,818
Caught a train into London
and found ibc studios.
134
00:08:49,947 --> 00:08:52,689
So there they were,
there was Barry, Robin and Maurice.
135
00:08:52,824 --> 00:08:55,236
And the drummer, Colin petersen.
136
00:08:55,369 --> 00:08:56,484
That night,
137
00:08:56,620 --> 00:09:01,455
my life changed completely.
Completely.
138
00:09:03,043 --> 00:09:05,750
The first evening we were in there,
there was a blackout.
139
00:09:05,879 --> 00:09:08,621
While waiting for the power
to come back on, we sat on the steps
140
00:09:08,757 --> 00:09:10,622
and Barry was playing his guitar.
141
00:09:10,759 --> 00:09:14,001
It was so echoey.
It was a wonderful echo in this place.
142
00:09:14,805 --> 00:09:16,090
There we were in the dark.
143
00:09:16,223 --> 00:09:19,431
The first thought was, "in the event
of something happening to me..."
144
00:09:19,559 --> 00:09:23,222
J in the event
of something happening to me
145
00:09:23,355 --> 00:09:25,391
and we thought,
"what could come from that?"
146
00:09:25,524 --> 00:09:29,187
J there is something I would
like you all to see
147
00:09:29,319 --> 00:09:30,900
we made believe we were in a mine.
148
00:09:31,029 --> 00:09:35,272
J' it's just a photograph
of someone that I knew
149
00:09:36,410 --> 00:09:40,653
j have you seen my wife, Mr. Jones?
150
00:09:41,665 --> 00:09:46,125
J do you know what it's like
on the outside?
151
00:09:46,962 --> 00:09:51,456
J don't go talking too loud,
you'll cause a landslide
152
00:09:51,591 --> 00:09:53,582
j Mr. Jones
153
00:09:53,927 --> 00:09:56,464
Robin: Because it was our first single,
we wanted a title
154
00:09:56,596 --> 00:09:59,383
that captured the imagination,
that got people's attention.
155
00:09:59,516 --> 00:10:01,677
Maurice: And "New York mining disaster�
was born.
156
00:10:01,810 --> 00:10:05,098
Barry: We had our first hit record
within five months of being in england.
157
00:10:05,230 --> 00:10:07,562
The thrill was that it did
the same thing in America.
158
00:10:07,691 --> 00:10:09,522
We thought we might get
a hit in england
159
00:10:09,651 --> 00:10:11,733
but never dreamed we'd get a hit
in America as well.
160
00:10:17,117 --> 00:10:20,905
So I take them to the United States
to make a record deal for them.
161
00:10:21,038 --> 00:10:24,997
I made a decision to place
the group with Atlantic.
162
00:10:25,125 --> 00:10:27,537
Otis Redding: J what you want,
honey, you've got it...
163
00:10:27,669 --> 00:10:29,910
Barry: He said, "I'm taking you
to meet ahmet ertegun
164
00:10:30,047 --> 00:10:32,789
and to get you into
the American music scene."
165
00:10:33,467 --> 00:10:35,924
Otis Redding was playing at the Apollo.
166
00:10:36,053 --> 00:10:39,295
Ahmet ertegun and Robert stigwood
took me down there to see Otis.
167
00:10:39,431 --> 00:10:41,171
J' hey, hey, hey
168
00:10:41,308 --> 00:10:42,844
and it was amazing.
169
00:10:42,976 --> 00:10:46,309
Soul has always had a special place
in Bee Gees music.
170
00:10:46,438 --> 00:10:48,895
Maurice: We've always been influenced
by black music.
171
00:10:49,024 --> 00:10:52,687
Smokey Robinson, motown.
All that was a big influence on us.
172
00:10:52,819 --> 00:10:54,650
Barry: Robert introduced us, but said,
173
00:10:54,780 --> 00:10:57,362
"I want you to write
a song for Otis Redding."
174
00:10:58,075 --> 00:10:59,940
"To love somebody" was born that night.
175
00:11:02,162 --> 00:11:05,905
But unfortunately,
Otis never got to record the song.
176
00:11:10,504 --> 00:11:12,119
J there's a light
177
00:11:14,382 --> 00:11:16,213
j' a certain kind of light
178
00:11:17,427 --> 00:11:19,964
j that never shone on me
179
00:11:22,641 --> 00:11:25,132
j' I want my life to be
180
00:11:25,977 --> 00:11:30,596
j' lived with you
181
00:11:30,732 --> 00:11:34,441
man: I mean, I must have always known
"to love somebody,"
182
00:11:34,569 --> 00:11:37,436
because that song
is just like in the ether.
183
00:11:37,572 --> 00:11:40,655
Those lyrics, "there's a certain kind
of light that never shone on me."
184
00:11:40,784 --> 00:11:42,866
I don't know if he's talking
about himself,
185
00:11:42,994 --> 00:11:46,578
but at some point, I got obsessed
tracking down every cover version,
186
00:11:46,706 --> 00:11:48,913
like Nina Simone, the animals.
187
00:11:49,042 --> 00:11:51,203
Some great singers have sung
that song, obviously,
188
00:11:51,336 --> 00:11:53,748
but his vocal when he sings it,
189
00:11:53,880 --> 00:11:55,996
I can still get chills
thinking about it.
190
00:11:56,133 --> 00:11:57,669
J baby
191
00:11:57,843 --> 00:12:01,176
j you don't know what it's like
192
00:12:01,930 --> 00:12:05,468
j' baby, you don't know what it's like
193
00:12:06,810 --> 00:12:08,721
j' io love somebody
194
00:12:09,563 --> 00:12:11,554
j' io love somebody
195
00:12:12,232 --> 00:12:14,063
j the way I love you
196
00:12:15,610 --> 00:12:18,101
j' ahhh, no, no
197
00:12:18,238 --> 00:12:21,446
j you don't know what it's like
198
00:12:21,950 --> 00:12:25,488
man: I just remember
this music being on.
199
00:12:25,620 --> 00:12:29,989
And I'm like, "who's this?"
And... "Well, it's the Bee Gees."
200
00:12:30,625 --> 00:12:32,331
And I was like, "the Bee Gees?"
201
00:12:34,421 --> 00:12:36,753
It actually blew my mind.
202
00:12:36,882 --> 00:12:39,715
Those early records sound like
the Beatles' early records.
203
00:12:39,843 --> 00:12:43,301
J I received an invitation
204
00:12:43,430 --> 00:12:47,264
it's a classic '60s guitar pop sound,
but then it had another thing going on.
205
00:12:47,392 --> 00:12:50,759
J come to the united nations
206
00:12:50,896 --> 00:12:54,388
you've got the brothers singing,
and when you've got brothers singing,
207
00:12:54,524 --> 00:12:57,015
it's like an instrument
that nobody else can buy.
208
00:12:57,152 --> 00:13:00,485
J that was when I was somebody
209
00:13:03,491 --> 00:13:07,860
j' in my own time
210
00:13:08,788 --> 00:13:10,494
you can't go buy that sound in a shop.
211
00:13:10,749 --> 00:13:13,206
You can put a Fender stratocaster
through a vox amp
212
00:13:13,335 --> 00:13:14,950
and sound like buddy Holly.
213
00:13:15,670 --> 00:13:17,206
You can't sing like the Bee Gees
214
00:13:17,339 --> 00:13:21,173
because when you've got family members
singing together, it's unique.
215
00:13:21,301 --> 00:13:23,792
It's the blend of the tones
of each brother.
216
00:13:24,512 --> 00:13:28,004
And Robin had this wonderful
tear-jerking voice.
217
00:13:32,270 --> 00:13:33,760
Barry: Robin was a joyous kid.
218
00:13:35,649 --> 00:13:37,981
He took great joy in being
on television.
219
00:13:38,109 --> 00:13:40,316
This was the funniest kid
you could ever meet.
220
00:13:40,445 --> 00:13:42,436
Maurice: My father called him
the nanny goat.
221
00:13:42,572 --> 00:13:44,153
He was always going... "Ewww!"
222
00:13:44,282 --> 00:13:47,570
He'd be rehearsing in the back
of the car doing all these faces.
223
00:13:47,702 --> 00:13:49,158
You know, j I love you...
224
00:13:49,287 --> 00:13:51,778
And he'd go, "shut up!
Sound like a bloody nanny goat."
225
00:13:53,583 --> 00:13:56,370
J' I started a joke
226
00:13:57,295 --> 00:14:01,629
j which started
the whole world crying
227
00:14:02,592 --> 00:14:04,958
Robin was always a bit of a loner.
228
00:14:05,095 --> 00:14:08,258
Robin: I like being spontaneous,
I like being funny with people,
229
00:14:08,390 --> 00:14:10,802
but you won't get that right away
with me, you see?
230
00:14:10,934 --> 00:14:13,550
Barry: Robin had a wit
that no one could compete with.
231
00:14:13,687 --> 00:14:15,348
And he could be very dark, too.
232
00:14:15,981 --> 00:14:18,563
J' 1 looked at the sky...
233
00:14:18,692 --> 00:14:21,604
Maurice: Robin is not a person
who would say, �I love my brothers."
234
00:14:21,736 --> 00:14:25,274
Or... "Group hug."
You know, none of that stuff.
235
00:14:25,407 --> 00:14:28,570
Robin: I'm basically a very shy person.
I'm very hard to get to know.
236
00:14:28,702 --> 00:14:32,445
I have to really know somebody
before I reveal myself.
237
00:14:32,580 --> 00:14:35,117
J till I finally died
238
00:14:36,626 --> 00:14:41,336
j which started the whole world living
239
00:14:42,924 --> 00:14:45,415
j oh, oh...
240
00:14:45,552 --> 00:14:47,292
Maurice: You know, that's the voice,
241
00:14:47,429 --> 00:14:49,841
that's the voice
that reaches your heart.
242
00:14:55,020 --> 00:14:56,931
Barry: We did a show
at the saville theatre.
243
00:14:57,063 --> 00:14:59,520
Paul McCartney was there
with Jane Asher.
244
00:14:59,649 --> 00:15:03,187
Because Robert had said,
"will you come and see the boys?"
245
00:15:03,320 --> 00:15:06,904
When you think that, five months
before all this was going on,
246
00:15:07,032 --> 00:15:09,990
I was in pitt street buying up
the Beatles fan club book.
247
00:15:10,827 --> 00:15:12,738
And now here I am partying
with these guys.
248
00:15:12,871 --> 00:15:14,782
We felt like we'd arrived.
249
00:15:14,914 --> 00:15:17,621
Now I'm living out in highgate,
outside London.
250
00:15:17,751 --> 00:15:19,366
Barry's got a place in eaton square.
251
00:15:19,502 --> 00:15:22,539
Robin's got a house
in St. George's hill. Beautiful area.
252
00:15:22,672 --> 00:15:25,084
Barry: And mum and dad
had their own place,
253
00:15:25,216 --> 00:15:27,127
and, of course, Andy lived with them.
254
00:15:28,053 --> 00:15:29,213
He was just like us.
255
00:15:29,346 --> 00:15:31,132
And he was always tagging along,
256
00:15:31,264 --> 00:15:34,848
hoping that one day he would do this,
too, he would like to sing.
257
00:15:34,976 --> 00:15:37,718
Maurice: There was a lot of hits
in that short time.
258
00:15:37,854 --> 00:15:40,470
After all the work we had done
through clubs and everything,
259
00:15:40,607 --> 00:15:43,940
I felt grown up, you know,
and so we made the most of it.
260
00:15:44,069 --> 00:15:46,105
Host 1: A very talented group of men,
the Bee Gees!
261
00:15:46,237 --> 00:15:47,943
Host 2: Once again
the fabulous Bee Gees!
262
00:15:48,073 --> 00:15:50,610
Here they are and get involved
with the Bee Gees!
263
00:15:50,742 --> 00:15:52,903
J' I am man and you are woman
264
00:15:53,036 --> 00:15:56,403
j who needs marriage?
We are humans all
265
00:15:57,123 --> 00:15:59,205
by then we were flying, you know?
266
00:15:59,334 --> 00:16:00,995
Just the most amazing experience.
267
00:16:01,127 --> 00:16:03,368
J then it would please you
if I should call
268
00:16:05,006 --> 00:16:07,338
j doesn't matter wnat your name is
269
00:16:07,467 --> 00:16:10,049
j' 1 can do a million things to you
270
00:16:10,178 --> 00:16:13,295
as a pop group, this was
the biggest moment of our lives.
271
00:16:13,431 --> 00:16:17,549
Never expected.
Hoped for, but never really expected.
272
00:16:26,194 --> 00:16:28,185
J' no, no, no
273
00:16:28,655 --> 00:16:30,236
j no, no
274
00:16:31,825 --> 00:16:33,440
then came "Massachusetts."
275
00:16:34,119 --> 00:16:36,360
Robin said, "I've got this idea
for a song."
276
00:16:36,496 --> 00:16:40,739
He sang the melody,
and I just remember our jaws dropping.
277
00:16:44,629 --> 00:16:50,841
J' feel I'm going back to massachusetfts
278
00:16:53,972 --> 00:16:57,260
j; Something's telling me
279
00:16:57,392 --> 00:16:59,599
j' I must go home
280
00:17:02,230 --> 00:17:06,564
j' and the lights all went out
281
00:17:06,693 --> 00:17:09,935
j in Massachusetts
282
00:17:11,239 --> 00:17:15,027
j' the day I left her
283
00:17:15,160 --> 00:17:18,527
j standing on her own
284
00:17:19,414 --> 00:17:22,577
man: For me, they connected
from very early on.
285
00:17:22,709 --> 00:17:27,043
�Massachusetts� was probably the first
song, I think, that really resonates.
286
00:17:27,172 --> 00:17:31,256
There is a... gospel quality to it.
287
00:17:31,384 --> 00:17:33,716
There's a folk quality to it.
288
00:17:34,304 --> 00:17:37,046
I didn't know where the hell
Massachusetts was.
289
00:17:37,182 --> 00:17:42,142
But I found myself singing that
and translating it to where I was from.
290
00:17:42,979 --> 00:17:46,392
Robert goes, ""Massachusetts'
has just gone to number one!"
291
00:17:46,524 --> 00:17:47,524
We went, "what?"
292
00:17:47,650 --> 00:17:49,561
To have a number one in england,
293
00:17:49,694 --> 00:17:52,481
you have no idea how much
we dreamed of this back in Australia.
294
00:17:52,614 --> 00:17:55,856
J and Massachusetts
295
00:17:55,992 --> 00:18:01,407
j' is one place I have seen
296
00:18:04,125 --> 00:18:05,725
host: "Massachuseftts�
from the Bee Gees.
297
00:18:06,252 --> 00:18:09,995
Woman: I met the Bee Gees
at top of the pops, I was young.
298
00:18:10,131 --> 00:18:12,622
Was I 167 maybe I was even 17.
299
00:18:12,759 --> 00:18:15,466
Announcer: Top pop girl in America.
Top pop girl in britain.
300
00:18:15,595 --> 00:18:17,256
I'ne one and only Lulu!
301
00:18:17,388 --> 00:18:19,003
J some people live within the world
302
00:18:19,140 --> 00:18:21,222
j and some people live without it
303
00:18:21,351 --> 00:18:23,182
j some people gotta whisper their love
304
00:18:23,311 --> 00:18:25,222
j' and some, they gofta shout it
305
00:18:26,231 --> 00:18:29,598
the Bee Gees were always in the studio.
306
00:18:29,734 --> 00:18:31,144
They were always recording.
307
00:18:32,695 --> 00:18:35,402
They would literally go into the studio
and start writing.
308
00:18:35,532 --> 00:18:38,865
I had never known
anything like that before.
309
00:18:38,993 --> 00:18:42,326
We don't usually write our lyrics
till the day we sing them.
310
00:18:42,455 --> 00:18:44,696
We usually write our lyrics
in the studio itself.
311
00:18:44,832 --> 00:18:47,323
That seems to work
through thick and thin.
312
00:18:47,460 --> 00:18:48,745
It always works for us.
313
00:18:48,878 --> 00:18:51,415
Maurice: It's very hard
to describe how we write.
314
00:18:51,548 --> 00:18:54,164
But the only way I can describe
how we work at it
315
00:18:54,300 --> 00:18:55,506
is by becoming one mind.
316
00:18:56,135 --> 00:19:00,128
Barry: Maurice had unique insight
into the way Robin and I thought.
317
00:19:01,349 --> 00:19:03,510
He would just be fiddling around
on the piano.
318
00:19:03,810 --> 00:19:07,018
He'd suddenly play something,
we'll go... "What was that?"
319
00:19:07,146 --> 00:19:09,057
He was trying to please us,
320
00:19:09,190 --> 00:19:11,772
in the way that we would all
try to please each other.
321
00:19:11,901 --> 00:19:14,313
And that sometimes
was the birth of a song.
322
00:19:14,445 --> 00:19:17,437
We'll wake each other's little
instincts up and the melodies come.
323
00:19:17,949 --> 00:19:20,031
It's wonderful when you hear it
taking shape.
324
00:19:20,159 --> 00:19:21,490
Then it all blossoms.
325
00:19:21,619 --> 00:19:24,452
- The third verse is four bars.
- It's rolling, fellas.
326
00:19:24,581 --> 00:19:26,321
They'd say, "ok, we're ready to roll.�
327
00:19:26,457 --> 00:19:28,288
They'd play the song.
I'd work the chords out.
328
00:19:28,418 --> 00:19:31,410
Colin would figure out
what he's gonna do on the drums.
329
00:19:32,297 --> 00:19:35,630
They'd say, "right, here we go.
Bang, bang, bang." Down it went.
330
00:19:38,052 --> 00:19:41,636
And that spontaneity
came out in the songs.
331
00:19:42,724 --> 00:19:45,466
Barry: In those days, you knocked
an album out in three weeks.
332
00:19:45,602 --> 00:19:47,638
I think we had three albums out
in one year.
333
00:19:47,770 --> 00:19:50,933
J' but that was when I got an idea
334
00:19:51,065 --> 00:19:53,681
j came like a gun and shot in my ear
335
00:19:54,402 --> 00:19:58,486
j don't you think it's time you got up
and stood alone?
336
00:19:59,699 --> 00:20:01,280
Melouney: When we went to Europe,
337
00:20:01,409 --> 00:20:05,698
there'd always be a big bunch of kids
outside waiting for us to arrive.
338
00:20:06,331 --> 00:20:09,915
It was a frightening time because
they crawled all over the Mercedes.
339
00:20:10,043 --> 00:20:14,707
They were on the roof,
they were over the window. It was crazy.
340
00:20:14,839 --> 00:20:19,458
"Hey, guys, you think we're famous?"
"Could be."
341
00:20:21,554 --> 00:20:25,843
Announcer: The Bee Gees!
The most exciting sound in the world.
342
00:20:27,393 --> 00:20:32,183
J now I've found
343
00:20:32,315 --> 00:20:35,227
j that the world
344
00:20:35,360 --> 00:20:37,316
j is round...
345
00:20:37,445 --> 00:20:39,481
If you've never been famous,
346
00:20:39,614 --> 00:20:43,027
the first time it happens
is a very difficult thing to handle.
347
00:20:43,159 --> 00:20:46,617
You don't know how to behave.
You don't know how to experience it.
348
00:20:46,746 --> 00:20:49,909
And that affected all of us
in its own way.
349
00:20:51,542 --> 00:20:54,033
Maurice: I had six rolls-royces
before I was 21.
