All language subtitles for The.Bee.Gees.How.Can.You.Mend.A.Broken.Heart.2020.720p.WEBRip.x264.AAC-[YTS.MX]

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek Download
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian Download
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese Download
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish Download
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,749 --> 00:00:03,292 [bright tone] 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:04,749 --> 00:00:07,666 [funky bass line] 4 00:00:07,749 --> 00:00:12,958 ♪ ♪ 5 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 6 00:00:13,041 --> 00:00:15,958 [remix of "Stayin' Alive"] 7 00:00:16,041 --> 00:00:17,583 [funky disco music] 8 00:00:17,666 --> 00:00:20,375 - ♪ Well, you can tell by the way I use my walk ♪ 9 00:00:20,458 --> 00:00:23,000 ♪ ♪ 10 00:00:23,083 --> 00:00:25,333 ♪ Music loud ♪ 11 00:00:25,417 --> 00:00:27,333 ♪ Kicked around ♪ 12 00:00:27,417 --> 00:00:29,833 ♪ And now it's all right, it's okay ♪ 13 00:00:29,916 --> 00:00:32,125 ♪ And you may look the other way ♪ 14 00:00:32,208 --> 00:00:34,499 ♪ We can try to understand ♪ 15 00:00:34,583 --> 00:00:36,875 ♪ "The New York Times'" effect on man ♪ 16 00:00:36,958 --> 00:00:38,666 ♪ ♪ 17 00:00:38,749 --> 00:00:39,833 [siren wails] 18 00:00:39,916 --> 00:00:41,583 ♪ ♪ 19 00:00:41,666 --> 00:00:43,875 ♪ Ah, ha, ha, ha ♪ 20 00:00:43,958 --> 00:00:50,875 ♪ Stayin' alive ♪ 21 00:00:50,958 --> 00:00:54,499 ♪ ♪ 22 00:00:54,583 --> 00:00:56,583 [indistinct chatter] 23 00:00:56,666 --> 00:00:58,749 [crowd cheering] 24 00:00:58,833 --> 00:01:00,749 - Okay, fellas, when you're ready. 25 00:01:00,833 --> 00:01:02,083 Okay, fellas, get back in line. 26 00:01:02,167 --> 00:01:03,250 - How did you people get back here? 27 00:01:03,333 --> 00:01:04,541 Come on. Come on. Sorry. 28 00:01:04,624 --> 00:01:05,875 - Excuse me. Have you got a pen? 29 00:01:05,958 --> 00:01:07,167 - I'm sorry, you can't come in here. 30 00:01:07,250 --> 00:01:08,666 - Get him out of here. - You can't come in here. 31 00:01:08,749 --> 00:01:10,833 What are you doing? This is a private session! 32 00:01:10,916 --> 00:01:12,541 [crowd cheering] 33 00:01:12,624 --> 00:01:15,041 - Thank you. 34 00:01:15,125 --> 00:01:18,583 Thank you very, very much. Good evening to all of you. 35 00:01:18,666 --> 00:01:19,875 Thank you. 36 00:01:19,958 --> 00:01:22,833 ["How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"] 37 00:01:22,916 --> 00:01:24,583 [soft ballad] 38 00:01:24,666 --> 00:01:28,833 - ♪ I can think of younger days ♪ 39 00:01:28,916 --> 00:01:31,958 ♪ When living for my life ♪ 40 00:01:32,041 --> 00:01:36,250 ♪ Was everything a man could want to do ♪ 41 00:01:36,333 --> 00:01:42,624 ♪ I could never see tomorrow ♪ 42 00:01:42,708 --> 00:01:45,250 ♪ No one said a word ♪ 43 00:01:45,333 --> 00:01:50,083 ♪ About the sorrow ♪ 44 00:01:50,167 --> 00:01:51,749 - ♪ And ♪ 45 00:01:51,833 --> 00:01:54,624 ♪ How can you mend ♪ 46 00:01:54,708 --> 00:01:58,958 ♪ A broken heart? ♪ 47 00:01:59,041 --> 00:02:00,791 ♪ How can you stop the rain ♪ 48 00:02:00,875 --> 00:02:04,250 ♪ From falling down? ♪ 49 00:02:04,333 --> 00:02:07,791 all: ♪ How can you stop ♪ 50 00:02:07,875 --> 00:02:10,583 ♪ The sun from shining? ♪ 51 00:02:10,666 --> 00:02:15,250 ♪ What makes the world go round? ♪ 52 00:02:15,333 --> 00:02:19,958 ♪ Na, na, na-na-na-na ♪ 53 00:02:20,041 --> 00:02:23,458 ♪ Na-na-na-na-na ♪ 54 00:02:23,541 --> 00:02:26,292 ♪ Na-na-na-na ♪ 55 00:02:26,375 --> 00:02:29,083 ♪ Na-na-na ♪ 56 00:02:29,167 --> 00:02:32,791 ♪ Please help me mend ♪ 57 00:02:32,875 --> 00:02:36,916 ♪ My broken heart ♪ 58 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:41,125 - ♪ And let me live again ♪ 59 00:02:41,208 --> 00:02:45,125 [cheers and applause] ♪ Da-da, da-da-da ♪ 60 00:02:45,208 --> 00:02:49,499 ♪ Da-da-da-da ♪ 61 00:02:49,583 --> 00:02:55,541 ♪ Da-da-da-da-da-da ♪ 62 00:02:55,624 --> 00:03:02,624 ♪ ♪ 63 00:03:13,250 --> 00:03:15,666 I am beginning to recognize the fact 64 00:03:15,749 --> 00:03:18,666 that nothing is true. 65 00:03:18,749 --> 00:03:20,499 Nothing. 