{1} Beth Neil, “We Were Young Tearaways,” Mirror, November 4, 2009.
{2} Oliver Bennett, “Fever Pitch,” Times, February 15, 1997.
{3} Judith Whelan, “Still Staying Alive,” Sydney Morning Herald, February 18, 1997.
{4} Chris Buckland, “Oh Boys! How Mr. and Mrs. Bee Gee Helped to Make Their Sons Shine,” Daily Mirror, April 17, 1979.
{5} Neil, “We Were Young Tearaways.”
{6} Paul Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’,” Songwriter, February 1978.
{7} Paul Dacre, “Off to the Sun—The Family Gibb,” Daily Express, April 19, 1979.
{8} Nick Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb,” New Musical Express, December 2, 1967.
{9} Ibid.
{10} Ibid.
{11} Ibid.
{12} Neil, “We Were Young Tearaways.”
{13} Dacre, “Off to the Sun.”
{14} Kerry McGlynn and Liane Maxfield, “No Looking Back for the Bee Gees,” Australian Women’s Weekly, June 14, 1967.
{15} “Early TV Start for Three Boys,” Australian Women’s Weekly, June 29, 1960.
{16} Frank Rose, “How Can You Mend a Broken Group? The Bee Gees Did It with Disco,” Rolling Stone, July 14, 1977.
{17} “Early TV Start for Three Boys,” Australian Women’s Weekly.
{18} Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb.”
{19} “Early TV Start for Three Boys,” Australian Women’s Weekly.
{20} Ibid.
{21} Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, as told to David Leaf (New York: Pinnacle Books, 1980), 25.
{22} Rose, “How Can You Mend a Broken Group?”
{23} Greg Mitchell, “The Act You’ve Known for All These Years,” Crawdaddy, August 1978.
{24} Timothy White, “This Is Where We Came In,” Billboard, March 24, 2001.
{25} “Billboard Salutes the Bee Gees,” Billboard, September 2, 1978.
{26} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{27} “Stayin’ Alive and Coming Back for Some More,” Sunday Times, December 30, 2001.
{28} Robin Eggar, “Bee Gees,” Courier-Mail, October 3, 1987.
{29} Bruce Elder, “Stayin’ Alive,” Sydney Morning Herald, March 20, 1999.
{30} Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb.”
{31} Joseph Brennan, Gibb Songs, http://www.columbia.edu/
~brennan/beegees/63.html.
{32} Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’.”
{33} Campbell Reid, “They Said We’d Never Make It,” Advertiser, November 9, 1989.
{34} Michael Pye, Moguls: Inside the Business of Show Business (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1990), 234–35.
{35} David Ansen, Janet Huck, Kartine Ames, and Susan Agrest, “Rock Tycoon,” Newsweek, July 31, 1978.
{36} Pye, Moguls, 239.
{37} Ibid.
{38} Peter Brown and Steven Gaines, The Love You Make: An Insider’s Story of the Beatles (New York: New American Library, 1983), 217–18.
{39} The Beatles, The Beatles Anthology (San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2000), 268.
{40} Rose, “How Do You Mend a Broken Group?”
{41} Ibid.
{42} Buckland, “Oh Boys!”
{43} Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’.”
{44} Alan Smith, “Meet a Bee Gee: Barry Gibb,” New Musical Express, November 25, 1967.
{45} Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb.”
{46} Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’.”
{47} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{48} Johnny Black, “The Rogue Gene,” Mojo, April 2001.
{49} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{50} Norrie Drummond, “The Bee Gees May Give You ‘World’ Next!” New Musical Express, October 14, 1967.
{51} Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’.”
{52} Brennan, Gibb Songs, http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/
beegees/63.html.
{53} Paul Gambaccini, “A Conversation with Paul McCartney,” Rolling Stone, July 12, 1979.
{54} Dick Tatham, The Incredible Bee Gees: Barry, Robin and Maurice—The Full Inside Story of Their Golden Success (London: Futura, 1979), 21.
{55} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{56} Alan Smith, “Meet a Bee Gee: Maurice Gibb,” New Musical Express, December 16, 1967.
{57} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{58} Brennan, Gibb Songs, http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/
beegees/63.html.
{59} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{60} Brown, The Love You Make, 222.
{61} Nick Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Vince Melouney,” New Musical Express, December 9, 1967.
{62} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{63} “The Bee Gees Have No Time to Be Frustrated,” Melody Maker, September 23, 1967.
{64} Richard Goldstein, “The Children of Rock Belt the Blues,” New York Times, July 30, 1967.
{65} Norrie Drummond, “Bee Gees Happened Everywhere—But Here!” New Musical Express, September 30, 1967.
{66} “Bee Gees—Five Australians with a Bright Future,” Melody Maker, May 27, 1967.
{67} Review of “New York Mining Disaster 1941,” New Musical Express, April 15, 1967.
{68} Review of “New York Mining Disaster.”
{69} “The Bee Gees Have No Time to Be Frustrated.”
{70} Ibid.
{71} Lulu, I Don’t Want to Fight (New York: Time Warner, 2002),
112–13.
{72} Brown The Love You Make, 240–41.
{73} “Bee Gees Banned from Britain,” Melody Maker, October 14, 1967.
{74} Drummond, “The Bee Gees Happened Everywhere.”
{75} Ibid.
{76} “Stigwood and NEMS Enterprises Split,” Melody Maker, November 4, 1967.
{77} “Bee Gees No. 1 Hit Started as a Send-Up,” Melody Maker, November 4, 1967.
{78} Drummond, “The Bee Gees Happened Everywhere.”
{79} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{80} Ibid.
{81} Brown The Love You Make, 251–52.
{82} Beatles, The Beatles Anthology, 268.
{83} “Stigwood and NEMS Enterprises Split.”
{84} Ibid.
{85} Drummond, “Bee Gees May Give You ‘World’ Next!”
{86} Ibid.
{87} Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb.”
{88} Alan Walsh, “Time to Bring Glamour Back to Pop,” Melody Maker, October 21, 1967.
{89} “Bee Gees No. 1 Hit Started as a Send-Up.”
{90} Drummond, “Bee Gees May Give You ‘World’ Next!”