350
00:20:54,170 --> 00:20:55,910
I don't know where they are now.
351
00:20:56,214 --> 00:20:57,829
But that's how crazy it was.
352
00:20:57,965 --> 00:21:00,581
Barry: We were all very selfish
at that point.
353
00:21:00,718 --> 00:21:05,758
The testosterone kicked in,
and the competition of life began.
354
00:21:08,810 --> 00:21:12,177
J' 1 told him I'm in no hurry
355
00:21:13,439 --> 00:21:15,896
j but if I broke her heart
356
00:21:16,025 --> 00:21:18,141
j then won't you tell her I'm sorry?
357
00:21:18,277 --> 00:21:21,519
Melouney: There was always a conflict
between Barry and Robin.
358
00:21:21,656 --> 00:21:24,568
They both had fantastic voices
359
00:21:24,701 --> 00:21:27,488
and Robin wanted to sing a song
and Barry wanted to sing it.
360
00:21:27,620 --> 00:21:31,954
J' 1 just gotla get a message to you
361
00:21:32,750 --> 00:21:34,786
j hold on
362
00:21:35,670 --> 00:21:37,410
j hold on
363
00:21:37,547 --> 00:21:40,380
Barry: Both of us wanted to be
individual performers.
364
00:21:40,508 --> 00:21:42,419
We all wanted individual recognition.
365
00:21:42,552 --> 00:21:44,884
And therein lies the issue.
366
00:21:46,180 --> 00:21:49,092
J hold on
367
00:21:50,560 --> 00:21:52,767
we're speaking to you from a club in...
368
00:21:52,895 --> 00:21:55,307
In Hamburg, and I'm Barry gibb
of the Bee Gees.
369
00:21:55,440 --> 00:21:58,102
Robin here. We've heard rumors
that the group is splitting up.
370
00:21:58,234 --> 00:21:59,940
Would you like to verify those rumors?
371
00:22:00,069 --> 00:22:03,186
If I was to say that was true,
I would be the premier of Russia.
372
00:22:03,322 --> 00:22:05,779
- I don't know.
- Thank you very much, Mr. petersen.
373
00:22:05,908 --> 00:22:08,240
- How about you, Mr. melouney?
- No, I don't think it is.
374
00:22:08,369 --> 00:22:10,735
No, no, no.
375
00:22:13,666 --> 00:22:19,127
Gallagher: I always say
that making music with your family
376
00:22:20,423 --> 00:22:24,291
is equally the greatest strength
and the greatest weakness
377
00:22:24,427 --> 00:22:27,385
you could ever have
in a musical partnership.
378
00:22:29,265 --> 00:22:33,725
To get to the top or near the top,
you've gotta be incredibly driven.
379
00:22:33,853 --> 00:22:36,014
And what drives you is your ego.
380
00:22:40,443 --> 00:22:42,229
It can be tricky to stay there.
381
00:22:43,237 --> 00:22:49,858
J' I am the searcher of my fortunes
382
00:22:49,994 --> 00:22:55,489
j' 1 got my right hand on the wheel
383
00:22:55,625 --> 00:22:58,412
Barry: The three of us stopped
looking inwards to each other
384
00:22:58,544 --> 00:23:02,332
and all started looking outwards
to what we could be individually.
385
00:23:02,465 --> 00:23:05,878
"To hell with what my brothers think.�
and each one of us was thinking that.
386
00:23:07,178 --> 00:23:10,136
J don't wanna live
387
00:23:10,264 --> 00:23:13,131
j' inside myself
388
00:23:13,267 --> 00:23:16,509
Gallagher: Travel the world
when you're young with a family member
389
00:23:16,646 --> 00:23:20,389
gives you a certain sense of who you are
and where you've come from.
390
00:23:20,525 --> 00:23:23,392
So, you kind of walk that tightrope.
391
00:23:23,528 --> 00:23:25,735
We'd been together all our lives,
don't forget.
392
00:23:25,863 --> 00:23:28,980
We'd been together since Robin and I
were five, singing professionally.
393
00:23:29,116 --> 00:23:30,401
That's a lot of years.
394
00:23:30,535 --> 00:23:32,947
Robin: We'd been kids living together
with each other
395
00:23:33,079 --> 00:23:36,663
right up until the time we arrived
and even after we arrived in england.
396
00:23:37,166 --> 00:23:41,830
J don't wanna live inside myself
397
00:23:41,963 --> 00:23:45,000
Barry: Robin was the first to say,
"I'm quitting the group.�
398
00:23:46,300 --> 00:23:53,138
I stopped really knowing Robin and his
personal life once we became famous.
399
00:23:53,808 --> 00:23:55,264
And the same with no.
400
00:23:55,893 --> 00:23:58,930
Our three lives
were three different lives.
401
00:23:59,063 --> 00:24:01,224
We were no longer living the same life.
402
00:24:08,489 --> 00:24:12,323
Brothers... in general,
it's a very complicated thing.
403
00:24:14,370 --> 00:24:17,908
Emotions are heightened and there's
things that go back to childhood
404
00:24:18,040 --> 00:24:22,158
about, you know, if one kid got more
attention than the other,
405
00:24:22,295 --> 00:24:26,083
and all these things play out in front
of just a small group of friends,
406
00:24:26,215 --> 00:24:28,297
but when you magnify that
with the whole world,
407
00:24:28,426 --> 00:24:30,337
it changes the game a little bit.
408
00:24:31,178 --> 00:24:34,887
Robin, that's a good picture.
That's you, Barry, Colin, Vince.
409
00:24:35,016 --> 00:24:36,722
- That's correct.
- Do you miss them?
410
00:24:37,393 --> 00:24:40,055
Well, it's not really a matter
of missing them, really.
411
00:24:40,187 --> 00:24:43,179
I still see them on and off
so that's the way things go.
412
00:24:43,816 --> 00:24:45,772
I'll show you the studio, anyway.
413
00:24:48,863 --> 00:24:52,071
Barry: It was really me and Robin
that were in conflict.
414
00:24:52,199 --> 00:24:54,064
And I think Maurice was in the middle.
415
00:24:54,201 --> 00:24:56,157
Story of my life, really.
416
00:24:56,287 --> 00:24:59,029
Barry would call and say,
"tell Robin if he wants to do that..."
417
00:24:59,248 --> 00:25:01,739
Robin would go,
"let Barry know I'll be over..."
418
00:25:01,876 --> 00:25:04,413
I said, "Robin, you call Barry."
"Barry, you call Robin."
419
00:25:04,545 --> 00:25:06,581
And they both said, "no, we won't."
420
00:25:06,714 --> 00:25:08,454
And for 18 months, they never did.
421
00:25:08,591 --> 00:25:12,800
Barry: We had this fascination
with calling the newspapers up.
422
00:25:13,721 --> 00:25:18,181
You'd call nme or you'd call
disc or music echo and say,
423
00:25:18,309 --> 00:25:22,348
"Robin said this about me and I want
to correct the record," and all that.
424
00:25:23,022 --> 00:25:25,183
Robin: It was a whole strange episode
of our lives.
425
00:25:25,316 --> 00:25:27,773
But a lot of things
had gone down at that time
426
00:25:27,902 --> 00:25:30,439
and we needed time apart
to think about them.
427
00:25:31,822 --> 00:25:34,188
Announcer: At caxton hall,
vip transport
428
00:25:34,325 --> 00:25:36,691
for very important pop star Barry gibb.
429
00:25:36,827 --> 00:25:41,366
He's getting married to 20-year-old
former miss Edinburgh, Linda gray.
430
00:25:43,751 --> 00:25:46,208
Their world was crazy at that time.
431
00:25:46,337 --> 00:25:50,171
At one time, there were three brothers,
and then all of the sudden,
432
00:25:50,299 --> 00:25:51,789
there were three wives.
433
00:25:51,926 --> 00:25:54,508
Maurice gibb and Lulu
became mister and missus
434
00:25:54,637 --> 00:25:58,846
at St. James parish church
at gerrards cross in buckinghamshire.
435
00:25:58,975 --> 00:26:04,845
Lulu: You think, by marrying someone
that you absolutely adore,
436
00:26:04,981 --> 00:26:08,724
you think that'll solve
all your problems. But, really...
437
00:26:08,859 --> 00:26:12,477
At caxton hall, Robin gibb
of the Bee Gees marries Molly hullis.
438
00:26:14,323 --> 00:26:17,907
Robin: Molly was my first real love,
the first serious one,
439
00:26:18,035 --> 00:26:20,822
but it was a very traumatic time for me.
440
00:26:23,082 --> 00:26:28,076
I went with my manager. He said, "Robin,
I'm going to send you to New Zealand."
441
00:26:28,212 --> 00:26:30,919
He says, "you're doing
the redwood park festival."
442
00:26:31,048 --> 00:26:34,211
So I went there, and it was advertised
that the Bee Gees were coming,
443
00:26:34,343 --> 00:26:35,753
not just Robin gibb, you see.
444
00:26:39,557 --> 00:26:41,343
Robin: All right, ok.
445
00:26:41,475 --> 00:26:43,136
Man: How did you feel last night?
446
00:26:43,269 --> 00:26:46,352
Robin: Um... I have an obligation
to my audience not to look scared.
447
00:26:46,480 --> 00:26:48,766
I can't say I really felt scared.
448
00:26:49,859 --> 00:26:50,939
I was terrified.
449
00:26:52,862 --> 00:26:55,604
J how far am I able fo...
450
00:27:05,291 --> 00:27:07,122
Barry: All three of us became isolated.
451
00:27:08,002 --> 00:27:11,540
And all three of us did things
to each other
452
00:27:11,672 --> 00:27:13,628
that I think we're all sorry for.
453
00:27:16,510 --> 00:27:17,625
We loved each other.
454
00:27:17,762 --> 00:27:20,094
There was an enormous amount
of love between us.
455
00:27:20,222 --> 00:27:22,133
Growing up, we did everything together.
456
00:27:22,266 --> 00:27:27,636
We often thought we were triplets,
because we all had the same love.
457
00:27:27,772 --> 00:27:30,855
We had the same sense of humor,
the love of the same kind of music.
458
00:27:30,983 --> 00:27:32,974
Barry: Just typical kids, you know,
459
00:27:33,110 --> 00:27:35,396
but the one thing
that no one else was doing
460
00:27:35,529 --> 00:27:36,939
was we were singing in Harmony,
461
00:27:37,073 --> 00:27:40,065
and beyond anything else,
that's all we cared about.
462
00:27:42,078 --> 00:27:44,194
We fell in love with the mills brothers.
463
00:27:44,330 --> 00:27:47,367
They all did something unique
in their own way.
464
00:27:47,500 --> 00:27:50,207
At the same time,
Robin and I did two different leads
465
00:27:50,336 --> 00:27:53,169
and Maurice would always know
where to put that other melody,
466
00:27:53,297 --> 00:27:54,503
to make a three-part Harmony.
467
00:27:54,632 --> 00:27:56,543
They mirrored what we wanted to be.
468
00:27:57,468 --> 00:28:00,175
Host: Do you find you miss
Robin and Maurice, musically?
469
00:28:00,304 --> 00:28:05,048
Yeah. Not musically,
I miss them both as brothers.
470
00:28:06,018 --> 00:28:09,806
Jonas: And something about entering
the world from the same place,
471
00:28:09,939 --> 00:28:12,396
I think, has an effect on your ability
to sing together,
472
00:28:12,525 --> 00:28:16,939
your creative awareness
and your artistic voice.
473
00:28:17,071 --> 00:28:19,403
Host: Could we see the Bee Gees
back together again?
474
00:28:19,532 --> 00:28:23,491
Um, that's a very strong point,
that it could be.
475
00:28:23,619 --> 00:28:27,407
I can't say definite, but I'd like
to see the Bee Gees again.
476
00:28:30,126 --> 00:28:32,868
Reporter: Mr. Epstein has been unwell
now for some months.
477
00:28:33,003 --> 00:28:36,666
He's been in the habit of taking tablets
to help him sleep at night.
478
00:28:36,799 --> 00:28:38,881
He was found in his second-floor bedroom
479
00:28:39,009 --> 00:28:41,546
just after two o'clock this afternoon
by his housekeeper.
480
00:28:41,679 --> 00:28:45,137
Brown: When Brian died
and we restructured nems,
481
00:28:45,266 --> 00:28:49,680
Robert asked to become a more important
senior executive for the Beatles.
482
00:28:50,312 --> 00:28:52,223
And that wasn't acceptable to them,
483
00:28:52,982 --> 00:28:56,019
so he then left the company
484
00:28:56,152 --> 00:28:59,189
and took with him Eric Clapton
and Bee Gees
485
00:28:59,321 --> 00:29:01,437
so he could start off on his own.
486
00:29:01,574 --> 00:29:02,689
Barry: We were an asset.
487
00:29:02,825 --> 00:29:06,534
We were one of those people Robert
needed as an element of going public.
488
00:29:08,122 --> 00:29:11,410
At the launching of the company,
we were starting to communicate again.
489
00:29:13,627 --> 00:29:17,119
And once we came back together again,
we wrote "lonely days,"
490
00:29:17,256 --> 00:29:20,714
which reflected the idea
that we'd been broken up.
491
00:29:20,843 --> 00:29:24,176
We'd always been boys
growing up together,
492
00:29:24,305 --> 00:29:26,842
and I think we came back
together as men.
493
00:29:26,974 --> 00:29:30,341
We respected each other's opinions,
which we didn't before that.
494
00:29:32,563 --> 00:29:35,100
If anything, that was the good thing
about the break-up.
495
00:29:37,902 --> 00:29:40,063
J' I can think of younger days...
496
00:29:40,196 --> 00:29:42,528
Barry: I'd already started
a first verse and chorus.
497
00:29:42,656 --> 00:29:44,772
I knew what "how can you mend
a broken heart" was.
498
00:29:44,909 --> 00:29:46,570
But Robin walks in.
499
00:29:46,702 --> 00:29:50,069
I said, "I'm just working on this song.
Do you wanna do it with me?"
500
00:29:50,206 --> 00:29:51,616
And he went, "yeah, of course.�
501
00:29:51,749 --> 00:29:57,039
J I could never see tomorrow...
502
00:29:57,171 --> 00:29:58,707
We'd been apart for two years.
503
00:29:58,839 --> 00:30:01,706
If we hadn't been brothers,
we wouldn't have lasted half an hour.
504
00:30:01,842 --> 00:30:03,753
It just wouldn't have happened.
505
00:30:06,263 --> 00:30:07,924
J hey
506
00:30:08,057 --> 00:30:10,218
j' how can you mend
507
00:30:11,227 --> 00:30:12,512
j' a broken heart...
508
00:30:12,645 --> 00:30:14,727
Things started to just improve
over time.
509
00:30:16,106 --> 00:30:19,769
J how can you stop
the rain from falling down?
510
00:30:19,902 --> 00:30:21,813
We became the Bee Gees again.
511
00:30:21,946 --> 00:30:24,187
J' how can you stop
512
00:30:25,658 --> 00:30:27,865
j' the sun from shining?
513
00:30:28,953 --> 00:30:32,787
J what makes the world go round?
514
00:30:34,625 --> 00:30:37,867
Barry: We came back together and made
two number-one records in America.
515
00:30:38,003 --> 00:30:40,494
So we were on a bit of a high.
516
00:30:42,758 --> 00:30:44,794
But we were not really that good
517
00:30:44,927 --> 00:30:47,714
when it came to just doing
anything without a pill.
518
00:30:48,514 --> 00:30:50,300
You know, or without a drink.
519
00:30:50,432 --> 00:30:51,922
It was destroying us.
520
00:30:52,059 --> 00:30:54,050
J' my broken heart
521
00:30:54,186 --> 00:30:56,848
that became, that became the battle.
522
00:30:56,981 --> 00:30:59,688
The fight to survive being a pop group.
523
00:30:59,817 --> 00:31:01,478
J dah-dah-dah-dah
524
00:31:02,611 --> 00:31:05,193
j dah-dah-dah-dah-dah
525
00:31:05,322 --> 00:31:06,528
j dah
526
00:31:14,665 --> 00:31:17,748
Thank you very, very much
on behalf of my brothers,
527
00:31:17,876 --> 00:31:18,991
Robin,
528
00:31:20,879 --> 00:31:22,289
and Maurice.
529
00:31:23,340 --> 00:31:24,921
And this beautiful orchestra.
530
00:31:26,885 --> 00:31:29,001
Our lead guitarist, Alan Kendall.
531
00:31:30,973 --> 00:31:33,840
Man: Robert stigwood said,
"the Bee Gees are gonna go on a tour
532
00:31:33,976 --> 00:31:37,218
and want a guitar player that can play
bass as well," because in those days,
533
00:31:38,105 --> 00:31:42,269
Maurice played bass
but he would go on piano sometimes.
534
00:31:42,401 --> 00:31:45,768
And so I called him and I said,
"well, I can't play bass."
535
00:31:45,904 --> 00:31:48,270
And he said,
"just say you can play bass."
536
00:31:48,407 --> 00:31:50,614
So I said, "ok, I can play bass."
537
00:31:53,579 --> 00:31:56,742
I'll be honest, I was very much
into the lifestyle.
538
00:31:56,874 --> 00:32:00,833
I just loved being on the road,
I loved playing music, chasing women.
539
00:32:02,379 --> 00:32:05,542
Maurice is so funny
cos he was good at magic tricks.
540
00:32:05,674 --> 00:32:07,915
And he liked to drink a little,
as I did.
541
00:32:08,802 --> 00:32:11,009
Robin I never really knew.
542
00:32:11,138 --> 00:32:14,096
I mean, I'd converse with him,
but not as much as the others.
543
00:32:14,224 --> 00:32:16,510
And I would bump into him
every now and then
544
00:32:16,643 --> 00:32:18,508
wandering the corridors of the hotel,
545
00:32:19,730 --> 00:32:22,642
and there's Barry
with his glamorous wife
546
00:32:22,775 --> 00:32:24,606
smoking a bone, you know.
547
00:32:25,986 --> 00:32:31,197
My early days with the Bee Gees were,
for me, thrilling.
548
00:32:31,325 --> 00:32:33,907
Even though I can understand
why it wasn't for them,
549
00:32:34,036 --> 00:32:36,493
cos they weren't
necessarily selling out.
550
00:32:39,124 --> 00:32:42,537
Barry: When we were broken up,
the world changed radically, quickly.
551
00:32:43,670 --> 00:32:47,629
And that was the beginning of the period
when there was no interest in us at all.
552
00:32:48,217 --> 00:32:49,707
Remember, we were on tour.
553
00:32:49,843 --> 00:32:53,381
They'd try to keep Robin
from looking out into the audience,
554
00:32:53,514 --> 00:32:55,470
in case it was only half full.
555
00:32:55,599 --> 00:32:57,931
When we got back home,
I'd tend to do more drinking.
556
00:32:58,060 --> 00:33:00,176
I'd go to the pubs,
the police knew my car.
557
00:33:01,271 --> 00:33:03,603
I was becoming the town drunk.
558
00:33:04,400 --> 00:33:06,106
I had about two grand in the bank
559
00:33:06,235 --> 00:33:08,317
and lived next door
to a fish-and-chip shop.
560
00:33:08,445 --> 00:33:12,939
Barry: So, by "74, we didn't think there
was gonna be much of a future.
