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 "Bee
Gees' Robin Gibb Isn't Jive Talking"
(By Gaylord
Fields, Spinner,
September 21, 2007)
The Bee
Gees' Robin Gibb is one third of not only one of the most
successful family acts in popular music but one of the most successful,
period. From their early days in their native England to their childhood
musical successes in Australia to their later status as world conquerors
with their 15-times platinum 'Saturday Night Fever' soundtrack, the
brothers Gibb -- Robin, his twin, Maurice, and their older brother,
Barry -- have had more careers, and hit records, than any five bands.
They've thrived with and excelled at Beatlesque orchestral rock,
dance-floor-ready R&B and disco, and just about every pop style
under the sun in their more than 40 years as music makers. Prolific
songwriters that they have been, this doesn't even take into account the
numerous hits other artists have had with their songs.
Robin was eager to talk about the historical significance of the
'Fever'-era songs compiled on the just-reissued and expanded double CD
'Bee Gees Greatest,' a collection of the group's R&B smashes. He
also discusses the ego problems that led to a rift between him and his
brothers in the late '60s, the idea of retiring the Bee Gees name after
the 2003 death of Maurice and why country music is the last bastion for
songwriters.
What was the thought behind reissuing your disco-era greatest hits with
bonus material?
I think we -- me and Barry --were quite cautious about this at the very
beginning when [the record label] approached us about re-releasing a
landmark greatest-hits album. It's not all the hits, but it's a
particular period, and it's actually a re-release of an album of the
greatest hits with the original artwork, the original logo at the front,
and the original photography, and the original track listing with bonus
tracks. One of those bonus tracks, interestingly enough, is one of the
songs that didn't make, by our own choice, the soundtrack, called 'Warm
Ride.' Incidentally, none of the tracks that we wrote were written for
'Saturday Night Fever,' they were put to 'Saturday Night Fever.' We
never saw the film till it came out. We'd recorded them in France and we
had all of them -- 'Stayin' Alive,' 'How Deep Is Your Love,' 'Night
Fever,' 'If I Can't Have You,' 'More Than a Woman' and 'Warm Ride' were
all written -- and they came over to France, listened to them and took
them away with them. It was just like we never heard another thing for
another nine months, then it came out at Christmas of '77, and we know
what happened after that.
Do you now appreciate just how musically revolutionary the 'Saturday
Night Fever' movie was?
I think the interesting thing about 'Fever' is that is was never a
musical in the true sense of the word in that nobody ever actually sang
in the film, like they do in 'Grease.' And secondly, it was a
contemporary film, it was about the time, it was a modern film about
modern-day New York City and it went against the grain of normal,
traditional musicals. So it was a new way of presenting music. Instead
of having the actors sing, you have the soundtrack intertwined into the
story and the plot, which is my favorite way. I mean, I like it when it
is part of the narration of the film and the atmosphere rather than
someone actually singing it. I'm not a great fan of actually watching
people sing in musicals, but I am a great fan of writing the right music
to the right film. And 'Fever' is still the best-selling soundtrack
album worldwide.
But didn't the Bee Gees make the transition from a pop-rock sound to to
a more R&B/disco one well before 'Fever,' for example, 'Jive
Talkin''?
We were already going in that direction two years earlier with the 'Main
Course' album. And then the following year we had the 'Children of the
World' album, which produced 'You Should Be Dancing' and 'Love So
Right,' which were Number One in black radio, as the previous ones were,
so we were already in a black R&B direction. We never heard of the
word "disco," by the way, that was something the radio created
when the film took off. We knew nothing about that; we were doing
R&B music.
Was there any skittishness about giving the songs over to the 'Fever'
soundtrack?
We were very cautious about these songs being used in the film, because
this was a very low-budget movie. It was a new actor, John Travolta, who
had been in 'Welcome Back Kotter,' and we didn't really know that much
about the film other than the fact it was low budget and there was not
going to be a tremendous amount of promotion on it. There was no great
anticipation of its success, certainly no prediction of it, and we were
more concerned about, well, are we going to throw these songs away on a
film that doesn't do anything?
What was it about those songs that made people embrace it in such a huge
way?
Well, first of all, there's an emotion in the sound. The songs are very
human songs. They're about human relationships, which are perennial.
And, of course, the sound is very emotional, the harmonies are very
emotional, and the sound of the harmony that we use, they do have a
tendency to transcend and reach people in a way that affects them. I
think there was a magical quality about that sound.
Even in the early days, there was a lot of R&B influence in songs
like 'To Love Somebody' and 'I Can't See Nobody.'