{91} Logan, “Meet a Bee Gee: Robin Gibb.”
{92} Walsh, “Time to Bring Glamour Back to Pop.”
{93} Ritchie York, “Keith Richard on Mick, Beatles, Led, Faith, Tull, Gees,” New Musical Express, December 6, 1969.
{94} Timothy White, “Earthy Angels: How the Bee Gees Talk Dirty and Influence People,” Rolling Stone, May 17, 1979.
{95} Corrina Honan,”I Never Get Up Until Midday; Bee Gee Robin Gibb, 42, Currently Recording a New Album, Talks to Corrina Honan,” Daily Mail, February 2, 1992.
{96} Ibid.
{97} Ibid.
{98} Nick Logan, “All About the Ghostly Gibbs,” New Musical Express, January 13, 1968.
{99} Drummond, “Bee Gees May Give You ‘World’ Next!”
{100} Walsh, “Time to Bring Glamour Back to Pop.”
{101} “Bee Gees Banned from Britain.”
{102} Walsh, “Time to Bring Glamour Back to Pop.”
{103} Smith, “Meet a Bee Gee: Maurice Gibb.”
{104} Review of “World,” New Musical Express, November 18, 1967.
{105} Nick Jones, “Bee Gees: Who Needs Drugs to Make Music?” Melody Maker, December 16, 1967.
{106} “It’s the Song That Matters Now . . . Says Bee Gee Barry,” Melody Maker, January 13, 1968.
{107} Jones, “Bee Gees: Who Needs Drugs to Make Music?”
{108} “Bee Gees Have No Time to Be Frustrated.”
{109} Jim Miller, “Bee Gees Horizontal,” Rolling Stone, December 21, 1968.
{110} Nick Logan, “Bee Gees ‘Words’ Mystery,” New Musical Express, February 24, 1968.
{111} Logan, “All About the Ghostly Gibbs.”
{112} Richard Green, “Bee Gee Maurice Plays Up-Tempo Raver,” New Musical Express, June 21, 1969.
{113} Ibid.
{114} Logan, “Bee Gees ‘Words’ Mystery.”
{115} Jim Miller, “Bee Gees Horizontal” Rolling Stone, December 21, 1968.
{116} Lulu, I Don’t Want to Fight, 115.
{117} “It’s the Song That Matters Now.”
{118} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{119} Keith Altham, “Bee Gees Sitting Targets for the Cynics,” New Musical Express, May 4, 1968.
{120} Nick Logan, “Barry: ‘Important We Have Respect,’” New Musical Express, August 10, 1968.
{121} Keith Altham, “Big Night for the Bee Gees,” New Musical Express, April 6, 1968.
{122} Ibid.
{123} Altham, “The Bee Gees Sitting Targets for the Cynics.”
{124} “‘Offensive’ Bee Gees TV Play?” New Musical Express, April 6, 1968.
{125} Altham, “The Bee Gees Sitting Targets for the Cynics.”
{126} “Illness Wrecks Bee Gees Tour,” Melody Maker, August 3, 1968.
{127} Honan, “I Never Get Up Til Midday.”
{128} The Atlantic Recordings: Percy Sledge, Rhino Records, 2001.
{129} Andrew Sandoval, Bee Gees: The Day-By-Day Story, 1945–1972, (RetroFuture Day-By-Day Series, 2012), 110.
{130} Alexis Petridis, “The Bee Gee’s Odessa File,” Guardian, January 30, 2009.
{131} Altham, “The Bee Gees Sitting Targets for the Cynics.”
{132} Nick Logan, “I’ve Never Been 100 Per Cent a Bee Gee: Vince,” New Musical Express, November 2, 1968.
{133} Jan Nesbit, “I Want More Respect—Barry,” New Musical Express, December 7, 1968.
{134} Mark Paytress, “Stayin’ Alive,” Mojo. December 2010.
{135} Nick Logan, “Bee Gee Colin Happy to Be the Outsider,” New Musical Express, March 15, 1969.
{136} Nick Logan, “Barry Reveals Bee Gees’ Plans and Takes You Round His Penthouse Pad,” New Musical Express, October 12, 1968.
{137} Bob Dawbarn, “I’m Not Leaving—Yet,” Melody Maker, September 28, 1968.
{138} Ibid.
{139} “Bee Gee Barry Wants to Quit—But Commitments Until 1970,” New Musical Express, September 14, 1968.
{140} Logan, “Barry Reveals Bee Gees’ Plans.”
{141} Ibid.
{142} Paytress, “Stayin’ Alive.”
{143} Nesbit, “I Want More Respect.”
{144} Paytress, “Stayin’ Alive.”
{145} Logan, “Bee Gee Colin Happy to Be the Outsider.”
{146} Logan, “Barry Reveals Bee Gees’ Plans.”
{147} Ibid.
{148} Lulu, I Don’t Want to Fight, 122.
{149} Ibid.
{150} Ibid.
{151} Pye, Moguls, 260.
{152} Ibid., 246.
{153} Black, “The Rogue Gene.”
{154} Alan Smith, “My Wife Comes Second to Me,” New Musical Express, August 30, 1969.
{155} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{156} Paytress, “Stayin’ Alive.”
{157} Tatham, The Incredible Bee Gees, 49.
{158} Ben Sisario, “Robin Gibb, a Bee Gee with a Taciturn Manner, Dies at 62,” New York Times, May 20, 2012.
{159} Dawbarn, “I’m Not Leaving—Yet.”
{160} Smith, “My Wife Comes Second to Me.”
{161} Nick Logan, “Marriage Might End Bee Gees Feuding,” New Musical Express, March 1, 1969.
{162} Nick Logan, “The New Man Who Is Bee Gee Barry,” New Musical Express, February 15, 1969.
{163} Lulu, I Don’t Want to Fight, 12.
{164} Ibid, 133.
{165} Bruce Harris, “Please Read Me: A Definitive Analysis of the Bee Gees’ Lyrics,” Jazz & Pop, May 1971.
{166} Petridis, “The Bee Gee’s Odessa File.”
{167} Author interview, November 10, 2012.