561
00:33:13,909 --> 00:33:16,571
When you become famous,
you think everyone loves you
562
00:33:16,703 --> 00:33:19,160
and they're gonna love you forever.
That is not true.
563
00:33:22,793 --> 00:33:26,126
Maurice: All of a sudden, we had to work
the clubs of the north of england
564
00:33:26,255 --> 00:33:28,541
to pay the tax man,
so we had the sheffield fiesta,
565
00:33:28,674 --> 00:33:31,086
the golden garter in Manchester,
batley variety club...
566
00:33:31,969 --> 00:33:33,049
Great clubs of our time.
567
00:33:33,971 --> 00:33:38,180
Kendall: The batley thing, it's where
all the has-beens went to play.
568
00:33:38,308 --> 00:33:39,844
Not saying that they were has-beens,
569
00:33:39,977 --> 00:33:42,343
but it was like, "god, not batley,"
you know.
570
00:33:42,479 --> 00:33:43,844
J Sunday morning...
571
00:33:43,981 --> 00:33:46,848
Woman: I was a waitress
at the batley variety club.
572
00:33:46,984 --> 00:33:50,272
I really wasn't a fan of the Bee Gees.
573
00:33:50,404 --> 00:33:52,861
The only thing I knew about them was,
574
00:33:53,282 --> 00:33:56,615
you know, Maurice was going
through a divorce with Lulu.
575
00:33:57,369 --> 00:33:59,985
Maurice: Yvonne came in
and I saw her eyes.
576
00:34:00,664 --> 00:34:03,280
I don't know about the rest of her,
I just saw her eyes.
577
00:34:03,417 --> 00:34:05,578
And I said, "I'm gonna marry her."
578
00:34:06,545 --> 00:34:08,627
And I knew I was gonna marry her.
579
00:34:09,173 --> 00:34:13,086
Yvonne: He was so cute.
His personality was amazing.
580
00:34:13,218 --> 00:34:15,334
Robin:
Maurice had this childlike quality,
581
00:34:15,471 --> 00:34:17,837
which is something very special in men.
582
00:34:18,515 --> 00:34:21,177
Yvonne: He loved dressing up
in police uniforms.
583
00:34:21,768 --> 00:34:24,726
Wherever we went on tour,
they'd give him a hat, give him a badge.
584
00:34:24,855 --> 00:34:26,595
- Is that his wallet?
- It's a badge.
585
00:34:26,732 --> 00:34:30,099
- Whoa! What was that?
- I'm not showing you now.
586
00:34:30,235 --> 00:34:33,147
People loved him.
He had the best smile ever.
587
00:34:33,280 --> 00:34:37,444
I remember him teaching me
the show-biz smile,
588
00:34:37,576 --> 00:34:40,033
and he said, "the trick is,
you don't move your eyes...
589
00:34:40,829 --> 00:34:42,239
And you just go like this.�
590
00:34:45,042 --> 00:34:46,498
And I'll be honest with you,
591
00:34:46,627 --> 00:34:49,664
I think Maurice was the glue
that held it all together.
592
00:34:49,796 --> 00:34:51,457
Oh, I'm Mr. fix-it.
593
00:34:51,590 --> 00:34:54,377
There's some discrepancy
between Barry and Robin,
594
00:34:54,510 --> 00:34:56,626
or we're gonna make a decision
about something,
595
00:34:56,762 --> 00:34:57,877
"what does Maurice think?"
596
00:34:58,013 --> 00:35:02,382
But most of the time, I'm like my mum.
I'm the peacemaker.
597
00:35:03,143 --> 00:35:05,930
Yvonne: If they'd not been brothers,
they would not be together.
598
00:35:06,522 --> 00:35:07,978
No doubt in my mind.
599
00:35:13,320 --> 00:35:18,064
Man: I met the Gibbs when they were on
a bit of a downturn in their career.
600
00:35:18,200 --> 00:35:21,237
Robert stigwood made me, unaccountably,
the head of his record label.
601
00:35:21,370 --> 00:35:22,860
I was only 21 years old.
602
00:35:22,996 --> 00:35:27,285
I believe it was because I was the only
guy in the room that I got the job.
603
00:35:27,417 --> 00:35:28,657
It was odd to me. I thought,
604
00:35:28,794 --> 00:35:31,706
if they can write those songs,
how come they can't be consistent?
605
00:35:31,838 --> 00:35:34,955
If you can write "how can you mend
a broken heart" and "to love somebody,"
606
00:35:35,092 --> 00:35:36,502
where does that talent go?
607
00:35:37,302 --> 00:35:40,214
There was two albums
in a row that were dismal.
608
00:35:41,515 --> 00:35:44,848
Ahmet ertegun said to Robert,
"maybe their time is gone."
609
00:35:44,977 --> 00:35:47,468
Cos Atlantic were paying
for these recordings.
610
00:35:47,604 --> 00:35:49,515
And Robert wouldn't hear of it,
of course.
611
00:35:49,648 --> 00:35:51,684
He would never let the Bee Gees go.
612
00:35:51,817 --> 00:35:55,150
There was this thing about stigwood.
613
00:35:55,279 --> 00:35:58,396
Stigwood and his loyalties.
614
00:35:59,366 --> 00:36:02,403
I had a kind of deep-seated resentment
about the fact that,
615
00:36:02,536 --> 00:36:05,994
you know, they were still his favorite.
616
00:36:09,960 --> 00:36:14,124
I had come out of a long period
of addiction and alcoholism,
617
00:36:14,256 --> 00:36:17,498
and I went into the sort
of recovery period.
618
00:36:18,635 --> 00:36:22,298
All these musical ambitions
came to the surface.
619
00:36:22,431 --> 00:36:25,173
So I went to Miami to record.
620
00:36:28,061 --> 00:36:31,428
Barry: We had a conversation with Eric
about making the comeback.
621
00:36:31,565 --> 00:36:35,308
Eric said, "I've just made this album
called 461 ocean boulevard in Miami.
622
00:36:35,444 --> 00:36:39,187
Why don't you make an album in America
instead of making an album in england
623
00:36:39,323 --> 00:36:43,111
and maybe a change of environment
will do something for you?"
624
00:36:43,243 --> 00:36:45,529
The studio there was unbelievable.
625
00:36:45,662 --> 00:36:51,282
And I think that's what
the suggestion was about, really.
626
00:36:52,002 --> 00:36:55,415
I thought those guys
were actually an R&B band
627
00:36:55,547 --> 00:36:58,038
that hadn't really worked that out yet.
628
00:36:58,175 --> 00:37:00,461
I thought, man, this would be so good
629
00:37:00,594 --> 00:37:03,427
if they could pick up
on what's going on in America.
630
00:37:03,555 --> 00:37:07,093
Kendall: I do know that they
had to change something.
631
00:37:07,225 --> 00:37:11,685
That's when the whole idea of actually
being more of a band together
632
00:37:11,813 --> 00:37:15,021
rather than musicians and orchestras
and all that stuff.
633
00:37:16,943 --> 00:37:19,730
Man: Alan Kendall,
who was a friend of mine, he said,
634
00:37:19,863 --> 00:37:23,606
"the Bee Gees are looking for a drummer.
Are you interested?"
635
00:37:24,284 --> 00:37:30,120
And I went, "uh, yes. I think
I'm interested. Yeah, I am interested."
636
00:37:30,916 --> 00:37:32,622
Barry: We needed to get more energized
637
00:37:32,751 --> 00:37:36,664
and don't rely so much on the ballads
that we had been doing.
638
00:37:36,797 --> 00:37:41,587
We wanted to be a band so bad.
And that was basically the birth of it.
639
00:37:42,386 --> 00:37:44,342
Bryon: We had a great
bass player, Maurice.
640
00:37:44,471 --> 00:37:46,507
We had a great guitar player, Alan.
641
00:37:46,640 --> 00:37:50,007
So really, the only thing we needed
was a keyboard player.
642
00:37:50,143 --> 00:37:51,383
And I thought, blue.
643
00:37:58,527 --> 00:38:02,896
Dennis called and said, "I'm putting
a band together with the Bee Gees.
644
00:38:03,031 --> 00:38:08,321
I've spoken to Barry and everybody's
in agreement. Are you interested?"
645
00:38:08,453 --> 00:38:13,368
I said, "no, no. I'm having great fun.
I'm in a rock-and-roll band."
646
00:38:13,500 --> 00:38:15,161
Queen was our support act.
647
00:38:15,293 --> 00:38:18,251
I'm touring America
and living the rock-and-roll life.
648
00:38:18,380 --> 00:38:21,463
J you don't get me,
I'm part of the union
649
00:38:21,591 --> 00:38:25,334
j you don't get me,
I'm part of the union...
650
00:38:25,470 --> 00:38:28,382
Bryon: We'd grown up together
playing in bands in Cardiff.
651
00:38:28,515 --> 00:38:31,131
I said, "we've known each other
for a long time, right?"
652
00:38:31,268 --> 00:38:33,725
He said, "Dan, don't do this to me."
653
00:38:33,854 --> 00:38:35,936
And I said, "I am doing it to you."
654
00:38:39,985 --> 00:38:44,570
And after you've met Barry, if you don't
wanna do it, I'll leave you alone."
655
00:38:46,867 --> 00:38:50,451
Barry: Maurice and I had moved
to the Isle of Man, where we were born.
656
00:38:50,579 --> 00:38:53,412
Blue was the guy who was gonna
come to the Isle of Man
657
00:38:53,540 --> 00:38:55,656
and audition for us on piano.
658
00:38:55,792 --> 00:39:00,252
J if I were you and you were me...
659
00:39:00,380 --> 00:39:04,840
Weaver: We were staying in Barry's house
and Linda and then Maurice came over.
660
00:39:04,968 --> 00:39:07,175
And hughie, the father.
661
00:39:08,138 --> 00:39:10,504
Instantly, you feel
comfortable with them.
662
00:39:10,640 --> 00:39:17,227
They started talking about synthesizers
and moogs, and blue had them all.
663
00:39:17,355 --> 00:39:20,893
It was the Sunday evening I was leaving
and hughie said,
664
00:39:21,026 --> 00:39:23,392
"hey, we haven't heard you play,"
you know.
665
00:39:23,528 --> 00:39:25,644
But my piano was so bad
666
00:39:26,448 --> 00:39:29,485
that he played something
and it just sounded awful.
667
00:39:29,618 --> 00:39:32,075
It was just, like, totally embarrassing.
668
00:39:32,204 --> 00:39:35,742
I said, "sounds fine to me, man,
let's do it," you know?
669
00:39:35,874 --> 00:39:37,489
Barry offered him the job.
670
00:39:37,626 --> 00:39:39,537
Weaver: I'd always loved the music,
671
00:39:39,669 --> 00:39:41,910
but the first time
you ever hear the Bee Gees,
672
00:39:42,047 --> 00:39:45,084
just when they're in a room like this,
you know, it's just magic.
673
00:39:45,842 --> 00:39:48,128
I think that's what
won me over with them.
674
00:39:48,261 --> 00:39:52,345
I said, "yes,"
and January the 1st we left.
675
00:39:53,058 --> 00:39:54,719
J doo-doo-doo doo-aoo-doo
676
00:39:54,851 --> 00:39:58,514
j doo-Dee-doo-dah-day
677
00:40:19,209 --> 00:40:20,699
Man: Miami is a gateway city.
678
00:40:20,836 --> 00:40:23,828
But in those days,
it was kind of sleepy,
679
00:40:23,964 --> 00:40:25,920
you know, a little off the beaten path.
680
00:40:26,925 --> 00:40:29,632
But in the winter,
that was the place to be.
681
00:40:29,761 --> 00:40:32,343
So Atlantic records
would always book their acts
682
00:40:32,472 --> 00:40:34,053
down in criteria.
683
00:40:34,182 --> 00:40:35,922
J when the lights shine...
684
00:40:36,059 --> 00:40:38,892
I was about the number-three engineer
at the studio.
685
00:40:39,020 --> 00:40:42,478
I worked my way up,
and I was at that point in my career
686
00:40:42,607 --> 00:40:44,143
where I was ready for anything.
687
00:40:44,276 --> 00:40:45,641
J get on up
688
00:40:46,278 --> 00:40:48,189
j look around
689
00:40:48,321 --> 00:40:52,314
j can't you feel the wind of change?
690
00:40:52,450 --> 00:40:55,192
When we got to Miami,
all of the sudden sunshine and, oh...
691
00:40:56,288 --> 00:40:57,653
You know, this is paradise.
692
00:40:57,789 --> 00:41:01,532
We'd come from england, and so there
was nothing sleepy about America.
693
00:41:01,668 --> 00:41:05,707
Put them in the same house I'd rented
for Eric Clapton, 461 ocean boulevard.
694
00:41:05,839 --> 00:41:07,375
Weaver: The first thing all of us did
695
00:41:07,507 --> 00:41:10,089
was take pictures
against that palm tree,
696
00:41:10,218 --> 00:41:11,754
doing the Eric Clapton pose.
697
00:41:12,387 --> 00:41:14,503
J we need a god down here...
698
00:41:14,639 --> 00:41:17,722
Weaver: Being in that house together,
you know, we were creative.
699
00:41:17,851 --> 00:41:20,433
And we were a family,
I mean, I felt like that.
700
00:41:20,562 --> 00:41:22,518
Kendall: It did make us close.
701
00:41:22,647 --> 00:41:25,514
I mean, you had to be,
and we'd all watch TV at night.
702
00:41:25,650 --> 00:41:27,356
The chemistry, it was very exciting.
703
00:41:27,485 --> 00:41:30,352
Weaver: In the morning, you went
to breakfast, had a cup of tea.
704
00:41:30,488 --> 00:41:31,603
It was all very relaxed.
705
00:41:31,740 --> 00:41:33,776
J taste the air
706
00:41:33,909 --> 00:41:38,653
j can't you see the wind of change?
707
00:41:38,788 --> 00:41:41,154
It was strange considering
the amount of pressure
708
00:41:41,291 --> 00:41:43,532
that was really
on the Bee Gees at that time.
709
00:41:43,668 --> 00:41:44,999
They were about to drop us.
710
00:41:45,128 --> 00:41:48,620
We had to adopt a new sound,
we had to adopt a new attitude.
711
00:41:48,757 --> 00:41:52,716
So the next step was, we brought
arif mardin in to produce them.
712
00:41:53,970 --> 00:41:56,240
Aretha Franklin: J day dreamin'
and I'm thinking of you...
713
00:41:56,264 --> 00:41:59,347
Barry: We'd often worked with other
people, but they weren't producers,
714
00:41:59,476 --> 00:42:01,012
and this man was a literal producer.
715
00:42:01,895 --> 00:42:05,729
Oakes: They expressed how much they
wanted to do American R&B kind of stuff,
716
00:42:05,857 --> 00:42:08,519
and arif was top of the heap for that.
717
00:42:08,652 --> 00:42:11,564
Maurice: Arif was so instrumental
in producing black artists,
718
00:42:11,696 --> 00:42:13,106
and we wanted that input.
719
00:42:13,239 --> 00:42:18,734
J it turns me rignt on
when I hear him say...
720
00:42:18,870 --> 00:42:22,454
Robin: We actually did an album
with arif before that, but arif said,
721
00:42:22,582 --> 00:42:24,743
"we've gotta go more into R&B."
722
00:42:24,876 --> 00:42:29,540
And we started working together
right here in Miami down at criteria.
723
00:42:30,799 --> 00:42:34,212
Well, I was in studio b,
and arif says to me,
724
00:42:34,344 --> 00:42:36,130
"Karl, have I got a group for you."
725
00:42:37,764 --> 00:42:39,629
And, of course,
everybody knew the Bee Gees.
726
00:42:40,475 --> 00:42:43,467
It was a surprise, out of nowhere.
I was excited.
727
00:42:43,603 --> 00:42:47,596
You know, they sing like angels,
and they were as excited as I was.
728
00:42:47,732 --> 00:42:49,848
And arif was right in there with them.
729
00:42:49,985 --> 00:42:53,102
Robin: He said, "look, if you're ever
going to break open brand new,
730
00:42:53,238 --> 00:42:54,398
you've gotta start now.
731
00:42:54,531 --> 00:42:57,068
Shock the pants off these people
who don't believe in you."
732
00:42:57,200 --> 00:42:59,907
Maurice: Robert came and saw us
when we were making the album.
733
00:43:00,036 --> 00:43:04,450
Sat down with us on the beach and said,
"right, we're gonna start from scratch.
734
00:43:04,582 --> 00:43:07,619
This is gonna be it. Let's make it big."
735
00:43:09,546 --> 00:43:11,753
Man: If you said to me, or anyone,
736
00:43:11,881 --> 00:43:14,247
�just go and write a hit song
right now,"
737
00:43:14,384 --> 00:43:16,466
they would be able
to craft something good,
738
00:43:16,594 --> 00:43:19,256
but it would probably be missing
this magic that,
739
00:43:19,389 --> 00:43:23,553
if you work in music long enough
you understand is running everything.
740
00:43:23,685 --> 00:43:25,801
Like surfers with waves.
741
00:43:25,937 --> 00:43:29,054
Surfers don't make the waves,
fishermen don't make the fish.
742
00:43:29,190 --> 00:43:32,353
Songwriters don't really write songs,
you receive songs.
743
00:43:34,362 --> 00:43:36,478
Barry: Driving backwards
and forwards to criteria,
744
00:43:36,614 --> 00:43:38,946
this clickety-click thing was going on
on this bridge
745
00:43:39,075 --> 00:43:42,158
every time we crossed over it,
and in my head it sounded like...
746
00:43:46,750 --> 00:43:47,750
And it was gone.
747
00:43:47,876 --> 00:43:51,209
And eventually, I started
singing to it in my head.
748
00:43:51,337 --> 00:43:53,919
J' just your jive talkin...
749
00:43:54,049 --> 00:43:55,789
Kendall: I remember
going in the studio.
750
00:43:55,925 --> 00:43:58,086
Barry said,
"can you do chicken pickin'?"
751
00:43:58,219 --> 00:44:00,175
I didn't really know what it was.
752
00:44:01,181 --> 00:44:04,673
So I played this one note and muted it,
thought it sounded like a chicken.
753
00:44:04,809 --> 00:44:07,346
J tak-it-ta-ka, tak-it-ta-ka...
754
00:44:07,479 --> 00:44:10,721
And mixed with Barry's rhythm guitar,
it really worked, you know.
755
00:44:10,857 --> 00:44:13,439
J' it's just your jive talkin'
756
00:44:13,568 --> 00:44:15,980
j' you're tellin" me lies, yeah
757
00:44:16,112 --> 00:44:17,693
j jive talkin'
758
00:44:17,822 --> 00:44:19,653
j you wear a disguise
759
00:44:20,283 --> 00:44:21,989
j jive talkin'
760
00:44:22,118 --> 00:44:24,450
j so misunderstood, yeah
761
00:44:24,579 --> 00:44:26,240
j jive talkin'
762
00:44:26,372 --> 00:44:28,488
j' you're really no good
763
00:44:28,625 --> 00:44:32,163
at that time, only a handful
of R&B artists were using synthesizers
764
00:44:32,295 --> 00:44:35,583
so we went into this field, uh...
765
00:44:35,715 --> 00:44:37,455
Pioneering in a way.
766
00:44:42,263 --> 00:44:45,847
Music is this huge energy
flying around everywhere,
767
00:44:45,975 --> 00:44:49,388
and if you're lucky, you get little
slices of it that turn into songs.