66 00:03:20,583 --> 00:03:22,458 It's all down to perception. 67 00:03:24,250 --> 00:03:26,375 My immediate family is gone. 68 00:03:26,458 --> 00:03:28,541 But that's life. 69 00:03:28,624 --> 00:03:30,208 It's the same thing with every family, 70 00:03:30,292 --> 00:03:32,292 that someone will be left in the end. 71 00:03:34,958 --> 00:03:36,916 And this time of life, 72 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:39,541 I have fantastic memories, 73 00:03:39,624 --> 00:03:41,875 but everybody's memory is different, 74 00:03:41,958 --> 00:03:44,499 so they're just my memories, you know? 75 00:03:46,292 --> 00:03:48,000 I know that Maurice and Robin would've had 76 00:03:48,083 --> 00:03:50,541 a different kind of memory. 77 00:03:50,624 --> 00:03:51,708 [projector whirring] 78 00:03:51,791 --> 00:03:53,541 [Richard Swift's "Lady Luck"] 79 00:03:53,624 --> 00:03:56,083 - ♪ One, two, three, four ♪ 80 00:03:56,167 --> 00:03:57,208 ♪ ♪ 81 00:03:57,292 --> 00:03:59,208 - I remember Barry saying that one day, 82 00:03:59,292 --> 00:04:01,250 we're gonna be really famous. 83 00:04:01,333 --> 00:04:04,041 And we said, "Oh, yeah." You know, "Whatever you say." 84 00:04:04,125 --> 00:04:06,541 He's the big brother, you know. 85 00:04:06,624 --> 00:04:08,417 - ♪ Ooh ♪ 86 00:04:08,499 --> 00:04:10,083 - We kind of saw ourselves as triplets 87 00:04:10,167 --> 00:04:12,250 rather than me and Maurice being twins, 88 00:04:12,333 --> 00:04:14,749 and we always had the same goals growing up 89 00:04:14,833 --> 00:04:16,666 that it became impossible to see each other 90 00:04:16,749 --> 00:04:19,250 as normal brothers. 91 00:04:19,333 --> 00:04:20,916 - My ninth Christmas, 92 00:04:21,000 --> 00:04:22,958 there was an acoustic guitar at the end of my bed, 93 00:04:23,041 --> 00:04:25,083 and Robin and Maurice started to collaborate 94 00:04:25,167 --> 00:04:26,791 and pretend to sing with me, 95 00:04:26,875 --> 00:04:30,333 and we started doing gigs as a teenage act. 96 00:04:30,417 --> 00:04:31,499 ♪ I, O ♪ 97 00:04:31,583 --> 00:04:33,083 - We emigrated as a whole family 98 00:04:33,167 --> 00:04:35,250 from England to Australia. 99 00:04:35,333 --> 00:04:37,083 - All three of us had the same understanding 100 00:04:37,167 --> 00:04:38,417 that we were going to be famous 101 00:04:38,499 --> 00:04:39,958 come hell or high water. 102 00:04:40,041 --> 00:04:43,250 ♪ You know I love getting up in the morning ♪ 103 00:04:43,333 --> 00:04:47,083 ♪ When the sun first strikes the trees ♪ 104 00:04:47,167 --> 00:04:48,958 Our father, he had his own band, 105 00:04:49,041 --> 00:04:52,208 but it didn't work out, so he became our manager, 106 00:04:52,292 --> 00:04:53,250 and it was a team. 107 00:04:53,333 --> 00:04:54,749 There was us three and Dad. 108 00:04:54,833 --> 00:04:56,125 And Mum, of course. 109 00:04:56,208 --> 00:04:58,417 - My mother, she was always the person 110 00:04:58,499 --> 00:05:00,791 who kept the calm between Dad and us. 111 00:05:00,875 --> 00:05:03,417 Very strong, very loyal. 112 00:05:03,499 --> 00:05:04,417 ["How Many Birds"] 113 00:05:04,499 --> 00:05:05,417 [crowd screaming] 114 00:05:05,499 --> 00:05:06,958 - The Beatles have just arrived 115 00:05:07,041 --> 00:05:08,833 for the first time in our country. 