{168} Don Short, “Barry Gibb Backs Out of Bee Gees’ First Film,” Daily Mirror, March 13, 1969.
{169} Don Short, “Robin Breaks the Silence with a No. 1 Sound,” Daily Mirror, May 3, 1969.
{170} Johnny Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco,” Q, April 2000.
{171} “Robin Gibb Unveils His Plans,” New Musical Express, May 10, 1969.
{172} Alan Walsh, “The Strange Saga of the Bee Gees,” Melody Maker, March 29, 1969.
{173} Nick Logan, “Barry Says Robin ‘Extremely Rude,’” New Musical Express, May 3, 1969.
{174} Ibid.
{175} Smith, “My Wife Comes Second to Me.”
{176} Geoffrey Wansell, “Tragedy for the Bee Gees,” Daily Mail, January 13, 2003.
{177} “Robin: Plans Not Settled,” Daily Express, April 24, 1969.
{178} Short, “Robin Breaks the Silence.”
{179} Richard Green, “Barry Plans Thank You Tour for Loyal Fans,” New Musical Express, October 4, 1969.
{180} “Robin Gibb Unveils His Plans,” New Musical Express, May 10, 1969.
{181} Logan, “Barry Says Robin ‘Extremely Rude.’”
{182} Green, “Bee Gee Maurice Plays Up-Tempo Raver.”
{183} Ibid.
{184} Nick Logan, “Happy Robin Not Gloating Over the Bee Gees Miss,” New Musical Express, July 19, 1969.
{185} Review of “Saved by the Bell,” New Musical Express, June 28, 1968.
{186} Ibid.
{187} Ibid.
{188} Author interview, October 2012.
{189} “Blind Date with Robin Gibb,” Melody Maker, August 16, 1969.
{190} Laurie Henshaw, “The Saga of the Bee Gees Continues,” Melody Maker, August 16, 1969.
{191} Laurie Henshaw, “Strange Case of the Sacked Drummer,” Melody Maker, September 6, 1969.
{192} “Colin Quits the Bee Gees,” New Musical Express, August 30, 1969.
{193} Richard Green, “Bee Gee Barry Censored Colin in an Effort to Stop Any More Bee Gees Feuding,” New Musical Express, September 13, 1969.
{194} Ibid.
{195} Green, “Barry Plans Thank You Tour.”
{196} Ibid.
{197} Nick Logan, “It’s My Duty to Appear Unreal, Says Robin Gibb,” New Musical Express, August 2, 1969.
{198} Dacre, “Off to the Sun.”
{199} David Wigg, “Ex–Bee Gees Answers ‘Ward of Court’ Threat,” Daily Express, September 5, 1969.
{200} Green, “Bee Gee Barry Censored Colin.”
{201} Ibid.
{202} “The ‘Pride’ of a Sacked Bee Gee,” Daily Mirror, September 25, 1969.
{203} Royston Eldridge, “Out of the Whole Mess Comes the New True Bee Gees Says Barry,” Melody Maker, October 4, 1969.
{204} Green, “Barry Plans Thank You Tour.”
{205} Smith, “My Wife Comes Second to Me.”
{206} Nick Logan, “Bee Gees Laugh Off Those Split Rumours,” New Musical Express, August 24, 1968.
{207} David Wigg, “Bee Gee Barry Quits,” Daily Express, December 2, 1969.
{208} Judith Simons, “The Millionaire Proud to Be Living in Lulu’s Shadow,” Daily Express, February 19, 1970.
{209} David Wigg, “Ex-Bee Gee Barry Says: I’m Quitting Britain,” Daily Express, January 21, 1970.
{210} Jeremy Gilbert, “Robin at Christmas,” Melody Maker, December 29, 1969.
{211} “Robin Forgets Quality,” New Musical Express, January 17, 1970.
{212} Don Short, “Bee Gee Booster!” Daily Mirror, September 5, 1970.
{213} Ibid.
{214} “The Bee Gees Back Together,” New Musical Express, November 14, 1970.
{215} “Bee Gees Re-form,” Melody Maker, August 29, 1970.
{216} Short, “Bee Gee Booster!”
{217} Chris Charlesworth, “The Bee Gees’ Lonely Days,” Melody Maker, November 14, 1970.
{218} Ibid.
{219} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{220} Robin Eggar, “The Bee Gees Keep on Bouncing Back,” Advertiser, October 17, 1987.
{221} Mitchell Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb,” Playboy, August 1978.
{222} William Leith, “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning,” Independent, July 18, 1993.
{223} Dacre, “Off to the Sun.”
{224} Leith, “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning.”
{225} Dacre, “Off to the Sun.”
{226} Harvey Kubernik, “How The Bee Gees Captured America,” Melody Maker, January 21, 1978.
{227} Eggar, “The Bee Gees Keep on Bouncing Back.”
{228} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{229} Kubernik, “How the Bee Gees Captured America.”
{230} Pye, Moguls, 246.
{231} Brennan, Gibb Songs, http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/
beegees/63.html.
{232} Lulu, I Don’t Want to Fight, 157.
{233} Ibid, 160.
{234} Ibid, 162.
{235} Fred Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits (New York: Billboard Books, 1997).
{236} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{237} Richard Harrington, “Grammy Granddaddy: Arif Mardin, Norah Jones’s Hall-of-Fame Producer, Was Winning Them Before She Was Born,” Washington Post, February 23, 2003.
{238} Ibid.
{239} Ibid.
{240} Kubrnik, “How the Bee Gees Captured America.”
{241} Ibid.
{242} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{243} “Right Hook Was a Lulu,” Daily Mirror, February 13, 1979.
{244} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{245} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{246} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{247} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{248} Rose, “How Do You Mend a Broken Group?”
{249} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{250} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{251} Kubernik, “How the Bee Gees Captured America.”
{252} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{253} Ibid.
{254} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{255} Adam Bernstein, “Record Producer Arif Mardin: Won 11 Grammy Awards,” Washington Post, June 27, 2006.
{256} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{257} Bill Altman, “Bee Gees Banquet: Some Funk in the Syrup,” Rolling Stone, September 11, 1975.