768
00:44:49,521 --> 00:44:51,807
- There is a sort of...
- Like a radio transmitter.
769
00:44:51,940 --> 00:44:53,271
It's exactly like that.
770
00:44:53,399 --> 00:44:55,127
As if somebody's written
the songs in the air
771
00:44:55,151 --> 00:44:56,391
and they're giving them to us.
772
00:44:56,528 --> 00:44:59,645
J' leaving me looking
like a dumbstruck fool
773
00:44:59,781 --> 00:45:02,238
j' with all your jive talkin'
774
00:45:02,367 --> 00:45:03,482
j you're tellin me lies...
775
00:45:03,618 --> 00:45:06,781
Robin: Robert pressed for "jive talkin�
to come out as the first single,
776
00:45:06,913 --> 00:45:09,245
because it was something
totally unexpected from us.
777
00:45:09,374 --> 00:45:12,582
Oakes: We sent the record out
but without naming the Bee Gees on it
778
00:45:12,710 --> 00:45:17,454
because by then, their stock had fallen
so low with radio stations in America.
779
00:45:17,590 --> 00:45:20,923
And within hours of the record
landing at all the radio stations,
780
00:45:21,052 --> 00:45:23,919
they were calling and saying,
"who is this? This is amazing."
781
00:45:24,055 --> 00:45:25,090
Time, weather, and...
782
00:45:26,975 --> 00:45:29,466
Kasem: The British group
who move into number one this week
783
00:45:29,602 --> 00:45:32,765
hit number one exactly
four years ago to the week.
784
00:45:34,315 --> 00:45:36,271
I'he brand-new number-one song
in the usa,
785
00:45:36,401 --> 00:45:39,689
the Bee Gees and "jive talkin"
786
00:45:44,159 --> 00:45:47,071
Maurice: When "jive talkin� came out,
everybody went, "who?
787
00:45:47,203 --> 00:45:49,819
The Bee Gees? 'Broken heart' Bee Gees?
Are you kidding?"
788
00:45:50,331 --> 00:45:53,619
Richardson: Something different was
happening, and the brothers felt it too.
789
00:45:53,751 --> 00:45:56,959
Miami, Miami beach,
that whole vibe turned them on.
790
00:45:57,088 --> 00:45:59,454
Barry: I just fell in love
with the atmosphere here.
791
00:45:59,591 --> 00:46:01,957
It reminded me so much
of growing up in Australia.
792
00:46:03,428 --> 00:46:04,543
Man: I'hat's great.
793
00:46:04,679 --> 00:46:07,637
Barry: And from "jive talkin� onwards,
we kicked it up.
794
00:46:08,683 --> 00:46:11,846
Richardson: The songwriting
was just very unique, nothing like it.
795
00:46:11,978 --> 00:46:15,436
They would write on the spot,
and they would bounce off each other.
796
00:46:15,565 --> 00:46:17,931
Engineer: You let us know
when you're ready.
797
00:46:18,067 --> 00:46:20,004
Richardson: �Nights on Broadway"
was one of those.
798
00:46:20,028 --> 00:46:21,893
The guys had been to New York
and they'd go,
799
00:46:22,030 --> 00:46:23,691
"we gotta write a New York
kind of song."
800
00:46:23,823 --> 00:46:25,233
Engineer: Here we go. Take ten.
801
00:46:25,366 --> 00:46:28,904
Richardson: They just did it naturally
in the studio, and everybody chipped in.
802
00:46:29,037 --> 00:46:30,527
Barry: Three, four...
803
00:46:35,877 --> 00:46:37,959
J well, here we are
804
00:46:39,047 --> 00:46:40,833
j in a room full of...
805
00:46:40,965 --> 00:46:42,796
Barry: Ahmet ertegun came to Miami.
806
00:46:42,926 --> 00:46:45,508
He was there when we were
cutting "nights on Broadway."
807
00:46:45,637 --> 00:46:47,969
At the time, it was
"lights on Broadway."
808
00:46:48,097 --> 00:46:49,382
J blamin' it all
809
00:46:50,433 --> 00:46:52,469
j on the lights on Broadway
810
00:46:53,478 --> 00:46:55,560
and ahmet went, "no."
811
00:46:56,022 --> 00:46:59,560
He says, "you know, you've got to get
more adult about the songs."
812
00:46:59,901 --> 00:47:02,483
And so "lights on Broadway"
became "nights on Broadway."
813
00:47:02,612 --> 00:47:06,150
J well, I had to follow you
814
00:47:07,825 --> 00:47:11,568
j' though you did not want me to
815
00:47:13,581 --> 00:47:16,698
j that won't stop my loving you
816
00:47:18,503 --> 00:47:21,995
j' 1 can't stay away
817
00:47:22,131 --> 00:47:23,587
j blamin' it all
818
00:47:24,717 --> 00:47:27,629
j on the nights on Broadway
819
00:47:27,762 --> 00:47:29,377
j' singing them love songs
820
00:47:30,181 --> 00:47:31,825
j' singing them
straight to the heart songs
821
00:47:31,849 --> 00:47:33,769
Maurice: We were completing
"nights on Broadway."
822
00:47:33,851 --> 00:47:35,682
We'd just done most of the vocal tracks.
823
00:47:35,812 --> 00:47:38,679
Usually at the end you have some adlibs
or some kind of thing
824
00:47:38,815 --> 00:47:41,431
to take us away from the original melody
and have some fun.
825
00:47:41,567 --> 00:47:43,307
Richardson: Arif suggested to the band,
826
00:47:43,444 --> 00:47:45,435
"we really need some kind
of background parts
827
00:47:45,571 --> 00:47:48,859
that come in and express
the meaning of the song."
828
00:47:48,992 --> 00:47:53,361
Barry: He was looking for one of us
to scream, in tune, if possible.
829
00:47:54,038 --> 00:47:55,699
I said, "I'll give it a shot.�
830
00:47:55,832 --> 00:47:58,539
Are we almost ready? Well, let's do it.
831
00:47:58,668 --> 00:48:01,455
So he went out then,
he did the "blamin" it all's.
832
00:48:03,256 --> 00:48:04,621
J biamin' it all
833
00:48:06,050 --> 00:48:08,006
j' blame it on the nights on Broadway
834
00:48:08,636 --> 00:48:10,376
everybody in the control room woke up,
835
00:48:10,513 --> 00:48:12,754
and it was like,
"oh, this is a new sound."
836
00:48:12,890 --> 00:48:15,347
J blamin' it all on the nights
on Broadway
837
00:48:15,476 --> 00:48:17,387
j' blame it on the nights on Broadway
838
00:48:17,520 --> 00:48:21,012
Barry: I was thinking, "my god, where
is this coming from? I can do this."
839
00:48:21,149 --> 00:48:23,435
My whole life I didn't know
I could do this.
840
00:48:23,568 --> 00:48:24,774
Everybody's giving me credit.
841
00:48:24,902 --> 00:48:27,063
No, he was singing it.
I said, "keep on doing it."
842
00:48:27,196 --> 00:48:29,107
J' blame it on the nights on Broadway
843
00:48:29,240 --> 00:48:30,776
j' yeah, yeah
844
00:48:30,908 --> 00:48:33,820
j' singing them
straight to the heart songs
845
00:48:33,953 --> 00:48:34,988
j blamin' it all...
846
00:48:35,121 --> 00:48:38,238
Arif brought it out of us, all that.
We weren't the first to sing falsetto.
847
00:48:42,587 --> 00:48:45,499
We loved the stylistics.
We loved the spinners, the delfonics.
848
00:48:46,341 --> 00:48:48,252
They were all falsetto lead singers.
849
00:48:49,010 --> 00:48:52,343
J' if I had money I'd go out
850
00:48:52,472 --> 00:48:53,552
j' buy you pearls
851
00:48:53,681 --> 00:48:56,718
j' dress you like a queen
852
00:48:56,851 --> 00:48:58,933
Riley: Something to be said
about all music
853
00:48:59,062 --> 00:49:01,053
is that it doesn't happen in a vacuum.
854
00:49:01,189 --> 00:49:05,057
The falsetto is very much
a black tradition.
855
00:49:05,193 --> 00:49:09,232
But they've translated it into
this interesting interpretation of soul.
856
00:49:10,239 --> 00:49:12,946
But I guess, more importantly for me,
it's emotional.
857
00:49:18,331 --> 00:49:22,370
Because we were so excited about this,
we started writing songs for this voice.
858
00:49:22,502 --> 00:49:24,743
Richardson: It created another
dimension of sound.
859
00:49:24,879 --> 00:49:26,870
That's what we thought, emotionally.
860
00:49:27,006 --> 00:49:30,169
It became another icon of the Gibbs.
861
00:49:30,301 --> 00:49:34,510
Everybody knew when you heard
that falsetto, that's the Bee Gees.
862
00:49:34,639 --> 00:49:39,099
J ooh, be tender with my love
863
00:49:39,811 --> 00:49:43,599
j' you know how easy it is to hurt me
864
00:49:43,731 --> 00:49:45,267
Maurice: When we sing songs like...
865
00:49:45,400 --> 00:49:48,437
J' you know how easy it is to hurt me
866
00:49:49,028 --> 00:49:50,893
it's Barry and Robin
singing in unison,
867
00:49:51,030 --> 00:49:54,488
but they mesh together so well
that it sounds like one voice,
868
00:49:54,617 --> 00:49:57,029
but it's a different voice
from them separately.
869
00:49:57,161 --> 00:49:59,447
J with my love
870
00:49:59,580 --> 00:50:02,572
j' you know how easy it is to hurt me
871
00:50:02,708 --> 00:50:04,164
j yeah-eah
872
00:50:04,293 --> 00:50:06,249
j' Fanny, be tender...
873
00:50:06,379 --> 00:50:08,461
Riley: It's delivered with such delicacy
874
00:50:08,589 --> 00:50:12,298
and the message in the lyrics
875
00:50:13,344 --> 00:50:15,801
was what guys should say,
876
00:50:15,930 --> 00:50:18,262
didn't say, couldn't say,
for whatever reasons.
877
00:50:18,391 --> 00:50:21,758
It's the kind of music you might have
bought and given to your girlfriend.
878
00:50:21,894 --> 00:50:24,806
But that's what
was special about them.
879
00:50:24,939 --> 00:50:26,145
J ahh
880
00:50:26,274 --> 00:50:28,435
j ahh-ah-ah
881
00:50:28,568 --> 00:50:32,026
j' Fanny, be tender with my love
882
00:50:32,155 --> 00:50:34,567
Barry: Main course became
a turning point for us.
883
00:50:34,699 --> 00:50:39,489
Dennis bryon on drums
and blue Weaver and Alan Kendall.
884
00:50:39,620 --> 00:50:41,156
That became our band.
885
00:50:41,289 --> 00:50:43,245
J with my love
886
00:50:43,374 --> 00:50:45,706
j' cos it's all that I've got
887
00:50:45,835 --> 00:50:48,542
j' and my love won't desert me
888
00:50:48,671 --> 00:50:50,832
j be Fender, tender...
889
00:50:54,177 --> 00:50:57,886
In many ways they were
chameleons of pop.
890
00:50:58,556 --> 00:51:00,217
Clapton: The way they changed
891
00:51:00,349 --> 00:51:03,512
and the groove they got into there
was so profound.
892
00:51:04,020 --> 00:51:07,478
If that was something
that was initiated by me,
893
00:51:07,607 --> 00:51:11,350
I can't think of any... it's one of
the great things I've done in my life.
894
00:51:11,486 --> 00:51:13,226
I'll take full credit.
895
00:51:21,954 --> 00:51:25,071
Barry: We were getting ready
to record the next album,
896
00:51:25,208 --> 00:51:29,872
and we get this phone call that arif
can't be involved in this album.
897
00:51:31,631 --> 00:51:35,795
Robert chose to take the organization
away from Atlantic records
898
00:51:35,927 --> 00:51:37,383
and go private.
899
00:51:38,387 --> 00:51:40,878
Atlantic, who were not happy about that,
900
00:51:41,015 --> 00:51:43,848
said, "you're not using arif anymore,
he's a house producer.�
901
00:51:43,976 --> 00:51:46,388
I said, "what about the next album?�
you know.
902
00:51:46,521 --> 00:51:49,308
I said, "who do you think
can continue where you left off?"
903
00:51:51,651 --> 00:51:53,983
Richardson: I got a call from Barry
and he said,
904
00:51:54,111 --> 00:51:56,443
�I want my studio time back
to work with you."
905
00:52:00,785 --> 00:52:02,446
And I'm in the control room.
906
00:52:02,578 --> 00:52:04,034
I said to Dennis the drummer,
907
00:52:04,163 --> 00:52:07,280
�that pattern you're playing right now
is just a little too busy."
908
00:52:09,168 --> 00:52:10,954
He said, "well, what do you mean?"
909
00:52:11,087 --> 00:52:14,579
I said, "I can't get into specifics
about the note values."
910
00:52:14,715 --> 00:52:17,707
I didn't have a technical term
for the open and closed hi-hat
911
00:52:17,843 --> 00:52:19,174
or any of that stuff.
912
00:52:19,303 --> 00:52:22,716
So apparently, I needed a communicator.
913
00:52:25,810 --> 00:52:29,473
Man: I was working as an independent
producer on some pub band in London.
914
00:52:29,605 --> 00:52:31,891
Karl called and he said,
"what are you doing?"
915
00:52:32,024 --> 00:52:34,481
I said, "I finished the mix.
I'm on a plane tomorrow."
916
00:52:34,610 --> 00:52:37,477
Richardson: Albhy went to berklee
school of music in new england
917
00:52:37,613 --> 00:52:39,899
and he was one of my best friends.
918
00:52:40,032 --> 00:52:42,193
He says,
"I'll be on the next flight to Florida."
919
00:52:42,326 --> 00:52:44,612
J' baby, you turn me on...
920
00:52:44,745 --> 00:52:47,578
Galuten: I got off the plane,
I went straight to the studio.
921
00:52:47,707 --> 00:52:50,665
I walked in, they were working
on "you should be dancing."
922
00:52:50,793 --> 00:52:53,705
They came in the control room
and Barry said, "what did you think?"
923
00:52:53,838 --> 00:52:57,001
And I said, "well, I just got in,
but sounds awfully good."
924
00:52:57,133 --> 00:52:59,545
We seemed to hit it off,
so I came back the next day.
925
00:52:59,677 --> 00:53:03,010
We have to remember at the time,
albhy was a hippie.
926
00:53:03,139 --> 00:53:04,504
I mean, he was just different.
927
00:53:04,640 --> 00:53:07,427
J 1 get lifted up...
928
00:53:07,560 --> 00:53:11,098
Albhy used to hang around the studio,
and I got on really well with him.
929
00:53:11,772 --> 00:53:15,139
I found out he played on
"I shot the sheriff" with Eric.
930
00:53:15,276 --> 00:53:20,191
Albhy had an inroad into technology
and he had a great ear.
931
00:53:20,323 --> 00:53:23,065
Everybody just seemed to be,
I think, relieved
932
00:53:23,200 --> 00:53:28,820
to have another ear in the control room
to hear what they were doing as a whole.
933
00:53:37,715 --> 00:53:42,084
In the beginning when I came,
the three brothers were clearly a unit.
934
00:53:42,219 --> 00:53:45,552
Each knew the way their brother sang
and would be on the same mic,
935
00:53:45,681 --> 00:53:49,594
and they would lean in or lean out
or complement each other's voices,
936
00:53:49,727 --> 00:53:51,558
so it was in perfect synchrony.
937
00:53:51,687 --> 00:53:54,178
J' how a love so rignt
938
00:53:54,315 --> 00:53:55,521
j ooh
939
00:53:55,650 --> 00:53:59,268
j' can turn out to be so wrong...
940
00:53:59,403 --> 00:54:01,940
Barry: We found another sound,
we found a new sound.
941
00:54:02,073 --> 00:54:05,236
I came up with a lot of new ideas
to suit the falsetto.
942
00:54:05,910 --> 00:54:10,028
Everybody was saying the same thing.
"Do that falsetto again."
943
00:54:10,164 --> 00:54:12,325
That was fine for me,
I was having a ball.
944
00:54:18,339 --> 00:54:21,831
Man: A lot of new music
has been coming out of Miami lately.
945
00:54:21,967 --> 00:54:26,552
Enough so that we've even heard
mentioned the term "Miami sound.�
946
00:54:27,848 --> 00:54:30,464
J my baby moves at midnight
947
00:54:31,727 --> 00:54:33,888
j goes right on till the dawn
948
00:54:34,021 --> 00:54:36,228
Riley: This is actually
a really important period
949
00:54:36,357 --> 00:54:39,315
for musicianship and production
and songwriting
950
00:54:39,443 --> 00:54:41,434
that targets the dance floor.
951
00:54:44,115 --> 00:54:46,197
It's a different emotional energy,
952
00:54:46,325 --> 00:54:48,657
which is about,
"can you make the body move?
953
00:54:48,786 --> 00:54:50,572
Can you make the body happy?"
954
00:54:50,705 --> 00:54:54,163
J' you should be dancing, yeah
955
00:54:55,334 --> 00:54:57,199
j' dancing, yeah
956
00:54:57,336 --> 00:55:02,126
man: And certain songs sounded like
the human embodiment of a brass section.
957
00:55:02,258 --> 00:55:04,965
- The same way a horn just punches?
- Man: Yeah.
958
00:55:05,678 --> 00:55:07,464
That's what Barry's voice reminds me of.
959
00:55:07,596 --> 00:55:10,008
J gives me power
960
00:55:10,599 --> 00:55:13,136
j goes right down to my blood
961
00:55:13,269 --> 00:55:16,807
I was always into
arrangement of instruments.
962
00:55:16,939 --> 00:55:21,808
�You should be dancing,� their voices
together sound like trumpets to me.
963
00:55:21,944 --> 00:55:25,357
J' you should be dancing, yeah
964
00:55:25,489 --> 00:55:28,071
I am not high, for the record.
I just wanna...
965
00:55:34,498 --> 00:55:37,490
It was a discovery,
and we discovered a new audience.
966
00:55:37,626 --> 00:55:41,118
Man: At the clubs,
"you should be dancing" exploded.
967
00:55:41,255 --> 00:55:44,372
Not just, "oh, well, I heard that record
and I really liked it."
968
00:55:44,508 --> 00:55:49,093
It was three times a night
at any club that you went to.
969
00:55:49,221 --> 00:55:53,840
There was a whole industry that was
built around this clubbing thing.
970
00:55:53,976 --> 00:55:57,719
Billboard started a chart
that was dance music chart.
971
00:55:58,272 --> 00:56:03,938
This billion-dollar industry was being
built way before the Bee Gees.
972
00:56:04,069 --> 00:56:07,561
A lot of people
don't realize disco started
973
00:56:07,698 --> 00:56:10,155
in the gay and the black community.
974
00:56:10,284 --> 00:56:14,243
People don't understand what it was like
back then for gay people.
975
00:56:14,371 --> 00:56:19,286
There was a law in New York that
did not allow people of the same sex
976
00:56:19,418 --> 00:56:24,458
to dance together in a place
that had a liquor license.
977
00:56:24,590 --> 00:56:28,924
And then the law changed
and that allowed me to open my club.
978
00:56:31,222 --> 00:56:36,808
A new era of dance music started
in the gay underground clubs.
