Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. With the start of the 1970's came tight white flares, big hair and disco, mastered by none better than the Bee Gees' Gibb brothers.
For some groups, it’s musical differences; for others, it’s too much blood under the bridge. For The Bee Gees, it was a b-side that ultimately caused the temporary break-up of the fraternal bond.
One family dominated the Billboard Hot 100 in the '70s: the Gibb Brothers. By Elias Leight In honor of Billboard magazine’s 120th anniversary on Nov. 1, we’re revealing the top 20 Billboard Hot 100 ...
Family, or blood, harmonies are a richly revered vocal gift that's quite powerful and unforgettable. Of course, creating family harmonies relies on a sibling act to create it. Enter the Brothers Gibb, ...
Tickets are now available online for the biggest boogie night of the year, Disco Fever, at the Gianpula Main Room on November 9, and it’s all in aid of charity. Get set to channel your 1970s disco ...
Barry Gibb performs a “Saturday Night Fever” medley of three songs to close a tribute special in this screengrab from CBS’ broadcast of “Stayin’ Alive: A Grammy Tribute to the Bee Gees” on Sunday, ...
Billeh Nickerson is a writer from Halifax who now lives in Vancouver. His other poetry collections include The Asthmatic Glassblower, McPoems, Impact: The Titanic Poems and Artificial Cherry. He ...
Colin Petersen, the original drummer in the Bee Gees, has died aged 78, his representatives have confirmed. The music star, who joined brothers Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb in the 1960s and played on ...
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