{258} Tom Doyle, “Arif Mardin: Producer,” Sound on Sound, July 2004.
{259} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{260} Ibid.
{261} Bruce Elder, “Stayin’ Alive,” Sydney Morning Herald, March 20, 1999.
{262} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{263} Rose, “How Do You Mend a Broken Group?”
{264} Black, “The Bee Gees Discover Disco.”
{265} Ibid.
{266} Ibid.
{267} Altman, “Bee Gees Banquet.”
{268} Tatham, The Incredible Bee Gees, 84–85.
{269} Stephen Holden, Review of Main Course, Rolling Stone, July 17, 1975.
{270} Baratta, “The Bee Gees Straight Talkin’.”
{271} Anonymous author interview.
{272} Author interview, May 2012.
{273} Anonymous author interview.
{274} Kubernik, “How the Bee Gees Captured America.”
{275} Joe McEwen, review of Children of the World, Rolling Stone, November 4, 1976.
{276} Chris Charlesworth, “Nights on Broadway,” Melody Maker, December 4, 1976.
{277} Rose, “How Do You Mend a Broken Group?”
{278} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{279} Altman, “Bee Gees Banquet.”
{280} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb,” Playboy.
{281} Charlesworth, “Nights on Broadway,” Melody Maker.
{282} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{283} Ben Fong-Torres, “‘Saturday Night’ Bumps ‘Rumours,’” Rolling Stone, March 9, 1978.
{284} Paul Grein, “‘Fever Sells at White Hot Pace Setting New Record,” Billboard, April 22, 1978.
{285} Sam Kashner, “Fever Pitch: How Travolta and the Bee Gees Shook the Night,” W, December 2007.
{286} Brother Cleve to author, July 2012.
{287} Jack Egan, “Cashing in on the Boogie to the Tune of $5 Billion; Disco” Washington Post, June 26, 1978.
{288} Sara Stosic, “Marketing the Illusion of Inclusive Exclusivity: How Communications/Public Relations Play a Key Role in Creating and Sustaining Vibrant Venues in the New York Nightlife Industry,” thesis, New York University, 14.
{289} Dave Marsh, “American Grandstand: Saturday Night Fever,” Rolling Stone, June 1, 1978.
{290} Lisa Robinson, “Boogie Nights: An Oral History of Disco,” Vanity Fair, February 2010.
{291} Leslie Bennetts, “An ‘In’ Crowd and Outside Mob Show Up for Studio 54’s Birthday,” New York Times, April 28, 1978.
{292} Stosic, “Marketing the Illusion of Inclusive Exclusivity,” 13.
{293} Ibid.
{294} Nik Cohn, “Fever Pitch,” Guardian, September 17, 1994.
{295} Ibid.
{296} Craig Rosen, The Billboard Book of Number One Albums (New York: Billboard Books, 1996).
{297} Anthony Haden-Guest, The Last Party: Studio 54, Disco, and the Culture of the Night (New York: William Morrow, 1997), xxv–xxvi.
{298} Haden-Guest, The Last Party; White, “Earthy Angels.”
{299} Richard Buskin, “Classic Tracks; The Bee Gees Stayin’ Alive,” Sound on Sound, August 2005.
{300} Ibid.
{301} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{302} Ibid.
{303} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{304} John Swenson, “The Bee Gees’ Record Setters,” Rolling Stone, September 21, 1978.
{305} Matt Blackett, “Alan Kendall on Playing with the Bee Gees,” Guitar Player, July 2009.
{306} Ken Sharp, “In One of His Last Extensive Interviews, Bee Gees’ Maurice Gibb on the Group’s Long Career,” Goldmine, September 3, 2004.
{307} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{308} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{309} Stan Soocher, “Can the Bee Gees Stay on Top?” Circus, March 13, 1979.
{310} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{311} Ibid.
{312} Ibid.
{313} Larry Pryce, The Bee Gees (London: Granada, 1979), 54.
{314} Ibid.
{315} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{316} Rose, “How Can You Mend a Broken Group?”
{317} Anonymous author interview.
{318} Soocher, “Can the Bee Gees Stay on Top?”
{319} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{320} Ibid.
{321} Ibid.
{322} Swenson, “The Bee Gees’ Record Setters.”
{323} Pryce, The Bee Gees, 87.
{324} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{325} Kashner, “Fever Pitch.”
{326} Robinson, “Boogie Nights.”
{327} Ibid.
{328} Paul Sexton, “Q&A with Robert Stigwood,” Billboard, March 24, 2001.
{329} Robinson, “Boogie Nights.”
{330} Fong-Torres, “‘Saturday Night’ Bumps ‘Rumours.’”
{331} Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, 110.
{332} Fong-Torres, “‘Saturday Night’ Bumps ‘Rumours.’”
{333} “Billboard Salutes the Bee Gees.”
{334} Fong-Torres, “‘Saturday Night’ Bumps ‘Rumours.’”
{335} Rosen, The Billboard Book of Number One Albums.
{336} Charlesworth, “Nights on Broadway.”
{337} “Billboard Salutes the Bee Gees.”
{338} Swenson, “The Bee Gees’ Record Setters.”
{339} Ibid.
{340} Ibid.
{341} Ibid.
{342} Ibid.
{343} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{344} Ibid.
{345} Ibid.
{346} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{347} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{348} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{349} Mark Small, “Albhy Galuten ’68,” On the Watchtower, Summer 2002.
{350} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{351} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{352} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{353} Small, “Albhy Galuten.”
{354} Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits.
{355} Buskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{356} Swenson, “The Bee Gees’ Record Setters.”
{357} “Movies: Kid from ‘Kotter’ Leaps Out of Pack and Into Disco Film,” New York Times, February 18, 1977.
{358} Grein, “‘Fever Sells at White Hot Pace.”
{359} Merrill Shindler, “The Tavares Family: Up from Doo-Wop,” Rolling Stone, July 28, 1977.
{360} David Wild, “The Bee Gees,” Rolling Stone, May 29, 1997.
{361} Haden-Guest, The Last Party, 79–80.
