Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Robin Hugh Gibb CBE (22 December 1949 – 20 May 2012) was a British singer and songwriter. He gained worldwide fame as a member of the Bee Gees with elder brother Barry and twin brother Maurice.
Just before his death, Robin Gibb recorded the song "Sydney" about the brothers' experience of living in that city. It was released on his posthumous album 50 St. Catherine's Drive. [24] The house was demolished in 2016. [25] A minor hit in 1965, "Wine and Women", led to the group's first LP, The Bee Gees Sing and Play 14 Barry Gibb Songs. By ...
This is the last Bee Gees single to feature Vince Melouney's guitar work, as he left the band in early December after this song was released as a single. The song's B-side was "Kilburn Towers", except in France, where "Swan Song" was used. "I Started a Joke" was written by Robin mainly, with help from Barry and Maurice Gibb on the bridge
The younger brother of Bee Gees’ singers Barry, Maurice, and Robin Gibb, Andy Gibb scored a hit with “I Just Wanna Be Your Everything” but descended into a $1,000 a day cocaine addiction and ...
Andrew Roy Gibb (5 March 1958 – 10 March 1988) was an English singer and songwriter. He was the younger brother of Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb, musicians who had formed the Bee Gees during the late-1950s.
(Barry Gibb, 78, is the only surviving family member; Maurice Gibb died in 2003 at 53 and Robin died in 2012 at 62. Younger brother Andy Gibb, a teen idol and solo artist, died in 1988 at age 30.)
The Best of the Bee Gees announced the drummer's death on Monday, Nov. 18. ... Vince Melouney, Robin Gibb (1949-2012), Barry Gibb, Maurice Gibb (1949-2003) and Colin Petersen.
[27] [28] Nat Kipner, who managed the Bee Gees early in their career in Australia in 1966, also attended the service. [28] Barry and Robin Gibb told the BBC about Maurice's death, "The fact that they had to operate on Maurice during the shock of cardiac arrest is very questionable." Barry said, "None of the sequence of events have yet made ...