Friday, June 12, 2020

We did have fights, but were brothers, so there was always going to be sibling rivalry' Inside the head of Barry Gibb

When did you last feel happy?

In March my daughter-in-law Jenna, who’s married to my youngest son Michael, gave birth to a little girl, Taylor May. When she was born I was so happy. I just kept thinking, ‘This is life. You lose people you love and then a child is born and it’s pure joy.’

What is your earliest memory?

It’s of finding a baby floating in a box on a little stream near our house in Spring Valley on the Isle of Man. I still dream about it. It was the year the King died (King George VI in 1952), so I was about five. I picked it up and I remember the baby was taken to a house. It was never really explained to me, but I guess it was abandoned. I never saw it again.

What sort of child were you?

I was very quiet. At the age of two I was very badly scalded by a pot of boiling water on a table. I was toddling around and grabbed it, and it went all over me. I have no memory of it happening; I wiped it out as it was so traumatic. I never spoke for two years after that. I was in hospital for most of that time and I think it made me a very shy boy.
 

When did you last cry, and why?

I cry at the drop of a hat. If I’m watching a sad movie or TV show, I sit with a towel on my lap because I cry so much. I came back to Australia recently, the first time without my brothers. A local reporter showed me a copy of our first television appearance and I started blubbering. I can’t help it – I’m emotionally wired.

How do you relax?

I’m a huge reader. I collect first editions – I have a first edition of Peter Pan and Uncle Tom’s Cabin. I can lose myself in books, and my greatest joy is spending hours in a bookshop. I feel sad that so many of them are disappearing. These are places where I’ve spent so many happy hours just browsing, lost in that world.

What or who do you dream about?

I occasionally dream about spending a day with Paul McCartney. We just sit around talking, having lunch, spending a few hours together playing music in the studio. I don’t actually know him, but he’s someone I’d really like to talk to.

What has been your biggest achievement?

I can’t point to one single thing, because to me the achievement is the whole journey with my brothers, good and bad. We did have fights, but we were brothers, so there was always going to be sibling rivalry. But there was always a lot of love.

What are you best at, and what would you like to be better at?

I’m best at singing and songwriting. There are things that other people wish I was better at – like technology. I don’t have a mobile or an email address.

What is your best character trait?

I have a very well-developed sense of humour. I laugh a lot. I think if there is a God, he gave us the ability to laugh to get through the tough times. I also believe you should never worry about tomorrow.

... and your worst?

I get angry very quickly. I almost don’t see it coming, and it can be something big or small. When I was younger I’d get angry about anything, like being interrupted when I was working, and just fly off into a rage. It happened too much. I think it’s to do with the life I’ve lived. No one teaches you how to deal with the attention. But I  have worked on it. I’m much calmer now.

Who would your dream dinner date be?

My wife Linda and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I love the Sherlock Holmes books.

Who are you closest to?

Linda, my mother Barbara and my sister Lesley.

What is your biggest fear?

The loss of books. Handing down ideas and truths through books is a beautiful tradition, but it’s fast disappearing. I have two libraries in my house.

What is your biggest regret?

I regret losing my brother Andy when he was just 30. None of my brothers made the age of retirement except for me. It’s a poignant thing for my mother to have outlived three of her sons.

Who is the love of your life?

My wife Linda. I met her on Top Of The Pops in 1967 when we were celebrating Massachusetts getting to No 1. It was love at first sight. We went to the BBC canteen for a cup of tea and then hid in the Doctor Who Tardis, where time literally stood still.

What is your most treasured possession?

My guitars. My favourites are my Guild and my two Matons, which is an Australian make. As a kid I always wanted one, but they were so expensive. I recently went to the factory and had two made for me.

 

source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk

 

https://beegeesfanfever.blogspot.com/

 

 

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Bee Gees star Robin Gibb gets back to his roots - and spends a penny


 27 MAY 2011

Robin Gibb, one third of the world’s most famous family band, took a break from filming for the BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? in Winton, Salford. He dashed into Good Looks Salon on Worsley Road, then stayed to chat to customers and staff.



Beauty salon customers got a bonus treatment when a Bee Gee popped in – to spend a penny.
Robin Gibb, one third of the world’s most famous family band, took a break from filming for the BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? in Winton, Salford.

He dashed into Good Looks Salon on Worsley Road, then stayed to chat to customers and staff.
Robin, who was brought up in Chorlton, was filming at nearby Alder Forest Funeral Home. for the BBC programme, where celebrities trace their family trees.
Funeral director Eric Birch was interviewed on camera and was told that research had traced a Gibb family member, a nurse, who used to live in the property in the 1930s.

Eric said: "I didn’t know the crew was coming, they just turned up and said they were filming for Who Do You Think You Are?

"I was interviewed and then I had a chat with Robin.
"He was a nice bloke and really down to earth. He caused quite a fuss and there were loads of people taking pictures."
After filming, it is understood Robin went on to the Marriot Hotel in Worsley for lunch.

 https://beegeesfanfever.blogspot.com/

Thursday, May 21, 2020

This Ol’ Hat” Charity Auction and Raffle Announced

Musician and hatmaker Charlie Overbey and partner Vanessa Dingwell are raising money to aid the Navajo Nation Reservation hit by COVID-19.



Charlie Overbey is a busy guy, splitting his time between writing and performing music with his band, the Broken Arrows, and making one of a kind hats for musicians, actors, and anyone else who is interested in attaining their own unique, custom-made hat. Charlie and his partner Vanessa Dingwall have joined forces with United Natives and Dr Michelle Tom in order to provide aid to the Navajo Reservation. Various Lone Hawk Hat owners have come together by autographing and donating their hats to be auctioned off to help raise money.

The donated hats will be auctioned on Lone Hawk Hats’ Instagram starting on Friday, May 22. 
Overbey explains, “When we learned that the Navajo Nation now has more documented COVID-19 cases per capita than any of the United States and they are not yet receiving U.S. government funding, we knew we had to do something to help.”

In addition to the Lone Hawk Hat charity auction, Overbey will raffle off “This Ol’ Hat,” a vintage hat signed by the Lone Hawk Hat family members.
The list of people who have donated to the auction and “This Ol’ hate” raffle are:



Cree Summer (actress)
Raoul Max Trujillo (actor)
Barry Gibb (Bee Gees)
Sheryl Crow
LP (singer / songwriter)
Nils Lofgren (Crazy Horse / Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band)
Chris Robinson (The Black Crowes)
Richard Fortus (Guns N’ Roses)
Jimmy Vivino
Charlie Starr (Blackberry Smoke)



Marcus King (The Marcus King Band)
Adam Slack (The Struts)
Corey McCormick (Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real)
Aaron Lee Tasjan
Jeff Schroeder (Smashing Pumpkins)

You can donate to Lone Hawk Hats’ GoFundMe campaign which is raising money for United Natives and enter the raffle to win “This Ol’ Hat” here.

Monday, May 4, 2020

Robin Gibb’s secret song for actor is unearthed

A previously unknown Robin Gibb song has emerged among the belongings of the late Peter Wyngarde, 
the actor who starred in the 1970s ITV detective series Jason King and who played Klytus in the 1980 film Flash Gordon. 
The lyric sheet for I Will Surrender says the words and music were written by Gibb, one of the brothers who formed the Bee Gees, in 1970. 


The song is only three verses long and has no chorus. It ends with the typewritten lines: “
All the crowds are far and few, and my giant music halls are empty, we had rehearsed a rendezvous, seems I must surrender to you! Yes I will surrender to you.”

© thetimes.co.uk 

https://beegeesfanfever.blogspot.com/