{362} Simon Yeamon, “Bee Gees’ Party of Life and Death,” Advertiser, April 6, 1998.
{363} Jamel Clayton Miller, Legends: Bee Gees, VH1 (1999) transcription (2002).
{364} Rose, “How Can You Mend a Broken Group?”
{365} White, “This Is Where We Came In,” Billboard.
{366} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{367} Goldstein, “The Children of Rock Belt the Blues.”
{368} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{369} Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, 112.
{370} Robert Christgau, Dean of American Rock Critics, http://www.
robertchristgau.com/xg/music/rocktheater.php.
{371} Henry Edwards, “Inventing a Plot for ‘Sgt. Pepper,’” New York Times, July 16, 1978.
{372} Ed Zukerman, “Sgt. Pepper’s Taught the Band to Play and Stigwood’s Gonna Make It Pay,” Rolling Stone, April 20, 1978.
{373} Ibid.
{374} Ibid.
{375} Cameron Crowe, “The One and Only Peter Frampton,” Rolling Stone, February 10, 1977.
{376} Edwards, “Inventing a Plot for ‘Sgt. Pepper.’”
{377} Stephen Demorest, “The Bee Gees Are Back and They’re Having a Ball,” New York Times, November 28, 1976.
{378} Crowe, “The One and Only Peter Frampton.”
{379} Zukerman, “Sgt. Pepper’s Taught the Band to Play.”
{380} “Billboard Salutes the Bee Gees.”
{381} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{382} Zukerman, “Sgt. Pepper’s Taught the Band to Play.”
{383} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{384} Ibid.
{385} Paul Grein, “A Day in the Life of Dee Anthony,” Billboard, November 26, 1977.
{386} “Billboard Salutes the Bee Gees.”
{387} Ibid.
{388} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{389} Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, 113.
{390} Ibid.
{391} Robert Stigwood, The Official Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band Scrapbook: The Making of a Hit Movie Musical (New York: Pocket Books, 1978).
{392} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{393} Ibid.
{394} Ibid.
{395} Stigwood, The Official Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band Scrapbook.
{396} Martin, George and Jeremy Hornsby, All You Need Is Ears (London: Macmillan, 1979), 154–55.
{397} Ibid, 217–18.
{398} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{399} Grein, “‘Fever’ Sells at White Hot Pace.”
{400} Glazer, “The Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{401} Ben Fong-Torres, “‘Sgt. Pepper’ Returns,” Rolling Stone, November 2, 1978.
{402} Ibid.
{403} Brennan, Gibb Songs, http://www.columbia.edu/~brennan/
beegees/63.html.
{404} Anthony Haden-Guest, The Last Party: Studio 54, Disco, and the Culture of the Night (New York: William Morrow, 1998), 79.
{405} Stanley Mieses, “Celluloid Heroes,” Melody Maker, December 10, 1977.
{406} Janet Maslin, “Screen: Son of ‘Sgt. Pepper,’” New York Times, July 21, 1978.
{407} Marilyn Laverty, “You Can Fool . . .” Record Mirror, August 12, 1978.
{408} Paul Nelson, “Sgt. Pepper Gets Busted,” Rolling Stone, October 5, 1978.
{409} Fong-Torres, “‘Sgt. Pepper’ Returns.”
{410} Paul Gambaccini, “A Conversation with Paul McCartney,” Rolling Stone, July 12, 1979.
{411} Mick Brown, “An Interview with George Harrison,” Rolling Stone, April 19, 1979.
{412} Soocher, “Can the Bee Gees Stay on Top?”
{413} Wild, “The Bee Gees.”
{414} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{415} Jim White, “The Gift of the Gibbs,” Independent, February 21, 1991.
{416} Ben Fong-Torres, “Al Coury Owns Number One,” Rolling Stone, October 5, 1978.
{417} Ansen, “Rock Tycoon.”
{418} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{419} Ibid.
{420} “Even at Miami Studio, the Bee Gees Stay Close to Fans,” Palm Beach Post, November 27, 1981.
{421} John Rockwell, “The Bee Gees Are Getting as Big as the Beatles,” New York Times, March 19, 1978.
{422} Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, 132.
{423} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{424} Cutler Durkee and Jonathan Cooper, “The Bee Gees Search for Life after Disco,” People, August 7, 1989.
{425} Eve H. Malakoff, “Personalities,” Washington Post, August 21, 1960.
{426} Fong-Torres, “Al Coury Owns Number One.”
{427} Rosen, The Billboard Book of Number One Albums.
{428} Albhy Galuten to author, May 2012.
{429} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{430} Soocher, “Can the Bee Gees Stay on Top?”
{431} Ibid.
{432} Ibid
{433} Ibid.
{434} Barry Gibb to David Frost, The Bee Gees Special, NBC, November 15, 1979.
{435} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{436} Dan Daley, “Stayin’ Power,” Studio Sound, June 1997.
{437} Ruskin, “Classic Tracks.”
{438} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{439} Gibb, Bee Gees: The Authorized Biography, 135.
{440} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{441} Roman Kozak, “Backstage at a Gift of Song,” Billboard, February 3, 1979.
{442} Ibid.
{443} Ray Herbeck Jr., “Radio Syndicators Wary of Disco,” Billboard, January 13, 1979.
{444} “Word ‘Disco’ Dirty in New York Radio,” Billboard, December 8, 1979.
{445} Richard Harrington, “The Bee Gees, After the Fever; Once Stung by Critics, the Brothers Gibb Return from the Disco Dungeon,” Washington Post, August 3, 1989.
{446} Stephen Holden, “The Bee Gees’ Millennial Fever,” Rolling Stone, April 5, 1979.
{447} Mitchell, “The Act You’ve Known for All These Years.”
{448} Holden, “The Bee Gees’ Millennial Fever.”
{449} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{450} Mark Kernis, “The Bee Gees: Still Ready for a New Start,” Washington Post, March 2, 1979.
{451} Soocher, “Can the Bee Gees Stay on Top?”
{452} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{453} Robert Christgau, “Christgau’s Consumer Guide,” Village Voice, April 1979.
{454} Jim Jerome, “Bee Gee Mania,” People, August 6, 1979.