116 00:05:08,916 --> 00:05:10,375 - When the Beatles came on the scene, 117 00:05:10,458 --> 00:05:13,250 it was like, "That's what we've been trying to do." 118 00:05:13,333 --> 00:05:14,916 - They turned pop music into an art form, 119 00:05:15,000 --> 00:05:16,458 and they were singing three-part harmony 120 00:05:16,541 --> 00:05:17,666 like we did. 121 00:05:17,749 --> 00:05:19,083 - So we made up our own minds 122 00:05:19,167 --> 00:05:22,125 that we were going back to be part of the British Invasion. 123 00:05:22,208 --> 00:05:23,916 - Making music was what we wanted to do 124 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:25,458 for the rest of our lives, 125 00:05:25,541 --> 00:05:27,499 so we thought, you know, whatever's going to happen, 126 00:05:27,583 --> 00:05:29,958 we'll make happen. 127 00:05:30,041 --> 00:05:33,292 ["Spicks and Specks"] 128 00:05:33,375 --> 00:05:35,208 - ♪ Where is the sun ♪ 129 00:05:35,292 --> 00:05:37,083 Before we left Australia, 130 00:05:37,167 --> 00:05:39,167 we did an album called "Spicks and Specks," 131 00:05:39,250 --> 00:05:41,208 and they became our best demos. 132 00:05:41,292 --> 00:05:43,292 ♪ The sun in my life ♪ 133 00:05:43,375 --> 00:05:45,666 ♪ It is dead ♪ 134 00:05:45,749 --> 00:05:47,708 Dad and I did the rounds, 135 00:05:47,791 --> 00:05:49,167 met with industry people, 136 00:05:49,250 --> 00:05:50,708 and as we sat in everyone's office, 137 00:05:50,791 --> 00:05:52,292 they would say the same thing: 138 00:05:52,375 --> 00:05:55,000 "No, no, I'm sorry, lads. We can't help you." 139 00:05:55,083 --> 00:05:57,708 - My dad, he was very, you know, "We gotta do this." 140 00:05:57,791 --> 00:06:00,000 Because my dad was really the most ambitious man, 141 00:06:00,083 --> 00:06:02,000 I think, in the Gibb clan. 142 00:06:02,083 --> 00:06:03,250 - We loved the Beatles, 143 00:06:03,333 --> 00:06:05,624 so Dad had sent this stuff to NEMS, 144 00:06:05,708 --> 00:06:08,292 the Brian Epstein offices. 145 00:06:08,375 --> 00:06:10,499 - Brian Epstein, the man who built the Beatles 146 00:06:10,583 --> 00:06:11,833 into a cult, 147 00:06:11,916 --> 00:06:13,791 is now as well-known as they are. 148 00:06:13,875 --> 00:06:17,167 - I was doing Brian's mail most of the time. 149 00:06:17,250 --> 00:06:18,875 There was a letter by the father 150 00:06:18,958 --> 00:06:22,666 of these three handsome, cute guys 151 00:06:22,749 --> 00:06:26,250 who were very proactive and who'd had some success. 152 00:06:26,333 --> 00:06:27,541 They came from Manchester, 153 00:06:27,624 --> 00:06:30,208 but they were writing from Australia. 154 00:06:30,292 --> 00:06:31,708 I showed it to him. 155 00:06:31,791 --> 00:06:33,875 Brian said, "Yeah, yeah. That's very nice. No, nice." 156 00:06:33,958 --> 00:06:35,833 He said, "Well, give it to Robert." 157 00:06:35,916 --> 00:06:36,875 ["Wine and Women"] 158 00:06:36,958 --> 00:06:38,583 "He's Australian 159 00:06:38,666 --> 00:06:40,583 and he's good at these kind of things." 160 00:06:40,666 --> 00:06:41,749 - Somebody sent you a tape 161 00:06:41,833 --> 00:06:43,541 of these boys from Australia? 162 00:06:43,624 --> 00:06:44,666 - Yes, they did. 163 00:06:44,749 --> 00:06:46,541 - Oh. [laughter] 164 00:06:46,624 --> 00:06:50,708 - I heard it, and I was absolutely astounded. 165 00:06:50,791 --> 00:06:52,708 It was the most brilliant harmony singing 166 00:06:52,791 --> 00:06:54,875 and composing I'd ever heard. 167 00:06:54,958 --> 00:06:56,791 all: ♪ If this should end ♪ 168 00:06:56,875 --> 00:06:59,250 ♪ I don't mind ♪ 169 00:06:59,333 --> 00:07:00,875 ♪ If this should end ♪ 170 00:07:00,958 --> 00:07:04,417 ♪ I will find ♪ 171 00:07:04,499 --> 00:07:06,583 - ♪ What shall I do? ♪ 172 00:07:06,666 --> 00:07:08,458 both: ♪ What shall I do? ♪ 173 00:07:08,541 --> 00:07:10,458 - ♪ What shall I do? ♪ 174 00:07:10,541 --> 00:07:12,624 both: ♪ What shall I do? ♪ 175 00:07:12,708 --> 00:07:14,250 ♪ ♪ 176 00:07:14,333 --> 00:07:17,250 - At the time, Robert was my manager. 