979
00:56:37,686 --> 00:56:39,972
J dream world
980
00:56:41,273 --> 00:56:47,769
so, the record industry
wants to name it, package it, sell it.
981
00:56:48,781 --> 00:56:52,865
That was the explosion
of the disco sound.
982
00:56:53,744 --> 00:56:56,861
J dream world
983
00:57:00,251 --> 00:57:03,038
we're down at criteria sound studios
984
00:57:03,170 --> 00:57:05,411
and currently it's the studio
985
00:57:05,548 --> 00:57:07,755
that's being used by the Bee Gees.
986
00:57:07,883 --> 00:57:11,876
What particular thing about the studio
makes it so attractive?
987
00:57:12,012 --> 00:57:14,469
It's cheap? = no.
988
00:57:15,516 --> 00:57:17,723
Cheap it isn't, but...
989
00:57:17,852 --> 00:57:20,810
But the actual atmosphere of the place
is very relaxing.
990
00:57:20,938 --> 00:57:23,179
We create better here
than anywhere else.
991
00:57:23,315 --> 00:57:24,875
That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
992
00:57:29,780 --> 00:57:32,237
Maurice:
America was the ultimate dream.
993
00:57:32,366 --> 00:57:36,484
As three kids, we said, "one day
we're gonna have houses in America
994
00:57:36,620 --> 00:57:38,736
all next door to each other
with swimming pools."
995
00:57:39,999 --> 00:57:41,705
We thought, "oh, that'll be great.�
996
00:57:46,964 --> 00:57:49,330
It was a huge uprooting.
997
00:57:51,010 --> 00:57:52,921
It's a very large family.
998
00:57:53,053 --> 00:57:56,511
And it just kept getting
bigger and bigger over time.
999
00:57:57,850 --> 00:58:00,387
Mum and dad came to Miami
as quickly as we did.
1000
00:58:01,228 --> 00:58:04,311
I think they were probably the happiest
they'd ever been in their lives.
1001
00:58:04,440 --> 00:58:06,897
And of course Andy came here with them.
1002
00:58:09,945 --> 00:58:12,732
Richardson: Andy was a gift
out of left field.
1003
00:58:13,490 --> 00:58:15,321
But I never knew he existed
1004
00:58:15,451 --> 00:58:18,864
until one day,
he shows up fresh from Australia.
1005
00:58:20,789 --> 00:58:22,450
Barry: Andy was a great kid.
1006
00:58:22,583 --> 00:58:24,744
He could do anything he set his mind to.
1007
00:58:25,210 --> 00:58:27,496
Barry was Andy's idol.
1008
00:58:28,047 --> 00:58:31,039
- They were almost like twins.
- Barry: We were very much alike.
1009
00:58:31,175 --> 00:58:33,257
We looked alike,
we had the same birthmarks.
1010
00:58:33,385 --> 00:58:36,673
I would say we were as much like twins
as Maurice and Robin.
1011
00:58:37,389 --> 00:58:40,096
Maurice: Main course, and
children of the world which followed,
1012
00:58:40,225 --> 00:58:41,681
were triple platinum.
1013
00:58:41,810 --> 00:58:43,971
I think he really wanted
to be a part of that.
1014
00:58:44,104 --> 00:58:47,471
They suggested that I go to Australia,
as my brothers first did in 1958,
1015
00:58:47,608 --> 00:58:49,189
when I was only five months old,
1016
00:58:49,318 --> 00:58:51,604
and start working there
and get some records released.
1017
00:58:52,571 --> 00:58:56,564
Linda: Andy was very young then.
He had his little band.
1018
00:58:56,700 --> 00:58:59,817
Barry: It was a process of building
him up, getting him to play live,
1019
00:58:59,954 --> 00:59:01,364
and getting him to be an artist.
1020
00:59:01,497 --> 00:59:02,907
Andy: I was there for two years.
1021
00:59:03,040 --> 00:59:06,908
A phone call came from my brother Barry
and said, "I wanna produce you."
1022
00:59:07,044 --> 00:59:09,911
And I think it was two weeks
I was in the studio
1023
00:59:10,047 --> 00:59:11,833
to do a new album in Miami.
1024
00:59:11,966 --> 00:59:13,672
I didn't think I was ready.
1025
00:59:13,801 --> 00:59:16,838
The first few times in front of a real
professional studio microphone,
1026
00:59:16,971 --> 00:59:18,836
Andy was, like, petrified.
1027
00:59:18,973 --> 00:59:21,305
But, you know, Barry was there
1028
00:59:21,433 --> 00:59:24,391
and guided him through
and helped him with lyrics.
1029
00:59:24,520 --> 00:59:27,182
He was very receptive to new ideas.
1030
00:59:30,401 --> 00:59:35,646
And it didn't take him long, you know,
to find, like, another groove.
1031
00:59:40,995 --> 00:59:42,576
J' for so long
1032
00:59:44,415 --> 00:59:48,533
j you and me been finding
each other for so long...
1033
00:59:48,669 --> 00:59:51,411
Galuten: The Bee Gees' point of view
was about having hit records
1034
00:59:51,547 --> 00:59:52,912
and being on the radio, and so,
1035
00:59:53,048 --> 00:59:55,881
the greatest gift that you could give
to your younger brother
1036
00:59:56,010 --> 00:59:59,093
would be to give him that success,
to write songs with him,
1037
00:59:59,221 --> 01:00:00,836
to teach him to be a star.
1038
01:00:00,973 --> 01:00:02,804
Jil..il..
1039
01:00:03,976 --> 01:00:07,309
J' 1 just wanna be your everything...
1040
01:00:07,438 --> 01:00:09,269
Barry: Then suddenly, out of nowhere,
1041
01:00:09,398 --> 01:00:11,434
Andy had about three
number ones in a row.
1042
01:00:11,567 --> 01:00:13,057
Oakes: He was a teen idol.
1043
01:00:13,193 --> 01:00:15,525
There wasn't talk about him
becoming a bee gee.
1044
01:00:15,654 --> 01:00:19,021
Robin saw he had a younger audience.
It was smart to keep him on his own.
1045
01:00:19,783 --> 01:00:21,364
J oh, baby
1046
01:00:21,493 --> 01:00:22,653
ji...
1047
01:00:23,620 --> 01:00:28,159
J if I stay here without you,
darling, I would die
1048
01:00:28,292 --> 01:00:30,328
Barry: All of the sudden,
he was the big thing.
1049
01:00:30,461 --> 01:00:34,545
There was a period when we lived
in the shadow of Andy's band.
1050
01:00:35,591 --> 01:00:38,879
J' io be your everything
1051
01:00:43,974 --> 01:00:46,010
Richardson:
After children of the world album,
1052
01:00:46,143 --> 01:00:49,385
the next project
we were booked to record in France,
1053
01:00:49,521 --> 01:00:53,855
cos of the Elton John album
honky chateau. It sounded great.
1054
01:00:53,984 --> 01:00:56,600
J bye-bye, chateau, I must leave you
1055
01:00:56,737 --> 01:00:58,193
j though it breaks my heart
1056
01:00:58,322 --> 01:01:02,156
Robert sent us there.
I think it was some kind of tax thing.
1057
01:01:02,284 --> 01:01:04,900
Richardson: We thought,
"if this studio sounds that good,
1058
01:01:05,037 --> 01:01:07,779
yeah, let's go off to France, why not?"
1059
01:01:12,211 --> 01:01:16,045
It wasn't the honky chateau
that Elton John had used.
1060
01:01:19,218 --> 01:01:21,755
A chateau sounds
absolutely gorgeous, doesn't it?
1061
01:01:21,887 --> 01:01:23,593
Beautiful building.
1062
01:01:23,722 --> 01:01:25,929
Great grounds and gardens
and ponds and fountains.
1063
01:01:26,058 --> 01:01:28,970
No, it's nothing like that.
1064
01:01:29,103 --> 01:01:32,846
It was a half-built castle.
No central heating, nothing.
1065
01:01:32,981 --> 01:01:33,981
And it was a dump.
1066
01:01:34,108 --> 01:01:36,474
Yvonne: We seemed to be
in the middle of nowhere.
1067
01:01:36,610 --> 01:01:38,521
Not a happy place to be.
1068
01:01:38,654 --> 01:01:41,987
It was kind of decrepit. I think
it'd been used to make porn movies.
1069
01:01:42,699 --> 01:01:43,859
This was not right.
1070
01:01:44,952 --> 01:01:49,537
But because there was a contract,
we just decided to plough on through.
1071
01:01:49,665 --> 01:01:53,874
Barry: We were going there to mix a live
album called here at last... live.
1072
01:01:54,002 --> 01:01:57,039
But also we were getting songs ready
for our new studio album,
1073
01:01:57,172 --> 01:01:59,504
which would be the follow-up
to children of the world.
1074
01:01:59,633 --> 01:02:02,796
And we got a call from Robert stigwood.
1075
01:02:08,934 --> 01:02:12,552
A friend of mine, Nik cohn, wrote
this piece for New York magazine,
1076
01:02:12,688 --> 01:02:14,849
"tribal rites
of the new Saturday night."
1077
01:02:14,982 --> 01:02:17,849
Disco was really under way,
in Manhattan, anyway.
1078
01:02:17,985 --> 01:02:19,646
But Nik cohn's point was that,
1079
01:02:19,778 --> 01:02:21,939
rather than just being
underground gay clubs,
1080
01:02:22,072 --> 01:02:25,985
straight couples are doing the hustle
on Saturday night in the suburbs.
1081
01:02:26,118 --> 01:02:28,780
I got Robert to buy the film rights
to a magazine article,
1082
01:02:28,912 --> 01:02:30,197
in which there was no story.
1083
01:02:30,330 --> 01:02:33,743
But it caught Robert's attention
because he saw
1084
01:02:33,876 --> 01:02:36,618
that that's a lead role for an actor,
if it was a movie.
1085
01:02:37,379 --> 01:02:39,836
He announced at the Beverly Hills hotel
at breakfast,
1086
01:02:39,965 --> 01:02:42,297
�I'm signing John Travolta
to a three-picture deal.�
1087
01:02:42,426 --> 01:02:43,836
People thought he was mad.
1088
01:02:43,969 --> 01:02:47,461
He was a TV actor. No one gets
a million dollars for three pictures.
1089
01:02:47,598 --> 01:02:50,965
Turned out to be the bargain of the
century because he got him for grease
1090
01:02:51,101 --> 01:02:54,184
and the movie we don't talk about,
moment by moment.
1091
01:02:54,313 --> 01:02:55,723
But two out of three's not bad.
1092
01:02:57,858 --> 01:03:01,771
I was still running rso records,
so my job was to do the soundtrack.
1093
01:03:01,904 --> 01:03:05,396
And my brief was,
"put all your favorite disco tracks.
1094
01:03:05,532 --> 01:03:07,972
Everyone will play it at a party
and will never stop dancing."
1095
01:03:13,207 --> 01:03:14,822
These were comparatively easy,
1096
01:03:14,958 --> 01:03:17,540
but we needed the Bee Gees
to write their few songs.
1097
01:03:18,712 --> 01:03:21,920
Barry: A phone call came from Robert
saying, "I wanna make this film."
1098
01:03:22,049 --> 01:03:24,256
He said, "but I'm gonna need
two or three songs."
1099
01:03:24,384 --> 01:03:26,796
It wasn't the idea that they would
do the soundtrack.
1100
01:03:26,929 --> 01:03:30,171
We knew they were busy, but,
"have you got some songs?" Robert said.
1101
01:03:30,307 --> 01:03:31,672
And they said, "yeah, sure.�
1102
01:03:32,726 --> 01:03:35,217
Barry: Robert said,
�I'm sending you a script."
1103
01:03:35,354 --> 01:03:37,720
But we decided not to read the script.
1104
01:03:37,856 --> 01:03:40,142
Robin: We weren't writing
the fever music.
1105
01:03:40,275 --> 01:03:43,859
We were writing our new album
and just having fun doing it.
1106
01:03:43,987 --> 01:03:48,071
They had a couple of tunes, or titles.
We thought, "let's leave it with them."
1107
01:03:48,200 --> 01:03:52,364
What we ended up doing
was the demos of these songs.
1108
01:03:52,496 --> 01:03:54,202
And I was really surprised
1109
01:03:54,331 --> 01:03:56,617
that it was only a few weeks later
we got the songs.
1110
01:03:57,542 --> 01:04:01,126
We got a cassette,
and to this day, it's amazing.
1111
01:04:10,013 --> 01:04:12,220
J on the waves of the air...
1112
01:04:12,349 --> 01:04:15,216
J you're in my life
1113
01:04:15,352 --> 01:04:18,765
it was just one after the other.
"Stayin' alive," "more than a woman."
1114
01:04:18,897 --> 01:04:22,936
"How deep is your love,"
"if I can't have you," "night fever."
1115
01:04:23,068 --> 01:04:27,232
On one cassette. I thought,
"yes, we've got a soundtrack."
1116
01:04:27,364 --> 01:04:29,776
Kendall: You know,
you listen to that tape,
1117
01:04:29,908 --> 01:04:32,024
whoever was playing,
there would have been hits.
1118
01:04:32,160 --> 01:04:36,824
The songs are so good, you think,
"shit," you know? "That's so cool.�
1119
01:04:37,791 --> 01:04:39,031
Barry: We had the demos,
1120
01:04:39,167 --> 01:04:41,954
and then we went into the process
of making real records.
1121
01:04:42,087 --> 01:04:46,547
Barry, Karl and I lived in that control
room, I don't know, 16 hours a day.
1122
01:04:46,675 --> 01:04:49,041
Yeah, that was the only thing to do.
1123
01:04:51,513 --> 01:04:53,253
We recorded "night fever" first.
1124
01:04:53,390 --> 01:04:54,926
We actually had that in the can.
1125
01:04:57,060 --> 01:04:59,972
Barry: Robert called and said,
"I need a title for the film."
1126
01:05:00,105 --> 01:05:02,938
"What I've got at the moment,�
I said, "is two titles:
1127
01:05:03,066 --> 01:05:06,979
Stayin' alive and night fever,"
and he said, "night fever."
1128
01:05:08,071 --> 01:05:11,529
He said, "sounds ok,
but it sounds a bit too pornographic.
1129
01:05:12,326 --> 01:05:15,238
It needs to be called
Saturday night,� he said.
1130
01:05:15,370 --> 01:05:17,406
So it turned into
Saturday night fever.
1131
01:05:17,539 --> 01:05:20,531
J' night fever, night fever
1132
01:05:20,667 --> 01:05:22,703
j we know how fo do it
1133
01:05:22,836 --> 01:05:25,248
oakes: We were editing fever
on the lot at Paramount.
1134
01:05:25,380 --> 01:05:27,666
I was deluged
by Paramount people saying,
1135
01:05:27,799 --> 01:05:29,835
"how's your little disco movie
coming along?"
1136
01:05:29,968 --> 01:05:31,378
So that was a bit patronizing.
1137
01:05:31,511 --> 01:05:34,878
But the inspiring thing was that
stigwood during post-production said,
1138
01:05:35,015 --> 01:05:38,007
"why wait for the release of the film?
Let's put out a single now."
1139
01:05:38,143 --> 01:05:40,930
Then he started with the heads
of Paramount. "How many theatres?"
1140
01:05:41,063 --> 01:05:42,644
They told him something like 200.
1141
01:05:42,773 --> 01:05:45,310
He said, "I'm releasing the record
in every city.
1142
01:05:45,442 --> 01:05:47,398
Why can't it be in every single city?"
1143
01:05:47,527 --> 01:05:50,564
So they made a deal whereby
if the record got to the top 20,
1144
01:05:50,697 --> 01:05:52,904
they would increase
the number of screens.
1145
01:05:53,033 --> 01:05:54,648
If it got top ten, they'd go more.
1146
01:05:54,785 --> 01:05:57,367
He said, "I need the first record
to be number one."
1147
01:06:01,792 --> 01:06:04,204
Weaver: Stigwood phoned up
and said to Barry,
1148
01:06:05,170 --> 01:06:08,833
"il need the best love song
you've ever written for the movie."
1149
01:06:09,674 --> 01:06:11,790
So we went into a room in the chateau.
1150
01:06:12,552 --> 01:06:16,170
Chopin had stayed there,
so every time I looked at this piano,
1151
01:06:16,306 --> 01:06:18,672
I envisaged chopin
sitting down and playing.
1152
01:06:20,310 --> 01:06:23,894
I sat down at the piano
and thought of his prelude in e flat,
1153
01:06:24,022 --> 01:06:26,183
and I knew Barry could sing in e flat.
1154
01:06:27,401 --> 01:06:30,359
When we were working like that,
I had a cassette player.
1155
01:06:37,160 --> 01:06:38,991
Barry: I think I wanna end there.
1156
01:06:47,003 --> 01:06:51,087
And I'm sure it happened at that point,
through the stained-glass window,
1157
01:06:51,925 --> 01:06:54,382
came a beam of sunlight, you know?
1158
01:06:54,511 --> 01:06:56,923
J' your eyes in the morning sun...
1159
01:06:59,224 --> 01:07:03,058
Barry: J I know your eyes
in the morning sun
1160
01:07:03,186 --> 01:07:07,976
j I feel you touch me
in the pouring rain...
1161
01:07:08,108 --> 01:07:11,396
Barry: And that's a memory,
that will last me all my life.
1162
01:07:12,070 --> 01:07:13,355
Never forget it.
1163
01:07:13,822 --> 01:07:15,028
Never forget it.
1164
01:07:18,368 --> 01:07:20,825
Weaver: All the feelings,
all the emotions are still there.
1165
01:07:20,954 --> 01:07:23,366
When you talk about it,
it all comes back.
1166
01:07:25,584 --> 01:07:26,915
I have a...
1167
01:07:28,920 --> 01:07:30,876
My heart is in that song.
1168
01:07:32,466 --> 01:07:36,584
J' I know your eyes in the morning sun
1169
01:07:36,720 --> 01:07:40,588
j I feel you touch me
in the pouring rain
1170
01:07:41,349 --> 01:07:45,843
j and the moment
that you wander far from me
1171
01:07:45,979 --> 01:07:49,221
j' I want to feel you in my arms again
1172
01:07:50,442 --> 01:07:54,981
j and you come to me
on a summer breeze
1173
01:07:55,113 --> 01:07:59,857
j keep me warm in your love
then you softly leave
1174
01:07:59,993 --> 01:08:02,780
j and it's me you need to show
1175
01:08:03,497 --> 01:08:09,533
j how deep is your love?
1176
01:08:09,669 --> 01:08:13,161
J' 1 really need to learn
1177
01:08:13,298 --> 01:08:17,917
j cos we're living in a world of fools
1178
01:08:18,053 --> 01:08:19,543
j' breaking us down
1179
01:08:20,222 --> 01:08:24,511
j when they all should let us be
1180
01:08:24,643 --> 01:08:28,727
j we belong to you and me
1181
01:08:30,524 --> 01:08:32,310
Weaver: Everything came together.
1182
01:08:33,193 --> 01:08:35,809
But sadly, Dennis had had some bad news.
1183
01:08:35,946 --> 01:08:39,063
Bryon: My mother was in hospital.
She had Alzheimer's.
1184
01:08:39,199 --> 01:08:42,407
So, you know...
I told Barry what was going on.
1185
01:08:42,536 --> 01:08:45,653
He said, "get dick to book you
a flight now."
1186
01:08:45,789 --> 01:08:49,828
He had to fly back to the uk,
and we had no drummer.