{455} Ibid.
{456} Maurice Gibb to David Frost, The Bee Gees Special, NBC, November 15, 1979.
{457} Kubernik, “How the Bee Gees Captured America.”
{458} Ibid.
{459} Geoffrey Himes, “Monday Night Fever; Shrieks and Lasers for the Bee Gees,” Washington Post, September 25, 1979.
{460} Jerome, “Bee Gee Mania,”
{461} Ibid.
{462} Ibid.
{463} White, “Earthy Angels.”
{464} “Heart Inflammation Killed Andy Gibb,” Associated Press, March 11, 1988.
{465} Eric Levin, “Death of a Golden Child,” People, March 28, 1988.
{466} Alison Steele, “Andy Gibb Close Up,” Co-Ed Magazine, November 1978.
{467} “‘Oh Brother, You’re Famous,’ Says Andy Gibb,” Fabulous 208, April 1969.
{468} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1978.
{469} “Glib Andy Gibb,” Philadelphia Daily News, June 5, 1978.
{470} Stan Soocher, “The Littlest Bee Gee: Andy Gibb Is More Than Just a Clone of His Successful Siblings,” Circus, August 17, 1978.
{471} Alison Steele, “Andy Gibb Close-Up,” Co-Ed, November 1978.
{472} “The Bee Gees Secret Weapon,” Teen Bag Magazine, August 1977.
{473} Connie Berman and Marsha Daly, Andy Gibb (Middletown, CT: Xerox, 1979), 15.
{474} Soocher, “The Littlest Bee Gee.”
{475} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1978.
{476} Soocher, “The Littlest Bee Gee.”
{477} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1981.
{478} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1978,
{479} Soocher, “Littlest Bee Gee: Andy Gibb Is More Than Just a Clone.”
{480} Andy Gibb to Robert Mogan, 1978.
{481} Susan Duncan, “I Want Justice for Our Daughter, Says Andy Gibb’s Ex-Wife Kim,” Australian Weekly, August 1989.
{482} Ibid.
{483} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1981.
{484} Anonymous author interview.
{485} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1978,
{486} Berman, Andy Gibb, 87.
{487} Ibid, 86.
{488} Soocher, “Littlest Bee Gee.”
{489} Duncan, “I Want Justice for Our Daughter.”
{490} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1981.
{491} “I’ve Never Paid My Dues! Why Andy Gibb Is Scared of Success,” Teen Beat, July 1979.
{492} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music, VH1, August 1997, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lq6WyysnAI.
{493} Brook Bayvel, “My Life with Andy,” Advertiser, March 15, 1988.
{494} Tatham, The Incredible Bee Gees, 119.
{495} Bayvel, “My Life with Andy.”
{496} John Rockwell, “The Bee Gees Are Getting as Big as the Beatles,” New York Times, March 19, 1978.
{497} Jim Jerome,” It’s Singles Time for Bee Gee Baby Andy Gibb: He’s Got 1977’s No. 1 Hit and a Marital Split,” People, November 14, 1978.
{498} Duncan, “I Want Justice for Our Daughter.”
{499} Ibid.
{500} Jim Jerome, “It’s Singles Time for Bee Gee Baby Andy Gibb,” People, November 14, 1977.
{501} “Please Tell Him, Kim Asks Mirror,” Daily Mirror, January 1978.
{502} “$250,000 Smile,” Daily Mirror, April 23, 1978.
{503} Glazer, “Rise and Fall of the Brothers Gibb.”
{504} Ibid.
{505} Andy Gibb to Robert W. Morgan, 1981.
{506} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{507} Soocher, “The Littlest Bee Gee”
{508} Mitchell, “The Act You’ve Known for All These Years.”
{509} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{510} Robert W. Morgan interview, 1981.
{511} Ibid.
{512} Fred Schruers, Anchorage Daily News (syndicated from Rolling Stone), July 28, 1978.
{513} Donn Downey, “Bee Gees Special Steers Clear of the Hokey,” Globe and Mail, November 21, 1979.
{514} Soocher, “Littlest Bee Gee.”
{515} Andy Gibb to Bob Durant, 1985.
{516} Stephen Holden, review of After Dark, Rolling Stone, April 17, 1980.
{517} Carla Hall, “The Fame Game,” Washington Post, August 21, 1980.
{518} Robert Hilburn, “Andy Gibb, 1970s Pop Music Sensation, Dies in England at 30,” Los Angeles Times, March 11, 1988.
{519} “Picks and Pans Review: Andy Gibb,” People, December 29, 1980.
{520} David Gritten, “Dallas Darling,” People, March 30, 1981.
{521} Carla Hall, “Stars and Austerity at Ford’s Theatre Gala,” Washington Post, March 23, 1981.
{522} “Mum Sees Andy Gibb Died,” Sun, March 11, 1988.
{523} Ibid.
{524} Jayne Reed, “Principally, Gibb,” U.S. Magazine, April 1981.
{525} Tony Brenna and Riva Dryan, Victoria Principal (Boston: St. Martin’s Press, 1989.
{526} Gritten, “Dallas Darling.”
{527} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{528} David Gritten, “Pam Dawber Casts Off from Mork to Crew with Andy Gibb and ‘The Pirates of Penzance,’” People, June 21, 1981.
{529} Ibid.
{530} “Tipoff,” Lakeland Ledger, September 23, 1981.
{531} Donahue, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADM6ksWP0Yk.
{532} Entertainment Tonight, March 10, 1989, .http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3YoGa6FlTw>.
{533} Brenna, Victoria Principal.
{534} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{535} Brenna, Victoria Principal.
{536} Ibid.
{537} Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{538} Giolia Diliberto, “Awol from Broadway Once too Often, Andy Gibb Is Ordered to Turn in His Dreamcoat,” People, January 31, 1983.
{539} Bruce Baskett, “Andy Gibb,” Courier-Mail, August 16, 1986; Good Morning America, July 23, 1982, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlPzyKjITMU.
{540} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{541} Entertainment Tonight, March 10, 1989.
{542} Bayvel, “My Life with Andy.”