177 00:07:17,333 --> 00:07:20,125 Cream was signed to Robert 178 00:07:20,208 --> 00:07:22,417 on what I thought was an exclusive deal. 179 00:07:22,499 --> 00:07:26,250 I was surprised that other bands were coming in. 180 00:07:26,333 --> 00:07:27,791 all: ♪ If this should end ♪ 181 00:07:27,875 --> 00:07:29,833 - Robert was so eccentric. 182 00:07:29,916 --> 00:07:32,417 I mean, absolutely bonkers. 183 00:07:32,499 --> 00:07:35,875 He was Australian, but he spoke like an English gentleman, 184 00:07:35,958 --> 00:07:38,499 and he would wear these really big, flashy ties, 185 00:07:38,583 --> 00:07:41,958 and he had a combover, and it was all-- 186 00:07:42,041 --> 00:07:43,624 who is this guy? 187 00:07:43,708 --> 00:07:46,083 - Whoever this man was, he really believed in us. 188 00:07:46,167 --> 00:07:48,167 He was almost like a parent. 189 00:07:48,250 --> 00:07:50,666 - You can't deny talent, 190 00:07:50,749 --> 00:07:53,458 and the talent was so obvious. 191 00:07:53,541 --> 00:07:56,666 all: ♪ Ooh ♪ 192 00:07:56,749 --> 00:07:58,583 ♪ ♪ 193 00:07:58,666 --> 00:08:01,458 - Somebody mentioned that the Bee Gees were in town. 194 00:08:01,541 --> 00:08:05,208 They were good friends of mine from Australia. 195 00:08:05,292 --> 00:08:07,624 So I phoned them up. 196 00:08:07,708 --> 00:08:08,916 I said, "Is Maurice there, then? 197 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:10,125 Put Maurice on." [champagne cork pops] 198 00:08:10,208 --> 00:08:11,958 He said, "We've being signed up 199 00:08:12,041 --> 00:08:13,958 "by this guy called Robert Stigwood. 200 00:08:14,041 --> 00:08:15,749 "We're doing this recording. 201 00:08:15,833 --> 00:08:18,083 Why don't you come and play guitar?" 202 00:08:18,167 --> 00:08:22,125 Caught a train into London and found IBC Studios. 203 00:08:22,208 --> 00:08:23,499 So there they were. 204 00:08:23,583 --> 00:08:25,292 There were Barry, Robin, and Maurice 205 00:08:25,375 --> 00:08:28,000 and the drummer, Colin Petersen. 206 00:08:28,083 --> 00:08:29,041 That night, 207 00:08:29,125 --> 00:08:32,167 my life changed completely. 208 00:08:32,250 --> 00:08:34,083 Completely. 209 00:08:35,541 --> 00:08:36,499 - The first evening we were in there, 210 00:08:36,583 --> 00:08:38,167 there was a blackout. 211 00:08:38,250 --> 00:08:40,125 So while we were waiting for the power to come back on, 212 00:08:40,208 --> 00:08:41,125 we just sat on the steps, 213 00:08:41,208 --> 00:08:43,000 and Barry was playing his guitar. 214 00:08:43,083 --> 00:08:44,666 It was so echoey. 215 00:08:44,749 --> 00:08:47,167 I mean, it was a wonderful echo in this place. 216 00:08:47,250 --> 00:08:48,666 - There we were in the dark. 217 00:08:48,749 --> 00:08:50,041 The first thought was, "In the event 218 00:08:50,125 --> 00:08:51,208 of something happening to me." 219 00:08:51,292 --> 00:08:52,708 both: ♪ In the event ♪ 220 00:08:52,791 --> 00:08:55,624 ♪ Of something happening to me ♪ 221 00:08:55,708 --> 00:08:57,541 - And we thought, "Well, what could come from that?" 222 00:08:57,624 --> 00:09:01,708 both: ♪ There is something I would like you all to see ♪ 223 00:09:01,791 --> 00:09:02,958 - We made believe we were in a mine. 224 00:09:03,041 --> 00:09:08,375 both: ♪ It's just a photograph of someone that I knew ♪ 225 00:09:08,458 --> 00:09:14,041 all: ♪ Have you seen my wife, Mr. Jones? ♪ 226 00:09:14,125 --> 00:09:19,041 ♪ Do you know what it's like on the outside? ♪ 227 00:09:19,125 --> 00:09:24,000 ♪ Don't go talking too loud, you'll cause a landslide ♪ 228 00:09:24,083 --> 00:09:26,541 ♪ Mr. Jones ♪ 229 00:09:26,624 --> 00:09:28,041 - Because it was gonna be our first single, 230 00:09:28,125 --> 00:09:29,875 we wanted a title that captured the imagination, 231 00:09:29,958 --> 00:09:31,749 that got people's attention. 