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"Too Much Heaven" is a song by the Bee Gees, which was the band's contribution to the "Music for UNICEF" fund. They performed it at the Music for UNICEF Concert on 9 January 1979. The song later found its way to the group's thirteenth original album, Spirits Having Flown. It hit No. 1 in both the US and Canada.
Nina Simone recorded and released this song in the UK as the B-side of "To Love Somebody", another cover by Simone lifted from the Bee Gees' 1st album. [8] The two songs were included on her 1969 album To Love Somebody. [9] Le Orme covered this song and recorded and released in the same year "Mita Mita" in Italy.
Song Writer(s) Duration Notes "Granny's Mr. Dog" Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb: Unknown: Recorded on 25 July 1967. [1] "All So Lonely!" Colin Petersen or Vince Melouney: Unknown: Petersen and Melouney, the first two non-Gibb brother members that was also an official member of the Bee Gees wrote the song. [1] "Vince's Number" Barry, Robin and ...
Featuring Donna Summer, Bee Gees, Tess Parks and original orchestral cues from Danny Elfman, the music from Tim Burton’s horror comedy sequel will be available Sept. 9 as a deluxe double LP with …
Bee Gees Greatest (Expanded) B, M & R Gibb Barry — — Rare Earth had 1979 #39 hit. Written in 1977. The Bee Gees version was released only on the expanded version of Bee Gees Greatest in 2007 "The Way It Was" 1976 Children Of The World: B, R Gibb & Blue Weaver Barry — — "We Lost The Road" 1972 To Whom It May Concern: B & R Gibb Barry ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 8 February 2025. Music group (1958–2012) "BGs" redirects here. For other uses, see BG (disambiguation) and BGS (disambiguation). Bee Gees The Bee Gees in 1977 (top to bottom): Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb Background information Also known as BGs (1958–1959) Genres Pop soul disco rock soft rock ...
RSO Records wanted the song to share the then-title of the film, "Saturday Night", but the Bee Gees refused a title change, insisting that there had been too many songs with "Saturday" in the title, and the album already had a song with the word "night" in the title—"Night Fever". Rather than change the name of the former song to match the ...
It was the first Bee Gees album to make the UK top 40 in ten years (not counting the soundtrack for Saturday Night Fever), as well as being their first and only UK No. 1 album. Spirits Having Flown also topped the charts in Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Sweden and the US.