1187
01:08:49,960 --> 01:08:51,951
We thought, well,
we've got to carry on writing
1188
01:08:52,087 --> 01:08:54,203
and getting these tracks together.
1189
01:09:02,514 --> 01:09:05,005
Galuten: When I was at berklee,
I had studied things
1190
01:09:05,141 --> 01:09:06,677
where they were moving tapes around
1191
01:09:06,810 --> 01:09:09,017
and make sort of
these interesting Sonic loops.
1192
01:09:09,854 --> 01:09:11,185
And when Dennis was not there,
1193
01:09:11,314 --> 01:09:15,102
I said, "well, why don't we just take
a bar out of 'night fever'?
1194
01:09:15,235 --> 01:09:19,274
It's a slower tempo, we'll slow it down
a little bit and make a loop out of it."
1195
01:09:25,287 --> 01:09:28,495
We found a bar that we thought
had a nice feel to it.
1196
01:09:28,623 --> 01:09:32,832
We copied it over
to a half-inch four-track
1197
01:09:32,961 --> 01:09:35,577
and spliced the tape into a loop.
1198
01:09:40,969 --> 01:09:43,881
Galuten: I was pretty good at imagining
what you might be able to do,
1199
01:09:44,014 --> 01:09:46,050
but Karl was able to make it happen.
1200
01:09:46,182 --> 01:09:48,924
Richardson: It was just necessity
being the mother of invention.
1201
01:09:50,395 --> 01:09:54,764
Galuten: No one had taken a drum beat
before and created a two-bar phrase.
1202
01:09:54,899 --> 01:09:57,311
We were breaking new ground.
1203
01:09:57,444 --> 01:09:58,524
Man: Perfect.
1204
01:09:58,653 --> 01:10:00,609
Galuten: This is the first time
we had ever
1205
01:10:00,739 --> 01:10:04,277
taken the song and built it
piece by piece from the ground up,
1206
01:10:04,409 --> 01:10:05,899
and we started with this drum loop.
1207
01:10:07,579 --> 01:10:09,240
And then we did a bass line.
1208
01:10:11,291 --> 01:10:12,291
Then a guitar part.
1209
01:10:17,464 --> 01:10:20,581
Never again would we rely
as much on the liveness.
1210
01:10:20,717 --> 01:10:23,083
We would always know that
we could construct the song
1211
01:10:23,219 --> 01:10:27,053
and put the pieces together based on
the original vision of the song
1212
01:10:27,182 --> 01:10:28,797
and how we imagined it.
1213
01:10:31,519 --> 01:10:35,103
I got back to the sessions
and there was just a buzz.
1214
01:10:35,231 --> 01:10:37,893
When we did it, we thought,
"we're just doing this temporarily.
1215
01:10:38,026 --> 01:10:40,608
When Dennis comes back,
we'll replace it with real drums."
1216
01:10:40,737 --> 01:10:44,525
But what happened is, the feel was
so amazing, we couldn't get rid of it.
1217
01:10:44,658 --> 01:10:48,367
He played it for me, and I could tell,
from the first listen,
1218
01:10:48,495 --> 01:10:52,534
I said, "man, that is amazing.�
1219
01:10:52,666 --> 01:10:56,329
When you listen to the drum track
on "stayin' alive," like, by itself,
1220
01:10:56,461 --> 01:10:59,373
it's really this super rugged,
like, tough thing.
1221
01:10:59,506 --> 01:11:00,837
It's like...
1222
01:11:03,426 --> 01:11:06,008
It's not pretty or pop
like you remember, it's pretty tough.
1223
01:11:09,265 --> 01:11:12,382
Barry: "Stayin' alive� was the influence
that New York gave to us.
1224
01:11:13,311 --> 01:11:17,805
And the energy level at that point,
in the late '70s, was really that.
1225
01:11:17,941 --> 01:11:19,397
You know, survival, it's survival.
1226
01:11:19,526 --> 01:11:21,733
Man: This is "77, everybody know
the time is hard.
1227
01:11:21,861 --> 01:11:25,274
You know, if I was out there myself,
I would have got what I wanted, too.
1228
01:11:25,407 --> 01:11:28,069
- Reporter: You were not a looter?
- No, I wasn't. Unfortunate.
1229
01:11:28,201 --> 01:11:30,613
Reporter: Do you feel threatened
by the .44 caliber killer?
1230
01:11:30,745 --> 01:11:31,860
Woman: Yes, I do.
1231
01:11:31,996 --> 01:11:34,988
I don't feel free to walk the streets
or go out at all.
1232
01:11:35,583 --> 01:11:39,041
Robin: Very few people realize
it's to do with anything but dance.
1233
01:11:39,170 --> 01:11:41,126
The lyrics don't talk about dance
at all.
1234
01:11:41,881 --> 01:11:45,624
And the lyrics very obviously state
the scenario of survival.
1235
01:11:45,760 --> 01:11:48,217
J whether you're a brother
or whether you're a mother
1236
01:11:48,346 --> 01:11:50,428
j' you're stayin' alive, stayin' alive
1237
01:11:50,557 --> 01:11:52,673
j feel the city breakin'
and everybody shakin'
1238
01:11:52,809 --> 01:11:55,175
j and we're stayin' alive,
stayin' alive
1239
01:11:55,311 --> 01:11:57,393
j' ah, ha, ha, ha
1240
01:11:57,522 --> 01:11:59,137
j' stayin' alive, stayin' alive...
1241
01:11:59,274 --> 01:12:01,890
Timberlake: If you think about...
"Ah, ha, ha, ha..."
1242
01:12:02,026 --> 01:12:05,109
I mean, that could very easily
have just been a horn line.
1243
01:12:05,238 --> 01:12:07,024
Instead, their voices are so sick,
1244
01:12:07,157 --> 01:12:09,739
they're like,
"nah, we're gonna sing it."
1245
01:12:10,785 --> 01:12:12,321
J oh, when you walk
1246
01:12:13,955 --> 01:12:16,492
Riley: The general fever at the time
1247
01:12:16,624 --> 01:12:18,785
was you must see this film.
1248
01:12:19,544 --> 01:12:22,581
The songs precipitated the interest.
1249
01:12:22,714 --> 01:12:25,421
It was this cultural phenomenon.
1250
01:12:28,553 --> 01:12:30,168
In the first week of release,
1251
01:12:30,305 --> 01:12:32,637
they were having to hire
extra staff in some cinemas
1252
01:12:32,766 --> 01:12:34,631
to stop them dancing in the aisles.
1253
01:12:34,768 --> 01:12:37,635
J girl, I've known you very well,
seen you growin"...
1254
01:12:37,771 --> 01:12:40,478
Other movies were being put back
or taken out of other screens
1255
01:12:40,607 --> 01:12:41,687
to make room for fever.
1256
01:12:41,816 --> 01:12:44,023
It was really quite a phenomenon.
1257
01:12:44,152 --> 01:12:47,644
John took me aside at one point
and said, "what do you think?
1258
01:12:47,781 --> 01:12:50,739
You think maybe
an academy award nomination?"
1259
01:12:50,867 --> 01:12:52,232
I'm thinking, "Jesus Christ.
1260
01:12:52,368 --> 01:12:54,859
I mean, this is ridiculous.
It's a dance movie."
1261
01:12:55,413 --> 01:12:56,528
He had the last laugh.
1262
01:12:56,664 --> 01:12:59,576
Host: And John Travolta
in Saturday night fever.
1263
01:13:01,836 --> 01:13:04,703
Oakes: The fever thing happened,
that's when everything exploded.
1264
01:13:05,006 --> 01:13:06,792
Other record companies were printing it.
1265
01:13:06,925 --> 01:13:08,836
Our record company
couldn't keep up the pace.
1266
01:13:08,968 --> 01:13:12,426
We didn't know what was going on
because this was just a soundtrack.
1267
01:13:12,555 --> 01:13:16,139
Could I ask what Saturday night fever
has grossed thus far?
1268
01:13:16,267 --> 01:13:18,349
Around 110 million.
1269
01:13:18,478 --> 01:13:20,594
At the moment, in America.
1270
01:13:21,272 --> 01:13:23,012
- Host: In America?
- In America, yeah.
1271
01:13:23,149 --> 01:13:24,264
Host: And the album?
1272
01:13:24,400 --> 01:13:29,190
The album, I think, is nearing
18 million double albums worldwide.
1273
01:13:29,322 --> 01:13:31,734
But that would be
the record breaker of all time.
1274
01:13:31,866 --> 01:13:34,858
Yes, it's already
the biggest-grossing album
1275
01:13:34,994 --> 01:13:36,484
in the history of music.
1276
01:13:36,621 --> 01:13:39,033
Host: The statistics
are just incredible.
1277
01:13:39,165 --> 01:13:41,622
Four singles from Saturday night fever
1278
01:13:41,751 --> 01:13:43,082
have hit number one
1279
01:13:43,211 --> 01:13:44,667
since the album was released.
1280
01:13:44,796 --> 01:13:47,959
More than from any other
new album in history.
1281
01:13:48,091 --> 01:13:49,672
That's just a few of the statistics
1282
01:13:49,801 --> 01:13:52,668
that lead to gold records like this.
1283
01:13:52,804 --> 01:13:54,760
And so it's my privilege to say,
1284
01:13:54,889 --> 01:13:58,473
ladies and gentlemen,
will you welcome the Bee Gees?
1285
01:14:01,479 --> 01:14:04,767
Has it changed your lives,
the enormous success of it?
1286
01:14:05,984 --> 01:14:09,226
Yes, I can safely say
it's changed our lives.
1287
01:14:11,739 --> 01:14:14,230
The Bee Gees I think
were stunned by the success.
1288
01:14:16,870 --> 01:14:19,327
Barry: We were aware
we were creating a specific sound,
1289
01:14:19,455 --> 01:14:21,696
but we didn't know what it was gonna do.
1290
01:14:22,750 --> 01:14:26,163
Oakes: It did end up with them having
half the top ten with these songs.
1291
01:14:26,754 --> 01:14:27,994
It was extraordinary,
1292
01:14:28,131 --> 01:14:30,793
the same domination the Beatles
had in the '60s in America.
1293
01:14:33,428 --> 01:14:35,089
They were just everywhere.
1294
01:14:36,055 --> 01:14:39,218
- Friends don't treat us the same way.
- From a distance, you know.
1295
01:14:39,350 --> 01:14:42,888
I was speaking to one of my friends
as he was cleaning my shoes.
1296
01:14:43,021 --> 01:14:44,056
I said, "listen..."
1297
01:14:44,939 --> 01:14:48,648
Kendall: Stigwood said, "let's give
the band half a point or a quarter."
1298
01:14:48,776 --> 01:14:51,233
No, it's not a percentage.
That's a tiny amount of money.
1299
01:14:51,362 --> 01:14:55,150
But when you sell as many copies
as Saturday night fever sold,
1300
01:14:55,283 --> 01:14:57,274
it turns out to be big money.
1301
01:14:59,454 --> 01:15:02,491
Host: What are you doing
with these millions of dollars?
1302
01:15:02,624 --> 01:15:04,544
What are you doing
with your millions of dollars?
1303
01:15:04,584 --> 01:15:06,199
= oh, now! -
1304
01:15:06,336 --> 01:15:09,216
it is the biggest night of the year
for people in the recording industry.
1305
01:15:09,297 --> 01:15:10,377
The grammy awards.
1306
01:15:10,506 --> 01:15:12,963
And the winner is
Saturday night fever.
1307
01:15:15,678 --> 01:15:18,590
Oakes: For a soundtrack
to win best album was amazing.
1308
01:15:18,723 --> 01:15:21,635
It went on to be one
of the best-selling albums in history.
1309
01:15:24,395 --> 01:15:26,727
Barry: We didn't know
that we were defining the culture.
1310
01:15:26,856 --> 01:15:28,767
We were just still
Barry, Maurice and Robin,
1311
01:15:28,900 --> 01:15:30,300
wondering what the hell's going on.
1312
01:15:38,451 --> 01:15:40,692
Reporter:
The "fever" has been contagious.
1313
01:15:40,828 --> 01:15:43,240
Discos, the places in which
to dance away the night
1314
01:15:43,373 --> 01:15:45,614
and the morning hours, are thriving.
1315
01:15:45,750 --> 01:15:47,286
What the �fever� has done is made
1316
01:15:47,418 --> 01:15:50,376
just about anything
related to disco profitable.
1317
01:15:50,505 --> 01:15:53,668
Where there's money to be made,
disco is the business.
1318
01:15:53,800 --> 01:15:57,008
Barry: We didn't categorize
our songs as disco.
1319
01:15:57,136 --> 01:15:59,377
But then we weren't thinking
that way at all.
1320
01:15:59,514 --> 01:16:01,114
We were just thinking
about writing songs
1321
01:16:01,224 --> 01:16:03,681
based on this discovery
of this falsetto voice
1322
01:16:03,810 --> 01:16:05,346
and how well that seemed to work.
1323
01:16:05,478 --> 01:16:07,059
Oakes: What the Bee Gees brought,
1324
01:16:07,188 --> 01:16:09,304
I've always felt
they brought melody to disco.
1325
01:16:09,440 --> 01:16:12,648
Most disco at that point
was melody-free, you know.
1326
01:16:12,777 --> 01:16:15,063
This was a different take on disco.
1327
01:16:15,196 --> 01:16:19,064
It was completely for
the broadest possible audience.
1328
01:16:19,200 --> 01:16:21,031
- You got the lyrics?
- Yes, right here.
1329
01:16:21,160 --> 01:16:22,900
- Ok, let's go.
- Straight in.
1330
01:16:24,455 --> 01:16:26,195
One, two, three, four...
1331
01:16:29,585 --> 01:16:31,371
Right, that's it.
1332
01:16:40,346 --> 01:16:42,337
Hey, guys. Just too slow.
1333
01:16:42,473 --> 01:16:44,964
It would be nice to find
a bigger sound for that solo.
1334
01:16:45,101 --> 01:16:47,308
- The way we'd rehearsed it last night.
- All right.
1335
01:16:49,105 --> 01:16:51,016
Yeah, just like that, yeah.
1336
01:16:51,149 --> 01:16:52,909
Beautiful. Bring that sound in.
That's great.
1337
01:16:54,110 --> 01:16:55,566
- Yeah.
- Let's try it again.
1338
01:16:55,695 --> 01:16:58,027
Ok. One, two, three, four...
1339
01:16:58,156 --> 01:16:59,646
J tragedy
1340
01:16:59,782 --> 01:17:02,194
j when the feeling"s gone
and you can't go on
1341
01:17:02,326 --> 01:17:03,611
j' it's tragedy
1342
01:17:03,745 --> 01:17:05,952
j when the morning cries
and you don't know why
1343
01:17:06,080 --> 01:17:08,241
j it's hard to bear
1344
01:17:08,374 --> 01:17:09,864
j' with no one beside you
1345
01:17:10,001 --> 01:17:12,208
j' you're going nowhere
1346
01:17:13,421 --> 01:17:14,661
j ahh
1347
01:17:14,797 --> 01:17:16,503
when we brought out
spirits having flown,
1348
01:17:16,632 --> 01:17:18,839
it did phenomenally well.
1349
01:17:18,968 --> 01:17:21,710
At the same time,
fever was still in the top ten.
1350
01:17:21,846 --> 01:17:23,962
You know, we could
have left it another year,
1351
01:17:24,098 --> 01:17:26,931
and it still probably would have been
a little too soon
1352
01:17:27,060 --> 01:17:28,800
with what was going on with fever.
1353
01:17:37,904 --> 01:17:41,237
Good morning, everybody.
Charley steiner, 99x.
1354
01:17:41,365 --> 01:17:45,449
As is per usual for Monday,
a very busy day coming into town.
1355
01:17:46,746 --> 01:17:50,614
Steiner: I'm working at a top 40 station
in New York, a big one.
1356
01:17:51,417 --> 01:17:54,033
Wxlo, but it was known as 99x.
1357
01:17:54,170 --> 01:17:57,082
And I was the morning news guy.
1358
01:17:57,215 --> 01:18:01,003
Most radio stations
had a very small playlist.
1359
01:18:01,135 --> 01:18:06,346
And the Bee Gees probably had the top
four, top five hits any given week.
1360
01:18:06,474 --> 01:18:10,763
Thirteen cfrw/,
music of the Bee Gees and "tragedy."
1361
01:18:10,895 --> 01:18:12,635
Doing one more with the Bee Gees.
1362
01:18:12,772 --> 01:18:14,532
All the gibb brothers together,
the Bee Gees.
1363
01:18:14,565 --> 01:18:17,272
"You should be dancing,� you should
be shakin' that thing one time.
1364
01:18:17,401 --> 01:18:19,767
And for those of us
at the radio station,
1365
01:18:19,904 --> 01:18:22,566
we're... we're gonna take hostages.
1366
01:18:24,242 --> 01:18:29,032
And if you haven't had enough Bee Gees
music yet, well, we've got more.
1367
01:18:29,163 --> 01:18:31,779
Guess you could kind of call it
"over-gibbing."
1368
01:18:31,916 --> 01:18:33,236
Steiner: And then Andy gibb, too.
1369
01:18:33,292 --> 01:18:36,580
He was like the caboose
on this musical train.
1370
01:18:36,712 --> 01:18:39,920
It was like waves in the sea.
1371
01:18:40,550 --> 01:18:44,759
J nobody gets too much heaven
no more
1372
01:18:44,887 --> 01:18:46,798
host: You're right
on the top of the world.
1373
01:18:46,931 --> 01:18:50,389
What is it
that drives you back on the road?
1374
01:18:50,518 --> 01:18:52,884
When we make records
and we're in the studio,
1375
01:18:53,020 --> 01:18:55,807
we never really see
who buys those records.
1376
01:18:55,940 --> 01:18:57,771
Getting on the road means that to us.
1377
01:18:57,900 --> 01:19:00,141
It means that we come face to face
with people
1378
01:19:00,278 --> 01:19:02,269
to whom our records mean a lot.
1379
01:19:02,405 --> 01:19:05,272
Well, to be sure, doing a tour
is an enormous amount of work.
1380
01:19:05,408 --> 01:19:08,070
The only thing that I notice
that's not right
1381
01:19:08,202 --> 01:19:11,365
is it doesn't actually say the Bee Gees,
and the Bee Gees name should be...
1382
01:19:11,497 --> 01:19:14,079
It should be, "Bee Gees:
Spirits having flown."
1383
01:19:16,711 --> 01:19:19,077
Oakes: The "79 tour
was a complete sell-out.
1384
01:19:19,213 --> 01:19:22,376
Weaver: The Bee Gees
hadn't toured since 1976.
1385
01:19:22,508 --> 01:19:25,591
And that tour was a promotion
for the spirits having flown album.
1386
01:19:25,720 --> 01:19:29,053
But it was celebrating
Saturday night fever as well.
1387
01:19:29,182 --> 01:19:31,451
Girl 1: Twenty-five thousand people
are supposed to be here.
1388
01:19:31,475 --> 01:19:34,182
- Girl 2: It's gonna be great.
- Man: You don't mind the rain?
1389
01:19:34,312 --> 01:19:35,427
Both: No, not at all.
1390
01:19:35,563 --> 01:19:37,428
We've been here since nine this morning.
1391
01:19:37,565 --> 01:19:40,022
They're worth waiting in the rain for.