232 00:09:31,833 --> 00:09:34,000 - And "New York Mining Disaster" was born then. 233 00:09:34,083 --> 00:09:36,417 - We had our first hit record within the first five months 234 00:09:36,499 --> 00:09:37,666 of being in England. 235 00:09:37,749 --> 00:09:39,875 The thrill was that it did the same thing in America. 236 00:09:39,958 --> 00:09:41,499 We thought that we might get a hit in England, 237 00:09:41,583 --> 00:09:42,875 but we never dreamed that we might get a hit 238 00:09:42,958 --> 00:09:44,458 in England and America as well. 239 00:09:44,541 --> 00:09:47,458 [Otis Redding's "Respect"] 240 00:09:47,541 --> 00:09:49,375 ♪ ♪ 241 00:09:49,458 --> 00:09:51,250 - So I came over to the United States 242 00:09:51,333 --> 00:09:53,417 to make a record deal for them. 243 00:09:53,499 --> 00:09:57,583 I made a decision to place the group with Atlantic. 244 00:09:57,666 --> 00:09:59,250 - ♪ What you want ♪ 245 00:09:59,333 --> 00:10:00,458 ♪ Honey, you got it ♪ 246 00:10:00,541 --> 00:10:02,417 - He said, "I'm taking you to meet Ahmet Ertegun 247 00:10:02,499 --> 00:10:05,250 and to get you into the American music scene." 248 00:10:05,333 --> 00:10:08,417 Otis Redding was playing at the Apollo. 249 00:10:08,499 --> 00:10:09,791 Ahmet Ertegun and Robert Stigwood 250 00:10:09,875 --> 00:10:11,708 took me down there to see Otis. 251 00:10:11,791 --> 00:10:13,749 - ♪ Hey, hey, hey ♪ 252 00:10:13,833 --> 00:10:15,375 - And it was amazing. 253 00:10:15,458 --> 00:10:17,958 - Soul has always had a special place 254 00:10:18,041 --> 00:10:19,125 in the Bee Gees' music. 255 00:10:19,208 --> 00:10:20,916 - We've always been influenced by Black music. 256 00:10:21,000 --> 00:10:23,208 Smokey Robinson, Motown, 257 00:10:23,292 --> 00:10:25,250 all that was a big influence on us. 258 00:10:25,333 --> 00:10:26,833 - Robert introduced us. 259 00:10:26,916 --> 00:10:30,458 He said, "I want you to write a song for Otis Redding." 260 00:10:30,541 --> 00:10:32,458 "To Love Somebody" was born that night. 261 00:10:32,541 --> 00:10:34,624 - ♪ Hey, hey, hey ♪ 262 00:10:34,708 --> 00:10:36,583 - But unfortunately, 263 00:10:36,666 --> 00:10:38,458 Otis never got to record the song. 264 00:10:38,541 --> 00:10:41,458 ["To Love Somebody"] 265 00:10:41,541 --> 00:10:42,916 [soulful ballad] 266 00:10:43,000 --> 00:10:46,791 ♪ There's a light ♪ 267 00:10:46,875 --> 00:10:49,749 ♪ A certain kind of light ♪ 268 00:10:49,833 --> 00:10:52,333 ♪ That never shone on me ♪ 269 00:10:52,417 --> 00:10:54,958 ♪ ♪ 270 00:10:55,041 --> 00:10:58,292 ♪ I want my life to be ♪ 271 00:10:58,375 --> 00:11:00,916 ♪ Lived with you ♪ 272 00:11:01,000 --> 00:11:03,125 ♪ Lived with you ♪ 273 00:11:03,208 --> 00:11:05,292 - I mean, I must have always known 274 00:11:05,375 --> 00:11:06,958 "To Love Somebody," 275 00:11:07,041 --> 00:11:10,000 'cause that song is just, like, in the ether. 276 00:11:10,083 --> 00:11:11,791 Those lyrics, "There's a certain kind of light 277 00:11:11,875 --> 00:11:13,000 that never shone on me," 278 00:11:13,083 --> 00:11:14,666 like, I don't even know if he's talking about himself, 279 00:11:14,749 --> 00:11:17,125 but there was some point where I got obsessed, 280 00:11:17,208 --> 00:11:19,000 like, tracking down every cover version, 281 00:11:19,083 --> 00:11:21,499 like Nina Simone, the Animals. 