{543} Malcolm Boyles, Joanna Patyn and Richard Motlock, “Lovesick and Suicide Scare,” Globe, 1982.
{544} Brenna, Victoria Principal.
{545} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{546} “Break-Up Has Gibb on Edge,” Star-News, April 27, 1982.
{547} Good Morning America, Jul 23, 1982.
{548} Entertainment Tonight, December 1, 1982.
{549} Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{550} Leslie Bennetts, “Absenteeism Said to Be Rising,” New York Times, March 9, 1983.
{551} Diliberto, “Awol from Broadway Once Too Often.”
{552} Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{553} “Police Guard Threatened Bee Gee, and Brother Found Unconscious After Tour Leaves Him Exhausted,” Montreal Gazette, August 20, 1984; Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{554} “Drug Treatment for Andy Gibb,” Courier-Mail, April 8, 1985.
{555} Andy Gibb to Bob Durant.
{556} Guy Phillips, “My Torment over Brother’s Death,” Sunday Mail, April 30, 1989.
{557} Jacqueline Lee Lewes, “Fall of a Bankrupt Star,” Sydney Sun Herald, September 13, 1987.
{558} “Singer Andy Gibb Files for Personal Bankruptcy,” Miami Herald, September 11, 1987.
{559} Ibid.
{560} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{561} Ibid.
{562} Ibid.
{563} “Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music, VH1, November 30, 1997.
{564} Ibid.
{565} Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{566} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{567} “Doctors Say Heart Inflammation Caused Death of Singer Andy Gibb,” Associated Press, March 12, 1988.
{568} Phillips, “My Torment over Brother’s Death.”
{569} “Final Days of Andy Gibb,” Behind the Music.
{570} Levin, “Death of a Golden Child.”
{571} Duncan, “I Want Justice for Our Daughter.”
{572} Entertainment Tonight, March 10, 1989.
{573} Cynthia Kirk, “Bee Gees Sue Stigwood in N.Y. for Coin & Freedom After Audit,” Variety, October 15, 1980.
{574} Ibid.
{575} Marc Kirkeby, “Bee Gees Sue Stigwood, Charge Mismanagement,” Rolling Stone, November 23, 1980.
{576} Kirk, “Bee Gees Sue Stigwood.”
{577} “Stigwood Files Counterclaim to Bee Gees Suit, Seeks $310-Mil,” Variety, October 29, 1980.
{578} Ibid.
{579} Richard M. Nusser, “Stigwood Countersues Bee Gees,” Billboard, November 8, 1980.
{580} Kirkeby, “Bee Gees Sue Stigwood.”
{581} Steve Pond, “Bee Gees Say They’re Sorry,” Rolling Stone, June 25, 1981.
{582} “The Bee Gees Didn’t Say They’re Sorry . . .” Rolling Stone, August 6, 1981.
{583} Ibid.
{584} Sexton, “Q&A with Robert Stigwood.”
{585} Simon Fanshawe, “Stigwood,” Provocateur with a Purpose, December 1, 2006, http://simonfanshawe.com/?p=39.
{586} Spencer Bright, “Now the Bee Gees Are Coming Alive Again,” Daily Mail, August 6, 1993.
{587} Elder, “Stayin’ Alive.”
{588} Ken Sharp, “In One of His Last Extensive Interviews, Bee Gees’ Maurice Gibb, on the Group’s Long Career,” Goldmine, September 3, 2004.
{589} Melinda Newman, “The Beat,” Billboard, November 17, 2001.
{590} “Kenny Rogers: ‘Luck or Something Like It: A Memoir,’” The Diane Rehm Show, WAMU, October 1, 2012.
{591} Anonymous author interview.
{592} Paul Grein, “Paul Atkinson Rocks RCA’s Roster,” Billboard, July 20, 1985.
{593} White, “This Is Where We Came In.”
{594} White, “The Gift of the Gibbs.”
{595} David Sly, “Evergreen Bee Gees Shrug Off Disco,” Advertiser, September 28, 1989.
{596} Amruta Slee, “Just Stayin’ Alive,” Sydney Sun Herald, October 22, 1989.
{597} Sly, “Evergeeen Bee Gees.”
{598} Pete Clark, “It Has Never Been Cool to Admit Liking the Sobbing Sound of the Bee Gees, But After 30 Years They Deserve Their Place in the Pop Pantheon,” Evening Standard, August 5, 1993.
{599} Claire Noland, “Robin Gibb, 1949–2012, Los Angeles Times, May 21, 2012.
{600} Timothy White, “Bee Gees: ‘Still’ Taking Chances,” Billboard, February 15, 1997.
{601} The Bee Gees Walk Out of Clive Anderson, http://www.youtube
.com/watch?v=VHa6vYq6Nyk.
{602} Durkee, “The Bee Gees Search for Life After Disco.”
{603} “Stayin’ Alive,” Evening Post (Wellington), October 19, 1998.
{604} Anjie Blardony Ureta, “Fever Pitch at the Palladium,” BusinessWorld, May 7, 1999.
{605} Edna Gundersen, “The Bee Gees Are Back in the Groove; ‘Fever’ Trio Is Earning a Healthy Respect Again,” USA Today, May 6, 1997.
{606} Elder, “Stayin’ Alive.”
{607} Gundersen, “The Bee Gees Are Back in the Groove.”
{608} We Are One, www.brothersgibb.org/chart-info.html.
{609} Tracey Snell, “Bee Gees TV Special Shows Value of Peak Viewing Slots,” Music Week, August 14, 1999.
{610} Dino Scatena, “Rockin’ Retro Is Really on a Roll,” Daily Telegraph, October 28, 1998.
{611} Ward Morehouse III, “Stayin’ Alive on Broadway,” Christian Science Monitor, October 15, 1999.
{612} Ben Brantely, “Singed by a Disco Inferno,” New York Times, Oct 22, 1999.
{613} White, “This is Where We Came In,” Billboard.
{614} Phil Gould, “Off the Record: They Win Again,” Birmingham Post, April 7, 2001.
{615} Leith, “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning.”
{616} Julia Llewellyn Smith, “From Superstars to Pop Pariahs—And Back Again—The Bee Gees Have Seen It All,” Express, March 29, 2001.