1392
01:19:40,151 --> 01:19:41,516
I mean, it was huge.
1393
01:19:42,153 --> 01:19:46,317
Dodger stadium, places like that.
We used to dream of this.
1394
01:19:46,449 --> 01:19:48,656
Having people in the audience
like Barbra Streisand,
1395
01:19:48,784 --> 01:19:50,274
watching your show and loving it.
1396
01:19:50,411 --> 01:19:51,947
I mean, these are fantasies.
1397
01:19:52,955 --> 01:19:54,570
You're in a goldfish bowl on tour.
1398
01:19:54,707 --> 01:19:56,914
You don't see much
of what's going on out there.
1399
01:19:57,835 --> 01:20:00,395
The most important thing is,
what are we gonna do after the show?
1400
01:20:00,421 --> 01:20:01,501
What do you wanna do?
1401
01:20:02,590 --> 01:20:06,208
Announcer:
It's here, the disco-body shaper,
1402
01:20:06,344 --> 01:20:09,677
the brand-new exerciser sensation
that's sweeping the country.
1403
01:20:09,805 --> 01:20:11,511
Send for yours today.
1404
01:20:11,641 --> 01:20:14,849
Buy it today, be a disco star tonignt.
1405
01:20:14,977 --> 01:20:16,968
Let's disco to burger king.
1406
01:20:17,104 --> 01:20:19,345
It all goes back to one thing,
1407
01:20:19,482 --> 01:20:22,064
and the same thing
that's happening now: Greed.
1408
01:20:24,528 --> 01:20:27,691
Greed is the thing
that happens in people
1409
01:20:27,823 --> 01:20:30,815
that really ruins a lot of shit.
1410
01:20:30,952 --> 01:20:32,692
J went to a party the other night...
1411
01:20:32,828 --> 01:20:35,615
In the beginning, you would buy
a disco-bannered record,
1412
01:20:35,748 --> 01:20:39,115
and it would be a great song,
no matter which one you picked out.
1413
01:20:39,252 --> 01:20:41,163
J movin' my feet to the disco beat...
1414
01:20:42,213 --> 01:20:45,501
But then some executive in diapers
1415
01:20:45,633 --> 01:20:51,299
decided, "let's put disco
on all these records we wanna sell,"
1416
01:20:51,430 --> 01:20:55,764
and it wasn't good music anymore,
it was garbage.
1417
01:20:55,893 --> 01:20:57,099
J look aft me
1418
01:20:57,228 --> 01:21:01,267
j I'm the disco duck!
1419
01:21:01,399 --> 01:21:03,230
J oh, let's go, mamma...
1420
01:21:03,359 --> 01:21:05,691
That was, I think, the straw
that broke the camel's back.
1421
01:21:05,820 --> 01:21:08,277
J' disco, disco duck
1422
01:21:08,406 --> 01:21:12,399
disco as a purely musical form
is, you know, dead.
1423
01:21:12,535 --> 01:21:14,867
I hated it. Couldn't think
of anything redeeming.
1424
01:21:14,996 --> 01:21:16,156
It was old people's music.
1425
01:21:16,289 --> 01:21:22,330
It was a very easy thing to get
involved with for commercial reasons.
1426
01:21:22,461 --> 01:21:25,874
J everybody's doin'
the disco, disco duck...
1427
01:21:26,007 --> 01:21:29,716
Man: I'd like to show you
how we destroy the disco records.
1428
01:21:30,428 --> 01:21:31,793
Thisis howl do it.
1429
01:21:32,805 --> 01:21:35,217
- Gotta get worked up a little bit.
- Psyched up.
1430
01:21:35,349 --> 01:21:36,759
Yeah. And then I just...
1431
01:21:39,437 --> 01:21:40,847
Oh, that felt good.
1432
01:21:41,981 --> 01:21:43,461
Our next guest tonight is Steve dahl.
1433
01:21:43,566 --> 01:21:48,276
He is a disc jockey for station wlup-fm
out in Chicago, Illinois,
1434
01:21:48,404 --> 01:21:49,985
and he hates disco music.
1435
01:21:50,114 --> 01:21:52,856
Steve dahl was kind of hard
to avoid in Chicago.
1436
01:22:01,417 --> 01:22:05,285
Steve dahl's on the radio saying,
"disco sucks, disco sucks."
1437
01:22:06,005 --> 01:22:07,996
I was 14.
1438
01:22:08,132 --> 01:22:09,497
I listened to the loop,
1439
01:22:09,633 --> 01:22:13,217
the radio station
that this kind of centered around.
1440
01:22:13,346 --> 01:22:15,302
He brings helium to the studio,
1441
01:22:15,431 --> 01:22:17,922
inhales it and imitates
the Bee Gees on the air
1442
01:22:18,059 --> 01:22:19,890
and then breaks up their records.
1443
01:22:20,019 --> 01:22:21,634
J how deep is your love
1444
01:22:21,771 --> 01:22:24,763
� how deep is your love
1445
01:22:24,899 --> 01:22:27,231
j' 1 really need to know
1446
01:22:28,819 --> 01:22:33,813
you know, when you do all those things,
like put out garbage,
1447
01:22:33,949 --> 01:22:37,737
you know, have radio feeling ostracized,
1448
01:22:37,870 --> 01:22:40,703
and a lot of straight people
feeling threatened,
1449
01:22:40,831 --> 01:22:44,665
it creates a real poison.
1450
01:22:47,171 --> 01:22:48,171
Hello again, everybody.
1451
01:22:48,297 --> 01:22:51,414
Harry caray and Jimmy piersall
from comiskey park,
1452
01:22:51,550 --> 01:22:55,042
where we're gonna have
a wild night tonight.
1453
01:22:55,179 --> 01:22:56,794
A twi-night doubleheader.
1454
01:22:56,931 --> 01:22:59,013
Lawrence: I was an Usher
at comiskey park.
1455
01:22:59,141 --> 01:23:00,597
That was my first job.
1456
01:23:00,726 --> 01:23:02,682
Look at that crowd out there.
1457
01:23:03,896 --> 01:23:06,478
Reporter: Fifty thousand people,
the largest crowd of the season,
1458
01:23:06,607 --> 01:23:08,768
showed up at Chicago's comiskey park.
1459
01:23:08,901 --> 01:23:12,359
Many had come for disco demolition
night, a promotional gimmick.
1460
01:23:12,488 --> 01:23:15,025
Fifteen thousand others
had to be turned away.
1461
01:23:15,908 --> 01:23:19,821
Steve dahl says, "we're gonna let
everybody in the white sox park
1462
01:23:19,954 --> 01:23:24,698
for 98 cents
if you bring a disco record.
1463
01:23:24,834 --> 01:23:27,826
And we're gonna blow those records up
in the middle of center field."
1464
01:23:30,047 --> 01:23:31,753
We're letting people in.
1465
01:23:32,716 --> 01:23:36,709
I pointed out to my chief Usher,
1466
01:23:36,846 --> 01:23:40,714
�that record, that record, that record,
that record, that record,
1467
01:23:40,850 --> 01:23:43,216
that record...
Those aren't disco records.
1468
01:23:44,019 --> 01:23:46,055
Those are just,
those are R&B records.�
1469
01:23:48,441 --> 01:23:53,026
And the thing that I noticed
more than anything
1470
01:23:54,196 --> 01:23:56,778
was just mostly black records.
1471
01:23:58,242 --> 01:24:01,484
Maurice: At the same time all this stuff
is going on in Chicago,
1472
01:24:01,620 --> 01:24:03,156
we were playing the stadiums.
1473
01:24:03,289 --> 01:24:04,870
It was an amazing tour.
1474
01:24:06,250 --> 01:24:08,411
We were sort of like
in our own little world.
1475
01:24:08,544 --> 01:24:10,580
Not thinking about the outside world.
1476
01:24:43,454 --> 01:24:46,617
Caray: He struck him out
and the ball game is over.
1477
01:24:50,419 --> 01:24:54,128
Announcer: Ok, let's Usher Steve dahl
to the explosives
1478
01:24:54,256 --> 01:24:57,293
with a loud "disco sucks' chant!
1479
01:24:58,677 --> 01:25:04,134
Disco sucks!
1480
01:25:04,266 --> 01:25:06,302
= disco sucks!
1481
01:25:06,435 --> 01:25:09,810
Disco sucks!
1482
01:25:11,106 --> 01:25:13,062
Barry: Ladies and gentlemen,
our brother Andy!
1483
01:25:18,197 --> 01:25:20,028
J my baby moves at midnight
1484
01:25:21,825 --> 01:25:23,315
j goes right on till the dawn
1485
01:25:25,955 --> 01:25:28,037
j my woman takes me higher
1486
01:25:29,500 --> 01:25:31,456
j my woman keeps me warm
1487
01:25:33,379 --> 01:25:34,915
j what you doin' on your back?
1488
01:25:35,756 --> 01:25:36,791
J' yeah, yeah
1489
01:25:36,924 --> 01:25:38,755
j what you doin' on your back?
1490
01:25:39,635 --> 01:25:44,345
J' ahh, you should be dancing, yeah
1491
01:25:45,391 --> 01:25:48,474
j' dancing, yeah
1492
01:25:52,606 --> 01:25:54,062
come on!
1493
01:25:54,191 --> 01:25:56,728
Maurice: Andy joined us on stage
for "you should be dancing,"
1494
01:25:56,860 --> 01:26:00,148
and it was the four of us together,
and Andy joined my mic.
1495
01:26:00,281 --> 01:26:01,896
So we were singing around the one mic.
1496
01:26:02,032 --> 01:26:04,364
And he kept looking over
and stood back and goes,
1497
01:26:04,493 --> 01:26:06,529
�can you believe this shit?"
1498
01:26:08,789 --> 01:26:10,309
Nobody could believe
what was going on.
1499
01:26:11,375 --> 01:26:14,287
And to see the four of us on stage,
when I saw Barry and Robin
1500
01:26:14,420 --> 01:26:17,140
and I saw Andy in front of me I thought,
"this is how it's gotta be."
1501
01:26:19,008 --> 01:26:21,090
J yeah
1502
01:26:26,515 --> 01:26:29,803
How about the Bee Gees?
1503
01:26:32,062 --> 01:26:35,145
Well, listen, we took all the disco
records that you brought tonight,
1504
01:26:36,191 --> 01:26:38,022
we got 'em in a giant box.
1505
01:26:39,278 --> 01:26:43,066
And we're gonna blow 'em up real gooa!
1506
01:26:56,128 --> 01:26:58,961
One, two, three...
1507
01:26:59,590 --> 01:27:00,830
Boom!
1508
01:27:05,346 --> 01:27:07,553
I'ney blew up real good!
1509
01:27:15,689 --> 01:27:18,852
Lawrence: They tell you as an Usher,
"every now and then,
1510
01:27:18,984 --> 01:27:22,226
you're gonna get a drunk person
storming the field.
1511
01:27:22,363 --> 01:27:24,820
Try to grab them, hold on to them,�
or whatever.
1512
01:27:24,948 --> 01:27:27,655
But everybody ran on the field.
1513
01:27:35,876 --> 01:27:39,243
When I got older, I recognized that...
1514
01:27:40,047 --> 01:27:42,663
This was actually the end of an era.
1515
01:27:45,636 --> 01:27:47,251
It was a book burning.
1516
01:27:47,388 --> 01:27:52,553
It was a racist,
homophobic book burning.
1517
01:27:52,685 --> 01:27:56,143
And the Bee Gees got caught up in that,
1518
01:27:56,271 --> 01:28:01,436
because they were part of that culture
that was lifting a lot of people up.
1519
01:28:06,990 --> 01:28:10,528
Barry: Thank you, we love youl!
And we'll see you again. Bye-bye.
1520
01:28:17,501 --> 01:28:21,210
Reporter: Nearly 7,000 spectators
held their very own demolition.
1521
01:28:21,338 --> 01:28:24,171
Game two of the doubleheader
was canceled last night.
1522
01:28:24,299 --> 01:28:26,210
That game will be forfeit.
1523
01:28:27,803 --> 01:28:32,012
The anti-disco movement
was almost anti-Bee Gees at that point.
1524
01:28:32,891 --> 01:28:35,724
Reporter: Ironically, the soundtrack
to "Saturday night fever,"
1525
01:28:35,853 --> 01:28:40,062
the album that made them superstars,
also branded them as a disco group.
1526
01:28:40,190 --> 01:28:43,603
Because you can dance to it doesn't
necessarily make it a disco song.
1527
01:28:43,736 --> 01:28:45,522
You can dance to lots of songs.
1528
01:28:45,654 --> 01:28:48,771
Host: You really don't wanna be labeled
"disco" at all, do you?
1529
01:28:48,907 --> 01:28:51,489
Because our music is a variety
of different kinds of music.
1530
01:28:51,618 --> 01:28:53,404
It shouldn't be called just that.
1531
01:28:53,537 --> 01:28:55,493
Some people hated disco.
1532
01:28:55,622 --> 01:28:56,782
Hated it.
1533
01:28:57,416 --> 01:28:59,656
Maurice: We had FBI and secret service
round the airplane
1534
01:28:59,752 --> 01:29:02,432
every time we landed in a certain place
because of the bomb threats.
1535
01:29:03,046 --> 01:29:04,582
It was scary stuff.
1536
01:29:05,591 --> 01:29:06,751
We were perplexed.
1537
01:29:06,884 --> 01:29:10,001
Cos I got that vibe from them,
"why are people doing this?"
1538
01:29:10,721 --> 01:29:13,804
Reporter: The Bee Gees claim
some radio stations around the country
1539
01:29:13,932 --> 01:29:16,548
are refusing to play their new single.
1540
01:29:16,685 --> 01:29:18,676
The Bee Gees
are not allowed to have a hit
1541
01:29:18,812 --> 01:29:21,554
because they had success with
Saturday night fever. That is crap.
1542
01:29:21,690 --> 01:29:25,729
Galuten: Radio is very difficult
to get back once you lose them.
1543
01:29:25,861 --> 01:29:28,978
Back then, if you weren't on the radio,
there was nothing.
1544
01:29:29,114 --> 01:29:32,277
Let's all grow up, we're just a pop
group, we're not a political force.
1545
01:29:32,409 --> 01:29:35,526
We're just making music, but I don't
think there's any reason to chalk us off
1546
01:29:35,662 --> 01:29:38,904
because we existed in the "70s
and would like to exist in the '80s.
1547
01:29:39,041 --> 01:29:41,953
Does anybody mind if we exist
in the '80s, thank you?
1548
01:29:42,085 --> 01:29:45,122
It was so overwhelming and...
1549
01:29:45,255 --> 01:29:47,541
The whole dynamic changed.
1550
01:29:47,674 --> 01:29:50,040
Yvonne: They were just crazy days.
1551
01:29:50,177 --> 01:29:51,667
I preferred Maurice as Maurice,
1552
01:29:51,804 --> 01:29:53,920
not being a bee gee,
if that makes sense to you.
1553
01:29:54,056 --> 01:29:57,594
I preferred him as Maurice,
not being a bee gee.
1554
01:29:58,352 --> 01:30:01,094
Dwina: Suddenly they realized
that they were in a different position.
1555
01:30:01,230 --> 01:30:03,437
Robin went through a kind of a...
1556
01:30:04,775 --> 01:30:08,359
It wasn't a breakdown,
but it was just something where
1557
01:30:08,487 --> 01:30:12,651
he felt very shy of being in public
and doing things for a while.
1558
01:30:12,783 --> 01:30:15,320
Robin: The backlash
was a very frightening experience.
1559
01:30:15,452 --> 01:30:20,446
When things get to that point, you're
out of control of the whole thing.
1560
01:30:20,582 --> 01:30:23,039
We thought the Bee Gees
better go on the back burner
1561
01:30:23,168 --> 01:30:25,784
until this dies down
or something, you know.
1562
01:30:26,588 --> 01:30:28,749
We couldn't do anything
as the Bee Gees at all.
1563
01:30:30,843 --> 01:30:32,834
Well, backlash I'm really good on.
1564
01:30:34,680 --> 01:30:36,011
Uh...
1565
01:30:37,182 --> 01:30:41,221
Any band... that is successful
1566
01:30:41,353 --> 01:30:45,722
is going to have...
Some form of resistance.
1567
01:30:45,858 --> 01:30:47,689
That's just the law of nature.
1568
01:30:48,861 --> 01:30:50,692
When they get so successful,
1569
01:30:50,821 --> 01:30:53,779
sometimes the only interesting thing
to say about them
1570
01:30:53,907 --> 01:30:54,987
is, "oh, I don't like them.
1571
01:30:55,075 --> 01:30:57,191
Everyone else likes
'how deep is your love.'
1572
01:30:57,327 --> 01:30:58,692
you know, it's stupid.�
1573
01:30:59,705 --> 01:31:01,741
For bands of my generation,
1574
01:31:01,874 --> 01:31:04,456
you understand about the ups
and downs, you can see it.
1575
01:31:04,585 --> 01:31:07,918
Like, where are the pitfalls'?
What is the shit you're gonna take?
1576
01:31:08,797 --> 01:31:10,662
When might this happen?
When might that happen?
1577
01:31:10,799 --> 01:31:12,664
For those people
that were on the first wave
1578
01:31:12,801 --> 01:31:17,010
of sort of global pop superstardom,
if you want to call it that,
1579
01:31:17,139 --> 01:31:20,427
it was new to them, like, "why does
everyone suddenly hate our band?
1580
01:31:20,559 --> 01:31:23,551
We sold eight billion records last year.
What's the deal?"
1581
01:31:24,605 --> 01:31:25,811
So it's confusing.
1582
01:31:27,107 --> 01:31:32,147
It was not just the Bee Gees,
but the idea of dance.
1583
01:31:33,697 --> 01:31:36,860
In that period,
it was no longer acceptable
1584
01:31:38,076 --> 01:31:42,445
for this kind of music to carry
the weight, to carry the industry.
1585
01:31:44,416 --> 01:31:47,283
Everybody was at that point
in their lives where they...
1586
01:31:47,419 --> 01:31:49,751
They began to look
for other things to do.
1587
01:31:51,548 --> 01:31:53,914
And Andy was having problems, too.
1588
01:31:55,594 --> 01:31:57,130
Maurice: I saw him in Malibu,
1589
01:31:57,262 --> 01:32:00,379
and he'd been involved with
a lot of people who were doing drugs.
1590
01:32:00,807 --> 01:32:03,765
And he was doing drugs,
he was doing cocaine.
1591
01:32:05,354 --> 01:32:08,141
I talked to him outside
on the balcony,
1592
01:32:08,273 --> 01:32:10,184
saying, "this is really
a nice house, Andy,
1593
01:32:10,317 --> 01:32:13,434
it's a nice car out there,
that Porsche, really nice.
1594
01:32:13,570 --> 01:32:15,686
You're not gonna keep all this,
you know."
1595
01:32:15,822 --> 01:32:17,278
He said, "what do you mean?"
1596
01:32:17,407 --> 01:32:20,649
I said, "you do what you're doing,
this stuff will vanish.
1597
01:32:20,786 --> 01:32:23,994
All this stuff will go. Your career
will go out the window, everything."
1598
01:32:24,122 --> 01:32:27,455
And he said, "I know,
I know what I have to do."
1599
01:32:27,584 --> 01:32:31,998
There was a lot of chaos that I
didn't witness, but I was aware of it.
1600
01:32:33,548 --> 01:32:35,789
We were scattered
all over the place for a little while.