282 00:11:21,583 --> 00:11:23,833 Some great singers have sung that song, obviously, 283 00:11:23,916 --> 00:11:26,208 but his vocal, when he sings it, 284 00:11:26,292 --> 00:11:28,499 I can still get chills thinking about it. 285 00:11:28,583 --> 00:11:29,833 - ♪ Baby ♪ 286 00:11:29,916 --> 00:11:34,333 all: ♪ You don't know what it's like ♪ 287 00:11:34,417 --> 00:11:39,167 ♪ Baby, you don't know what it's like ♪ 288 00:11:39,250 --> 00:11:41,791 ♪ To love somebody ♪ 289 00:11:41,875 --> 00:11:44,499 ♪ To love somebody ♪ 290 00:11:44,583 --> 00:11:47,875 ♪ The way I love you ♪ 291 00:11:47,958 --> 00:11:50,541 - ♪ Aw, no, no ♪ 292 00:11:50,624 --> 00:11:54,375 both: ♪ You don't know ♪ all: ♪ What it's like ♪ 293 00:11:54,458 --> 00:11:58,041 - I just remember this music being on, 294 00:11:58,125 --> 00:12:00,041 and I'm like, "Who's this?" 295 00:12:00,125 --> 00:12:03,375 And, "Why, it's the Bee Gees." 296 00:12:03,458 --> 00:12:04,833 And I was like, "The Bee Gees?" 297 00:12:04,916 --> 00:12:06,833 ["In My Own Time"] 298 00:12:06,916 --> 00:12:08,749 It actually blew my mind. 299 00:12:08,833 --> 00:12:12,208 Those early records sound like the Beatles' early records. 300 00:12:12,292 --> 00:12:15,833 - ♪ I received an invitation ♪ 301 00:12:15,916 --> 00:12:18,375 - It's classic '60s guitar pop sound, 302 00:12:18,458 --> 00:12:19,749 but then it had another thing going on. 303 00:12:19,833 --> 00:12:23,208 - ♪ "Come to the United Nations" ♪ 304 00:12:23,292 --> 00:12:25,167 - You've got the brothers singing, 305 00:12:25,250 --> 00:12:27,167 and when you've got brothers singing, 306 00:12:27,250 --> 00:12:29,541 it's like an instrument that nobody else can buy. 307 00:12:29,624 --> 00:12:32,958 - ♪ That was when I was somebody ♪ 308 00:12:33,041 --> 00:12:35,916 [bouncy rock music] 309 00:12:36,000 --> 00:12:40,791 all: ♪ In my own time ♪ 310 00:12:40,875 --> 00:12:43,250 - You can't go buy that sound in a shop. 311 00:12:43,333 --> 00:12:44,499 You can buy a Fender Stratocaster 312 00:12:44,583 --> 00:12:47,916 and put it through a VOX amp and sound like Buddy Holly. 313 00:12:48,000 --> 00:12:49,417 You can't sing like the Bee Gees, 314 00:12:49,499 --> 00:12:50,583 because when you've got 315 00:12:50,666 --> 00:12:52,125 family members singing together, 316 00:12:52,208 --> 00:12:53,708 it's unique. 317 00:12:53,791 --> 00:12:56,875 - It's the blend of the tones of each brother. 318 00:12:56,958 --> 00:13:00,250 And Robin had this wonderful, tear-jerking voice. 319 00:13:00,333 --> 00:13:02,749 ["I Started a Joke"] 320 00:13:02,833 --> 00:13:04,458 [somber ballad] 321 00:13:04,541 --> 00:13:06,250 - Robin was a joyous kid. 322 00:13:06,333 --> 00:13:08,083 Hysterically funny. 323 00:13:08,167 --> 00:13:10,749 He took great joy in being on television. 324 00:13:10,833 --> 00:13:13,167 This was the funniest kid you could ever meet. 325 00:13:13,250 --> 00:13:14,958 - My father always used to call him the nanny goat. 326 00:13:15,041 --> 00:13:16,791 'Cause Robin would go... [silly vocalization] 327 00:13:16,875 --> 00:13:18,458 He'd be rehearsing in the back of the car, 328 00:13:18,541 --> 00:13:19,791 you know, doing all these phases 329 00:13:19,875 --> 00:13:21,624 and, you know... ♪ I love you-ooh ♪ 330 00:13:21,708 --> 00:13:22,958 And he'd go, "Shut up! 331 00:13:23,041 --> 00:13:24,250 You sound like a bloody nanny goat." 332 00:13:24,333 --> 00:13:25,958 ♪ ♪ 333 00:13:26,041 --> 00:13:29,624 - ♪ I started a joke ♪ 334 00:13:29,708 --> 00:13:34,833 ♪ Which started the whole world crying ♪ 335 00:13:34,916 --> 00:13:37,458 - Robin was always a bit of a loner. 336 00:13:37,541 --> 00:13:39,666 - I like being spontaneous. 337 00:13:39,749 --> 00:13:40,833 I like being funny with people, 338 00:13:40,916 --> 00:13:43,292 but you won't get that right away with me, you see. 339 00:13:43,375 --> 00:13:46,125 - Robin had a wit that no one could compete with. 340 00:13:46,208 --> 00:13:47,833 And he could be very dark too. 341 00:13:47,916 --> 00:13:51,292 - ♪ I looked at the skies ♪ 342 00:13:51,375 --> 00:13:52,833 - Robin is not a person who would say, 343 00:13:52,916 --> 00:13:54,167 "Oh, I love my brothers," 344 00:13:54,250 --> 00:13:56,292 or, "Group hug." 345 00:13:56,375 --> 00:13:57,583 You know, none of that stuff. 