{617} Leith, “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning.”
{618} Smith, “From Superstars to Pop Pariahs.”
{619} “The Day I Nearly Killed My Family; Bee Gee Waved a Gun and Scared Himself Off Drink,” Daily Mail, July 29, 1992.
{620} Allan Ramsay, “The Day Bee Gee Maurice Drew a Gun on His Family,” Evening Standard, July 28, 1992.
{621} “The Day I Nearly Killed My Family.”
{622} Ibid.
{623} Ibid.
{624} Leith, “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning.”
{625} Nigel Dempster, “Stayin’ Alive . . . and in Love,” Daily Mail, February 24, 1992.
{626} Alasdair Buchan, “Primed and Timed for Healing,” Times, June 26, 1992.
{627} “Bee Gee Denies He’s Back on Booze,” Sunday Mail, January 30, 1994.
{628} Tim Cooper, “Bee Gee Maurice Critically Ill After Mystery Collapse,” Evening Standard, January 10, 2003.
{629} Hugh Davies, “Bee Gee Maurice Critically Ill After Surgery,” Daily Telegraph, January 11, 2003.
{630} Ibid.
{631} Corky Siemaszko, “Bee Gee Hit by More Than Night Fever,” Daily News, January 11, 2003.
{632} “Bee Gee Flies Out to Be with Sick Twin,” Mail on Sunday, January 12, 2003.
{633} Tony Jones, “Bee Gees Lose a Brother and the Harmony Is Gone,” Advertiser, January 13, 2003.
{634} “Bee Gees’ Anger at Maurice’s Op,” Bath Chronicle, January 13, 2003.
{635} “Probe Call in Bee Gee Death,” Birmingham Evening Mail, January 13, 2003.
{636} Helen Rumbelow and Jacqui Goddard, “Shocked Bee Gees Thought Maurice Was Recovering,” Times, January 13, 2003.
{637} Emma Pearson, “Obituaries: Tormented Soul Brought Magic to Band of Brothers,” Birmingham Post, January 13, 2003.
{638} Geoffrey Wansell, “Tragedy for the Bee Gees,” Daily Mail, January 13, 2003.
{639} Jacqui Goddard, “Hospital to Probe Death of Bee Gee,” Australian, January 15, 2003.
{640} Federal Bureau of Investigation, Robin Gibb file, December 23, 1980.
{641} Ibid.
{642} Ibid.
{643} Paul Scott, “The Bee Gee Who Hired a Hitman to Bump Off His Wife; FBI Files Reveal the Raging Jealousy and Drug-Fuelled Paranoia of Robin Gibb’s Astonishingly Toxic Divorce,” Daily Mail, September 21, 2012.
{644} Shirley Lowe, “How We Met,” Independent, March 15, 1992.
{645} Monica Porter, “15 Years Ago . . . Oct. 28,” Daily Mail, October 28, 1998.
{646} Lowe, “How We Met.”
{647} “After Saturday Night Fever, Sunday Afternoon Ceremony,” Daily Mail, June 22, 1992.
{648} Lynn Barber, “As Someone Said, the Rich Are Different,” Independent, June 28, 1992.
{649} York Membery, “My Passion,” Daily Mail, February 25, 2006.
{650} Ibid.
{651} Jane Bidder, “Spirits Having Flown In,” Times, April 18, 1992.
{652} The Howard Stern Show, November 24, 1993.
{653} Wendy Leigh, “House of Decadence,” Daily Mail, December 28, 2006.
{654} Anna Pukas, “The Sleazy Bee Gee,” Express, February 10, 2009.
{655} Grant Hodgson and Victoria Murphy, “Ah, ha, ha, ha, Straying Alive,” Sunday Mirror, February 8, 2009.
{656} Ibid.
{657} Elise Roche and John Ingham, “Brave Robin ‘Is Feeling Good,’” Express, January 21, 2012.
{658} “Gravely Ill? I’m at Home Writing Music and Feeling Great, Says Robin Gibb,” Mail on Sunday, January 22, 2012.
{659} “Bee Gees’ Robin Gibb ‘Feels Fantastic’ After Cancer Recovery,” New Musical Express, February 5, 2012.
{660} Wendy Leigh, “I’ve Been at Death’s Door,” Sun, March 10, 2012.
{661} Marc Baker, “I’ll Get Bee Gees Back Together,” The People, April 1, 2012.
{662} Dominic Herbert, “Bee Gees Mum Flies in to See Sick Robin,” Sunday Mirror, April 1, 2012.
{663} Simon Boyle, “Son, It’s Gone . . . I’ve Done It,” Mirror, April 3, 2012.
{664} “The Bee Gees’ Barry Gibb Flies to the UK to Be by Ill Brother Robin’s Side,” New Musical Express, April 9, 2012.
{665} Herbert, “Bee Gees Mum Flies in to See Sick Robin.”
{666} Wendy Leigh, “Robin Told Docs: There Will Never Be a Time When Enough Is Enough . . . I Want to Live,” Sun, April 26, 2012.
{667} Herbert, “Bee Gees Mum Flies in to See Sick Robin.”
{668} Leigh, “There Will Never Be a Time When Enough Is Enough.”
{669} Ibid.
{670} Simon Boyle, “‘I Wish Maurice Was Here,’ Robin Gibb’s Touching Deathbed Tribute to his Late Twin,” Daily Mirror, May 22, 2012.
{671} Anita Singh, “Robin Gibb Confounds Doctors by Waking from Coma,” Telegraph, April 22, 2012.
{672} Dominic Herbert, “Miracle Robin Out of the Hospital This Week,” Sunday Mirror, April 29, 2012.
{673} Gordon Rayner, “Bee Gee Robin Gibb Has 50/50 Chance of Recovering after Coming out of Coma, Wife Tells Friends,” Telegraph, May 9, 2012.
{674} Chris York, “Robin Gibb Death, Barry Gibb Tells of Conflict with Brother Before His Death,” Huffington Post UK, July 6, 2012.
{675} Barry Gibb to Rahni Sadler, Sunday Night, Channel 7, September 23, 2012.