That is correct. That's the way we grew up in Australia. We used to
listen to a lot of commercial radio stations in Sydney that were playing
a lot of this stuff, and I think if we had stayed in England we wouldn't
have heard that because they weren't playing it. A lot of white acts,
even in America, would not be exploring that kind of music in those
days. We didn't feel any boundaries to that in Australia.
So many Bee Gees songs, even the ones that aren't overtly
R&B-sounding, have been covered by black artists. What would you
attribute that to?
Recently, we had 'Emotion' [covered] by Beyonce and Destiny's Child -- a
lot of black artists have always been interested in our sound and our
music and influenced by it. And a lot of black artists are influenced by
these tracks today in their own way and they try to put their own stamp
on the sound, they sample them and they are influenced by the harmonies.
So much the style of the songs transcends the times that they're written
in.
A couple of 'Fever' classics have been given the remix treatment for the
album's re-release, like the Teddybears' remix of 'Stayin' Alive.' Are
you happy with how they turned out?
I always like the originals, but we're living in a day and age where
people like remixes. I suppose it's really an acquired taste. One
person's gonna say, 'I like it,' another person's gonna say, 'Oh, I
don't like that.' It's a mixed bag of emotion, really, but it's an
acceptable thing.
You and your brothers have written songs for everyone from Barbara
Streisand and Dionne Warwick to a duet for Kenny Rogers and Dolly
Parton. Do you wish you were more recognized for your songwriting?
I think it's an important thing to be songwriters. When Elton John was
signed, he was writing songs, and I think there was a time, as the
Beatles themselves were writing songs, when artists were writing their
own songs and people were covering them. And also it was just good to
write your own songs and to be first, not to copy people, to try and be
original and set the pace rather than today where they copy what's gone
on in the last forty years.
Your 1969 album 'Odessa' has been acknowledged as your masterpiece, but
it also temporarily broke up the band. What do you recall about that
record?
An adventurous album in a sense, because it was actually written not as
a commercial album. It was done always as a theme, and it was suggested
by [manager] Robert Stigwood to do something that was entirely
different, and we knew it was going to be a hard sell, even by the
standards of the time. But we wanted to do something that was entirely
different and unusual, for a better word. But again it was all part of
our evolvement; it was part of the writing development of where we were
going. We were still teenagers at the time.
You were so young while you were having all this commercial and critical
success -- did it go to your head?
Yeah, it did, but it didn't go to our head through money, because we
didn't have much of that, 'cause we didn't own our own publishing or
anything like that at the time. I think it had more to do with freedom
of choice and we weren't listening to each other as much as we were
going to much later. So it was an exciting time, but it was also a very
tough time emotionally, coming to terms with this, you know, this ego.
Right after 'Odessa' you left the Bee Gees to record your solo album
'Robin's Reign' and your brothers carried on with 'Cucumber Castle.' How
hard was it being and working without them?
It was a tough time, it was 18 months of writing songs that probably we
would have written together or would have ended up on a Bee Gees album,
and instead we put them out individually. And it was kind of tough
emotionally when you want to work together and you've still got so much
to do and you're still actually teenagers, you know, and we had 18
months of that where we had time apart. But I think it was probably
necessary for what was to come later. 'Cause the first thing, as soon as
we got back together, in one afternoon we wrote 'Lonely Days' and 'How
Can You Mend a Broken Heart.' So it was productive, it was worth the 18
months off.
Am I to understand that with the passing away of your brother Maurice in
2003, you've retired the Bee Gees name?
We haven't exactly retired the Bee Gees name, we did it as an honor and
respect for Maurice as being part of something in musical culture that
we achieved together. Me and Barry will get together and make albums and
make songs, but in the end people will always call us Bee Gees -- we
can't change that. In respect for Maurice, the Bee Gees will always be
the three brothers. We can never change people's concept of even me and
Barry or even me or Barry alone. As Paul McCartney is a always going to
be a Beatle, we're always going to be the Bee Gees, but as far as we're
concerned the Bee Gees will always be us three.
Do you think if the Bee Gees were a new group they would be successful
in today's music market?
I don't know -- because popular radio is not the same as it used to be.
It wouldn't be just us: Where would Elton John be? Where would the
Beatles be? Your starting point is where your advantage is. Today there
isn't a platform for popular music and the popular song. And I think the
popular song is always going to have a place in history, and the
vehicles have been vastly reduced and music has been sidelined. What we
have now is, if you have a melody and you're white and you're male --
you have to go to country.
How do you think the Bee Gees will be remembered?
I think the legacy of the Bee Gees -- you can't really enforce it, but I
would like to think as a songwriter is the most important thing. And
creating a huge catalog, which most people aren't really doing today. As
being not just songwriters for ourselves but for other people
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