346 00:13:57,666 --> 00:13:59,375 - I'm basically a very shy person. 347 00:13:59,458 --> 00:14:01,167 I'm very hard to get to know. 348 00:14:01,250 --> 00:14:05,000 I have to really know somebody before I reveal myself. 349 00:14:05,083 --> 00:14:08,875 ♪ Till I finally died ♪ 350 00:14:08,958 --> 00:14:15,000 ♪ Which started the whole world living ♪ 351 00:14:15,083 --> 00:14:18,167 ♪ Oh ♪ 352 00:14:18,250 --> 00:14:19,499 - You know, I mean, that's the voice. 353 00:14:19,583 --> 00:14:22,333 That's the voice that reaches your heart. 354 00:14:22,417 --> 00:14:27,499 ♪ ♪ 355 00:14:27,583 --> 00:14:29,333 - We did a show at the Saville Theatre, 356 00:14:29,417 --> 00:14:32,167 and Paul McCartney was there with Jane Asher, 357 00:14:32,250 --> 00:14:33,458 because Robert had said, 358 00:14:33,541 --> 00:14:35,708 "Would you come and see the boys?" 359 00:14:35,791 --> 00:14:36,708 - When you think that 360 00:14:36,791 --> 00:14:39,333 five months before all this was going on, 361 00:14:39,417 --> 00:14:42,499 I was in Pitt Street buying up the Beatle fan club book, 362 00:14:42,583 --> 00:14:45,250 and now here I am partying with these guys. 363 00:14:45,333 --> 00:14:47,333 We felt like we'd arrived. 364 00:14:47,417 --> 00:14:49,666 Now I'm living out in Highgate outside London. 365 00:14:49,749 --> 00:14:51,875 Barry's got a place in Eaton Square. 366 00:14:51,958 --> 00:14:53,875 Robin's got a house in St. George's Hill, 367 00:14:53,958 --> 00:14:55,041 beautiful area. 368 00:14:55,125 --> 00:14:57,541 - And Mum and Dad had their own place, 369 00:14:57,624 --> 00:15:00,083 and, of course, Andy lived with them. 370 00:15:00,167 --> 00:15:01,708 He was just like us, 371 00:15:01,791 --> 00:15:03,541 and he was always tagging along, 372 00:15:03,624 --> 00:15:06,041 hoping that one day, he would do this too. 373 00:15:06,125 --> 00:15:07,541 He would like to sing. 374 00:15:07,624 --> 00:15:09,666 - There was a lot of hits in that short time, 375 00:15:09,749 --> 00:15:11,083 you know, and after all the work 376 00:15:11,167 --> 00:15:13,000 we had done through clubs and everything, 377 00:15:13,083 --> 00:15:14,666 I felt grown up, you know, 378 00:15:14,749 --> 00:15:16,208 so we made the most of it. 379 00:15:16,292 --> 00:15:18,292 - Very talented group of men, the Bee Gees. 380 00:15:18,375 --> 00:15:20,458 - Once again, the fabulous Bee Gees. 381 00:15:20,541 --> 00:15:22,125 - Here they are, and get involved with the Bee Gees. 382 00:15:22,208 --> 00:15:23,125 Here they are. 383 00:15:23,208 --> 00:15:25,417 - ♪ I am man and you are woman ♪ 384 00:15:25,499 --> 00:15:26,749 ♪ Who needs marriage? ♪ 385 00:15:26,833 --> 00:15:29,292 ♪ We are humans all ♪ 386 00:15:29,375 --> 00:15:30,499 By then, we were flying, 387 00:15:30,583 --> 00:15:33,541 you know, just the most amazing experience. 388 00:15:33,624 --> 00:15:35,875 ♪ Then it would please you if I should call ♪ 389 00:15:35,958 --> 00:15:37,417 ♪ ♪ 390 00:15:37,499 --> 00:15:39,417 ♪ Doesn't matter what your name is ♪ 391 00:15:39,499 --> 00:15:42,583 ♪ I can do a million things to you ♪ 392 00:15:42,666 --> 00:15:43,708 As a pop group, 393 00:15:43,791 --> 00:15:45,749 this was the biggest moment of our lives. 394 00:15:45,833 --> 00:15:47,250 Never expected. 395 00:15:47,333 --> 00:15:50,083 Hoped for but never really expected. 396 00:15:50,167 --> 00:15:52,624 [drum solo] 397 00:15:52,708 --> 00:15:56,083 ♪ ♪ 398 00:15:56,167 --> 00:15:58,583 [crowd shouting] 399 00:15:58,666 --> 00:16:00,791 ♪ No, no, no ♪ 400 00:16:00,875 --> 00:16:02,458 ♪ No, no ♪ [tires squealing] 401 00:16:02,541 --> 00:16:04,167 [engine revving] 402 00:16:04,250 --> 00:16:06,458 Then came "Massachusetts." 