Author Topic: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...  (Read 2764 times)

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Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« on: May 20, 2012, 11:11:46 pm »
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/robin-gibb-bee-gees-co-founder-dead-at-62-20120520

Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62
Singer had been battling cancer



By David Browne
May 20, 2012 6:35 PM ET

Robin Gibb, one-third of the Bee Gees, died Sunday after a long battle with cancer, his spokesperson has confirmed via a statement. Gibb was 62 years old.

"The family of Robin Gibb, of the Bee Gees, announce with great sadness that Robin passed away today following his long battle with cancer and intestinal surgery," reads the statement. "The family have asked that their privacy is respected at this very difficult time."

Two years ago, Gibb battled colon and liver cancer, but despite making what he called a "spectacular recovery," a secondary tumor recently developed, complicated by a case of pneumonia. The singer was hospitalized in mid-April and fell into a coma at one point, although the singer was later said to have regained consciousness and communicated with family members.

Gibb was born in Manchester, England, in 1949, along with twin brother Maurice. (Maurice died in 2003 of complications from a twisted intestine; eerily, Robin had surgery for the same medical issue in 2010.) Along with their older brother Barry, the brothers began harmonizing as a trio in Australia, where the family moved in 1958. Although the Bee Gees had some success in Australia – they hosted a weekly variety show there – they didn't truly arrive until they returned to England and signed with manager Robert Stigwood. Robin's quivering, vulnerable voice was featured prominently on several of the group's earliest and most Beatles-eque hits, including "New York Mining Disaster 1941," "I Started a Joke," "Massachusetts," and "I've Gotta Get a Message to You."

Although he looked and sounded like the meekest Bee Gee, Robin grew into the family rebel. By 1969, he and Barry were feuding over whose song should be singles, and Robin, then 20, was declared a "ward of the state" by their father when his drinking and partying seemed to take over his life. "It happened so fast that we lost communication between us," Gibb later recalled. "It was just madness, really."

But it also Robin who, in 1971, made the first call to Barry to reunite with his brothers. Robin's solo career had stalled, and Barry and Maurice's attempts to continue the Bee Gees as a duo had floundered as well. "If we hadn't been related, we would probably have never gotten back together," Robin said at the time. Robin's voice was heard, beautifully, on the chorus of their minor 1972 hit "Run to Me."

The Bee Gees' massive second wind arrived with their proto disco hit, "Jive Talkin'," in 1975; two years later, their contributions to Saturday Night Fever made them bigger stars than ever. Most of the hits from that era featured Barry's falsetto voice, but the brothers' vocal blend remained an indelible apart of their sound.

The group entered another fallow period during the early Eighties, although during this time, Robin produced a semi-hit album by Jimmy Ruffin, brother of the Temptations' David Ruffin. The last Bee Gees album, This Is Where I Came In, was released in 2001. Two years later, Maurice died, and with his passing the Bee Gees ended. (Their other, younger brother Andy died in 1988.)

Robin and Barry reunited periodically – in 2010, they made an appearance on American Idol and inducted ABBA into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame – and talked about a duo tour, but nothing materialized. Robin, though, kept his hand in music. With his son Robin-John, he wrote an ambitious piece, The Titanic Requiem, a mix of orchestral and vocal pieces telling the story of the doomed liner on the 100th anniversary of its sinking. "It's a serious subject and it's not a rock opera," Gibb said before its debut. "There are no backbeats. This could have been written 300 years ago."

Featuring the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the work had its world premiere in London on April 10th. But in a sign that Gibb's health had taken a turn for the worse, he wasn't able to attend.
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Offline Allegra

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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #1 on: May 20, 2012, 11:21:59 pm »
RIP, Robin

This is the second 70s music icon to die in the past week.

I know the BeeGees actually got their start in the 60s, but I think "Saturday Night Fever" was what catapulted them to Hall of Fame material.
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Offline Chieftain

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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #2 on: May 20, 2012, 11:23:39 pm »
RIP, Robin

This is the second 70s music icon to die in the past week.

I know the BeeGees actually got their start in the 60s, but I think "Saturday Night Fever" was what catapulted them to Hall of Fame material.

My thought exactly...first Donna Summer and now Robin Gibb who's next??

Rest....

(On edit:  I'll refrain from any wisecracks about driving more nails into the coffin of disco...)

Offline Rapunzel

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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #3 on: May 20, 2012, 11:42:26 pm »
RIP...
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Offline truth_seeker

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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #4 on: May 21, 2012, 12:38:52 am »
My thought exactly...first Donna Summer and now Robin Gibb who's next??

Rest....

(On edit:  I'll refrain from any wisecracks about driving more nails into the coffin of disco...)

Some of the best Disco is good; Donna Summer, Bee Gees, ABBA, etc.

Especially compared to much of what comes out these days.
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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #5 on: May 21, 2012, 01:12:05 pm »
Some of the best Disco is good; Donna Summer, Bee Gees, ABBA, etc.

Especially compared to much of what comes out these days.
It's not that disco music was bad. In fact, it was the epitome of good pop: in the words of the late Dick Clark, "it's got a good beat and you can dance to it."

What ticked people off was the disco culture. Drugs (but curiously no alcohol), hedonism, gay overtones, and the like. That's why they rounded up every disco album they could find and blew a hole in Comiskey Park in 1979, and why disco as a word didn't survive much longer. It eventually survived as "dance music," but the word "disco" became a dirty word.
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Offline Chieftain

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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #6 on: May 21, 2012, 01:35:27 pm »
Some of the best Disco is good; Donna Summer, Bee Gees, ABBA, etc.

Especially compared to much of what comes out these days.

I should explain....

WMMR FM in Philadelphia used to run a schtick during the day called "Driving the nails into the coffin of Disco".  People called in to request their least favorite disco tune and whatever the consensus was got a 30 second play on the air before the DJ destroyed it....

The Bee Gees were one of the most frequently requested bands, and quite a few of their tunes were used as nails....

Just sayin'......not really mocking the dead.....


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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #7 on: May 21, 2012, 10:48:06 pm »
I hear Robin Gibb will organize the "Rock the Dead" vote for Obama this year...


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Re: Robin Gibb, Bee Gees Co-Founder, Dead at 62...
« Reply #8 on: May 24, 2012, 01:03:21 am »
I hear Robin Gibb will organize the "Rock the Dead" vote for Obama this year...


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