1601
01:32:37,928 --> 01:32:41,546
Robin was either in New York
and Maurice was in england.
1602
01:32:41,682 --> 01:32:45,470
I was alone at the time
and I got a phone call from Barbra.
1603
01:32:48,230 --> 01:32:50,846
She'd asked me about
writing songs for her.
1604
01:32:50,983 --> 01:32:53,565
And that terrified me.
1605
01:32:53,694 --> 01:32:56,185
I don't know if I can do this, you know?
1606
01:32:57,072 --> 01:33:00,314
So I called my brothers, and I said,
"this is what we gotta do.
1607
01:33:00,450 --> 01:33:01,781
And let's do it."
1608
01:33:03,161 --> 01:33:05,618
And that's how
the guilty album came about.
1609
01:33:09,543 --> 01:33:12,285
We really could not get on the radio.
1610
01:33:12,421 --> 01:33:14,833
So the whole idea
was to write for other people.
1611
01:33:16,174 --> 01:33:17,505
Let's be songwriters.
1612
01:33:17,634 --> 01:33:21,297
Let's try and graduate
from being a group that's probably...
1613
01:33:23,015 --> 01:33:25,552
Beginning to fade, you know?
1614
01:33:25,684 --> 01:33:27,720
Let's see if we can dance around that.
1615
01:33:28,478 --> 01:33:31,845
Barry: [ Life is a moment in space
1616
01:33:31,982 --> 01:33:34,564
j when the dream is gone
1617
01:33:34,693 --> 01:33:37,651
j' it's a lonelier place
1618
01:33:37,779 --> 01:33:39,815
Richardson: It was more
about outlets for writing.
1619
01:33:39,948 --> 01:33:43,611
Writing songs
that aren't Bee Gees songs.
1620
01:33:43,744 --> 01:33:45,575
They have an attitude somewhere else.
1621
01:33:45,704 --> 01:33:47,820
Streisand: J I stumble and fall
1622
01:33:47,956 --> 01:33:51,995
j but! Give you it all
1623
01:33:52,127 --> 01:33:55,790
j 1am a woman in love
1624
01:33:55,922 --> 01:33:58,129
j' and I'd do anything
1625
01:33:58,258 --> 01:34:01,091
j' to get you into my world...
1626
01:34:01,219 --> 01:34:03,676
Host: Now, Robin, you and Barry
co-wrote "woman in love,"
1627
01:34:03,805 --> 01:34:05,670
which became the international smash.
1628
01:34:05,807 --> 01:34:08,423
Was it difficult taking
the woman's perspective?
1629
01:34:08,560 --> 01:34:10,642
Oh, no.
1630
01:34:11,354 --> 01:34:12,969
It's our way of doing things.
1631
01:34:13,106 --> 01:34:15,426
We will assume that role
within the song to write the song.
1632
01:34:15,525 --> 01:34:19,518
After the Barbra Streisand album,
managers would call up all the time.
1633
01:34:19,654 --> 01:34:22,691
"Gee, can I get together with you guys?
Will you make my record?"
1634
01:34:22,824 --> 01:34:24,280
You know, established artists.
1635
01:34:24,409 --> 01:34:25,740
J oh, oh
1636
01:34:25,869 --> 01:34:30,659
j why do you have to be
a heartbreaker
1637
01:34:30,791 --> 01:34:34,204
j when I was being
what you want me to be?
1638
01:34:34,336 --> 01:34:37,920
J get in the middle of a chain reaction
1639
01:34:38,048 --> 01:34:40,630
j you get a medal
when you're lost in action...
1640
01:34:40,759 --> 01:34:43,399
It was just as important for us to have
an artist singing our songs
1641
01:34:43,428 --> 01:34:45,840
and being on the radio
as it was for ourselves.
1642
01:34:45,972 --> 01:34:47,303
J islands in the stream
1643
01:34:47,432 --> 01:34:49,388
j that is what we are
1644
01:34:49,518 --> 01:34:51,429
j no one in between
1645
01:34:51,561 --> 01:34:53,847
j how can we be wrong?
1646
01:34:53,980 --> 01:34:55,095
J' sail away with me...
1647
01:34:55,232 --> 01:34:58,520
Maurice: When you write a song with
someone in mind that you really love,
1648
01:34:58,652 --> 01:35:03,066
and then that person ends up singing it,
there's no reward like it.
1649
01:35:03,198 --> 01:35:07,737
J immortality
1650
01:35:07,869 --> 01:35:09,234
j oh, baby
1651
01:35:09,371 --> 01:35:13,034
j there is a vision and a fire in me
1652
01:35:13,166 --> 01:35:14,622
j oh
1653
01:35:14,751 --> 01:35:17,367
Barry: We wrote
so many different types of songs.
1654
01:35:18,421 --> 01:35:20,286
And that created
that new determination...
1655
01:35:21,216 --> 01:35:23,252
For us to become the Bee Gees again.
1656
01:35:24,427 --> 01:35:26,793
J when a lonely heart breaks
1657
01:35:26,930 --> 01:35:30,013
j it's the one that forsakes
1658
01:35:30,142 --> 01:35:33,509
j it's the dream that we stole
1659
01:35:33,645 --> 01:35:37,558
Barry: I think over time,
we became more and more unified.
1660
01:35:37,691 --> 01:35:40,558
By "85, we really
got it together as a group.
1661
01:35:42,737 --> 01:35:45,228
We became a real band, again.
1662
01:35:47,784 --> 01:35:51,026
J' for you it's goodbye
1663
01:35:51,163 --> 01:35:53,199
j for me its to cry
1664
01:35:53,331 --> 01:35:57,290
j for whom the bell tolls
1665
01:35:57,419 --> 01:35:59,159
we never really had a category.
1666
01:35:59,296 --> 01:36:01,378
We just had different periods.
1667
01:36:01,506 --> 01:36:04,088
And we managed
to fit into different eras.
1668
01:36:04,217 --> 01:36:08,301
And we saw a lot of people who were
the champions of their era come and go.
1669
01:36:09,264 --> 01:36:11,971
We didn't always connect
but we stayed around.
1670
01:36:12,100 --> 01:36:15,308
We managed to defy the criticism,
most of the time.
1671
01:36:15,437 --> 01:36:18,429
J it's the one that forsakes
1672
01:36:18,565 --> 01:36:22,183
j it's the dream that we stole
1673
01:36:22,319 --> 01:36:24,935
and I just hope and pray
that the music lasts, you know.
1674
01:36:25,864 --> 01:36:29,527
Because I begin to recognize that
there's not as much time in front of me
1675
01:36:29,659 --> 01:36:31,115
as there is behind me.
1676
01:36:38,168 --> 01:36:41,205
Hi, Australia.
This is Andy gibb here in Miami.
1677
01:36:41,338 --> 01:36:42,953
And I'd like to wish all you kids...
1678
01:36:43,089 --> 01:36:44,374
One more time.
1679
01:36:47,469 --> 01:36:50,211
Hi, Australia.
This is Andy gibb here in Miami.
1680
01:36:50,347 --> 01:36:53,009
And I'd like to wish all the kids
and all my friends in Australia
1681
01:36:53,141 --> 01:36:55,632
a very merry Christmas
and a happy new year.
1682
01:36:57,729 --> 01:37:01,267
J' ahh, ahh...
1683
01:37:15,997 --> 01:37:19,034
Barry was first. In fact, Robin's
half an hour older than I am.
1684
01:37:19,167 --> 01:37:24,503
And we're twins. And that's how
we basically met.
1685
01:37:37,811 --> 01:37:40,848
- Robert stigwood, this is for you.
- You gotta watch the thing.
1686
01:37:40,981 --> 01:37:45,145
Oh, the reaction? All right, ok.
1687
01:37:45,277 --> 01:37:48,565
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Sorry, do it again. Ok.
1688
01:37:49,447 --> 01:37:51,028
Robert stigwood, this is for you.
1689
01:38:13,555 --> 01:38:15,921
Announcer: Ladies and gentiemen,
an Oscar nominee
1690
01:38:16,057 --> 01:38:19,174
for "Saturday night fever,�
John Travolta!
1691
01:38:20,186 --> 01:38:24,520
Tonight, the recording academy
is celebrating
1692
01:38:24,649 --> 01:38:29,939
three brothers who changed my life
and the world of music forever.
1693
01:38:30,071 --> 01:38:32,983
And though brothers Robin and Maurice
are sadly gone,
1694
01:38:33,116 --> 01:38:36,153
we are thrilled to be joined
by a brother like no other,
1695
01:38:36,286 --> 01:38:39,949
one of the most successful
singer-songwriters of our times,
1696
01:38:40,081 --> 01:38:41,821
my friend, Barry gibb.
1697
01:38:44,336 --> 01:38:46,042
J hmm...
1698
01:38:53,178 --> 01:38:59,174
J' feel I'm going back to massachusetfts
1699
01:39:01,978 --> 01:39:07,689
j something's telling me
I must go home
1700
01:39:07,817 --> 01:39:10,809
Gallagher: They're a brilliant chapter
in the book of music.
1701
01:39:10,945 --> 01:39:12,230
Some people are a footnote.
1702
01:39:12,364 --> 01:39:15,106
Some people take up...
The Beatles and Dylan take up huge...
1703
01:39:15,909 --> 01:39:17,240
But the Bee Gees are there.
1704
01:39:17,994 --> 01:39:22,454
J' the day I left her standing
1705
01:39:22,582 --> 01:39:24,789
j on her own
1706
01:39:24,918 --> 01:39:27,079
Timberlake: You go back
and look at their body of work
1707
01:39:27,212 --> 01:39:28,972
and it's some of the best songs
ever written.
1708
01:39:29,047 --> 01:39:32,585
J' talk about the life
in Massachusetts...
1709
01:39:32,717 --> 01:39:34,799
There's nothing else to say
about the Bee Gees except
1710
01:39:34,928 --> 01:39:36,168
they were fucking awesome.
1711
01:39:36,304 --> 01:39:41,139
J speak about the people
I have seen
1712
01:39:43,019 --> 01:39:46,682
j' and the lights all went down
1713
01:39:46,815 --> 01:39:49,557
j in Massachusetts
1714
01:39:50,443 --> 01:39:53,480
j and Massachusetts
1715
01:39:53,613 --> 01:39:57,401
j' is one place I have seen
1716
01:39:58,535 --> 01:40:01,652
j and Massachusetts
1717
01:40:01,788 --> 01:40:06,327
j' is one place I have seen
1718
01:40:19,472 --> 01:40:21,463
Barry: When I think about it now,
1719
01:40:22,851 --> 01:40:25,092
I think about
how it all sort of started.
1720
01:40:27,105 --> 01:40:28,470
We just had this dream.
1721
01:40:29,566 --> 01:40:33,559
And we thought, well,
"what do we want to be famous for?"
1722
01:40:35,822 --> 01:40:37,858
It turns out it was the songwriting.
1723
01:40:42,454 --> 01:40:47,619
And I think everything we set out to do,
we did, against all odds.
1724
01:40:49,752 --> 01:40:51,663
I can't honestly
come to terms with the fact
1725
01:40:51,796 --> 01:40:53,661
that they're not here anymore.
1726
01:40:53,798 --> 01:40:55,163
Never been able to do that.
1727
01:40:59,804 --> 01:41:01,385
I'm always reliving it.
1728
01:41:01,514 --> 01:41:04,381
It's always, "what would Robin think
or what would Maurice think?"
1729
01:41:05,143 --> 01:41:07,885
And Andy. It never goes away.
1730
01:41:11,774 --> 01:41:14,641
And what I wanted to say earlier
1731
01:41:14,777 --> 01:41:17,735
is that I'd rather have them
all back here and no hits at all.
1732
01:41:41,012 --> 01:41:44,470
J' if ever you've got rain in your heart
1733
01:41:45,934 --> 01:41:49,893
j someone has hurt you
and torn you apart
1734
01:41:51,439 --> 01:41:56,900
j am I unwise to open up your eyes
to love me?
1735
01:41:58,446 --> 01:42:01,279
J' and when you've got nothing to lose
1736
01:42:02,659 --> 01:42:06,993
j' nothing to pay for
and nothing to choose
1737
01:42:08,122 --> 01:42:13,207
j am I unwise to open up
your eyes to love me?
1738
01:42:13,336 --> 01:42:18,581
J' run to me whenever you're lonely
1739
01:42:18,716 --> 01:42:24,086
j run to me if you need a shoulder
1740
01:42:24,222 --> 01:42:29,262
j' now and then, you need someone older
1741
01:42:29,394 --> 01:42:32,932
j' so, darling
1742
01:42:33,648 --> 01:42:37,516
j you run to me
1743
01:43:19,360 --> 01:43:21,942
J well, you can tell by the way
I use my walk
1744
01:43:22,071 --> 01:43:24,528
j I'm a woman's man, no time to talk
1745
01:43:24,657 --> 01:43:26,568
j music loud and women warm
1746
01:43:26,701 --> 01:43:29,158
j' I've been kicked around
since I was born
1747
01:43:29,287 --> 01:43:31,528
j and now it's all right, it's ok
1748
01:43:31,664 --> 01:43:33,780
j' and you may look the other way
1749
01:43:33,916 --> 01:43:36,077
j we can try to understand
1750
01:43:36,210 --> 01:43:38,576
j the "New York times" ' effect on man
1751
01:43:38,713 --> 01:43:40,691
j whether you're a brother
or whether you're a mother
1752
01:43:40,715 --> 01:43:43,001
j you're stayin' alive
stayin' alive
1753
01:43:43,134 --> 01:43:45,170
j feel the city breakin'
and everybody shakin'
1754
01:43:45,303 --> 01:43:47,794
j and we're stayin' alive
stayin' alive
1755
01:43:47,930 --> 01:43:50,091
j' ah, ha, ha, ha
1756
01:43:50,224 --> 01:43:52,431
j stayin' alive, stayin' alive
1757
01:43:52,560 --> 01:43:54,801
j' ah, ha, ha, ha
1758
01:43:54,937 --> 01:43:58,930
j stayin' alive...
1759
01:44:03,154 --> 01:44:04,735
J' as you walk
1760
01:44:08,910 --> 01:44:11,071
j' life goin' nowhere
1761
01:44:11,204 --> 01:44:13,195
j somebody help me
1762
01:44:13,998 --> 01:44:15,909
j somebody help me, yeah
1763
01:44:20,254 --> 01:44:21,869
j' life goin' nowhere
1764
01:44:22,715 --> 01:44:24,831
j somebody help me
1765
01:44:25,802 --> 01:44:29,465
j' I'm stayin' alive...
1766
01:44:36,396 --> 01:44:38,307
J' life goin' nowhere
1767
01:44:38,439 --> 01:44:40,600
j somebody help me
1768
01:44:41,442 --> 01:44:43,307
j somebody help me, yeah
1769
01:44:45,279 --> 01:44:46,564
j somebody
1770
01:44:47,532 --> 01:44:49,864
j' life goin' nowhere
1771
01:44:49,992 --> 01:44:51,948
j somebody help me
1772
01:44:53,454 --> 01:44:57,038
j' I'm stayin' alive...
1773
01:45:41,836 --> 01:45:44,248
Barry: One, two, three, four...
1774
01:45:54,932 --> 01:45:57,423
J! Green fields
1775
01:45:58,394 --> 01:46:02,262
j where we used fo wander
1776
01:46:04,275 --> 01:46:08,143
j' purple valleys
1777
01:46:09,530 --> 01:46:12,442
j' near my home
1778
01:46:15,077 --> 01:46:18,365
j we would play there
1779
01:46:19,832 --> 01:46:23,120
j' beneath the sky
1780
01:46:25,671 --> 01:46:28,253
j' and then I kissed you
1781
01:46:31,052 --> 01:46:33,794
j' butterfly
1782
01:46:37,850 --> 01:46:39,806
j' young girl
1783
01:46:41,771 --> 01:46:45,138
j you came restless
1784
01:46:47,068 --> 01:46:50,435
j and you left me
1785
01:46:52,406 --> 01:46:55,148
j' here to cry
1786
01:46:57,745 --> 01:47:00,703
j my big tears
1787
01:47:02,959 --> 01:47:06,292
j' in red pastures
1788
01:47:08,256 --> 01:47:10,838
j' for I loved you
1789
01:47:13,594 --> 01:47:16,176
j' butterfly
1790
01:47:18,808 --> 01:47:23,268
j' butterfly, yeah
1791
01:47:25,231 --> 01:47:27,688
j' I dream about you
1792
01:47:27,817 --> 01:47:31,730
j' lonely without you, butterfly
1793
01:47:34,240 --> 01:47:38,904
j' butterfly, yeah
1794
01:47:40,621 --> 01:47:43,033
j' each night I'm sleeping
1795
01:47:43,165 --> 01:47:46,999
j' your face comes creeping, butterfly
1796
01:47:50,798 --> 01:47:53,130
j! Green fields
1797
01:47:54,010 --> 01:47:57,753
j where we used fo wander
1798
01:47:59,765 --> 01:48:03,553
j' purple valleys
1799
01:48:04,854 --> 01:48:07,561
j' near my home
1800
01:48:10,109 --> 01:48:13,272
j we would play there
1801
01:48:14,572 --> 01:48:17,780
j' beneath the sky
1802
01:48:20,244 --> 01:48:22,781
j' for I loved you
1803
01:48:25,374 --> 01:48:27,956
j' butterfly
1804
01:48:30,463 --> 01:48:35,002
j butterfly, yeah
1805
01:48:36,886 --> 01:48:39,343
j' I dream about you
1806
01:48:39,472 --> 01:48:41,884
j' lonely without you
1807
01:48:42,016 --> 01:48:43,347
j' butterfly
1808
01:48:45,686 --> 01:48:50,055
j' butterfly, yeah
1809
01:48:51,943 --> 01:48:54,355
j' each night I'm sleeping
1810
01:48:54,487 --> 01:48:58,321
j' your face comes creeping, butterfly
1811
01:49:00,868 --> 01:49:06,864
j' butterfly...
1812
01:49:26,852 --> 01:49:30,720
J smile an everlasting smile
1813
01:49:30,856 --> 01:49:35,190
j' a smile can bring you near to me
1814
01:49:37,822 --> 01:49:42,441
j don't ever let me find you down
1815
01:49:42,576 --> 01:49:47,036
j' cos that would bring a tear to me
1816
01:49:50,209 --> 01:49:54,202
j' talk in everlasting words
1817
01:49:54,338 --> 01:49:58,456
j and dedicate them all fo me
1818
01:50:01,387 --> 01:50:06,097
j and I will give you all my life
1819
01:50:06,225 --> 01:50:10,309
j I'm here if you should call to me
1820
01:50:13,274 --> 01:50:17,938
j you think that I don't even mean
1821
01:50:18,070 --> 01:50:23,565
j' a single word I say
1822
01:50:23,701 --> 01:50:26,943
j' it's only words
1823
01:50:27,079 --> 01:50:30,037
j and words are all I have
1824
01:50:30,166 --> 01:50:33,658
j' to take your heart away
1825
01:50:35,838 --> 01:50:39,205
j' it's only words
1826
01:50:39,884 --> 01:50:43,251
j and words are all I have
1827
01:50:43,387 --> 01:50:45,878
j' to take your heart
1828
01:50:46,015 --> 01:50:49,758
j away
1829
01:51:03,157 --> 01:51:06,149
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144544
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