403 00:16:06,541 --> 00:16:08,791 Robin said, "I've got this idea for a song." 404 00:16:08,875 --> 00:16:10,666 He sang the melody, 405 00:16:10,749 --> 00:16:13,541 and I just remember our jaws dropping. 406 00:16:13,624 --> 00:16:17,000 [sweeping ballad] 407 00:16:17,083 --> 00:16:20,250 - ♪ Feel I'm going back ♪ 408 00:16:20,333 --> 00:16:23,125 ♪ To Massachusetts ♪ 409 00:16:23,208 --> 00:16:26,167 ♪ ♪ 410 00:16:26,250 --> 00:16:29,458 ♪ Something's telling me ♪ 411 00:16:29,541 --> 00:16:32,292 ♪ I must go home ♪ 412 00:16:32,375 --> 00:16:34,458 ♪ ♪ 413 00:16:34,541 --> 00:16:36,833 all: ♪ And the lights ♪ 414 00:16:36,916 --> 00:16:39,083 ♪ All went down ♪ 415 00:16:39,167 --> 00:16:43,375 ♪ In Massachusetts ♪ 416 00:16:43,458 --> 00:16:46,833 - ♪ The day I left ♪ 417 00:16:46,916 --> 00:16:51,833 ♪ Her standing on her own ♪ 418 00:16:51,916 --> 00:16:55,000 - For me, they connected from very early on. 419 00:16:55,083 --> 00:16:57,624 "Massachusetts" is probably the first song, 420 00:16:57,708 --> 00:16:59,541 I think, that really resonates. 421 00:16:59,624 --> 00:17:03,958 There is a gospel quality to it. 422 00:17:04,041 --> 00:17:06,666 There is a folk quality to it. 423 00:17:06,749 --> 00:17:09,624 I didn't know where the hell Massachusetts was, 424 00:17:09,708 --> 00:17:11,041 but I found myself singing that 425 00:17:11,125 --> 00:17:15,167 and translating it to where I was from. 426 00:17:15,250 --> 00:17:16,417 - Robert runs up and he goes, 427 00:17:16,499 --> 00:17:18,833 "'Massachusetts' has just gone to number one." 428 00:17:18,916 --> 00:17:20,000 We went, "What?" 429 00:17:20,083 --> 00:17:22,000 To have a number one in England, 430 00:17:22,083 --> 00:17:23,875 you have no idea how much we dreamed of this 431 00:17:23,958 --> 00:17:24,875 back in Australia. 432 00:17:24,958 --> 00:17:28,333 - ♪ And Massachusetts ♪ 433 00:17:28,417 --> 00:17:33,916 ♪ Is one place I have seen ♪ 434 00:17:34,000 --> 00:17:36,208 ♪ ♪ 435 00:17:36,292 --> 00:17:38,875 - "Massachusetts" from the Bee Gees. 436 00:17:38,958 --> 00:17:41,041 - I met the Bee Gees at "Top of the Pops." 437 00:17:41,125 --> 00:17:42,541 I was young. 438 00:17:42,624 --> 00:17:45,167 Was I 16? Maybe I was even 17. 439 00:17:45,250 --> 00:17:48,041 - Top pop girl in America, top pop girl in Britain, 440 00:17:48,125 --> 00:17:49,583 the one and only Lulu. 441 00:17:49,666 --> 00:17:51,499 - ♪ Some people live within the world ♪ 442 00:17:51,583 --> 00:17:53,583 ♪ And some people live without it ♪ 443 00:17:53,666 --> 00:17:55,666 ♪ Some people gotta whisper their love ♪ 444 00:17:55,749 --> 00:17:58,541 ♪ And some, they gotta shout it ♪ 445 00:17:58,624 --> 00:18:02,083 The Bee Gees were always in the studio. 446 00:18:02,167 --> 00:18:03,708 They were always recording. 447 00:18:03,791 --> 00:18:05,125 [melodic piano notes] 448 00:18:05,208 --> 00:18:06,583 They would literally go into the studio 449 00:18:06,666 --> 00:18:08,208 and start writing. 450 00:18:08,292 --> 00:18:11,417 I had never known anything like that before. 451 00:18:11,499 --> 00:18:12,958 - We don't usually write our lyrics 452 00:18:13,041 --> 00:18:14,791 till the day we sing them. 453 00:18:14,875 --> 00:18:17,250 We usually write our lyrics in the studio itself. 454 00:18:17,333 --> 00:18:19,417 That seems to work through thick and thin. 455 00:18:19,499 --> 00:18:21,250 It always works for us. 456 00:18:21,333 --> 00:18:23,791 - It's very hard to describe how we write, 457 00:18:23,875 --> 00:18:25,292 but the only way I can describe 458 00:18:25,375 --> 00:18:28,041 how we work at it is by becoming one mind. 459 00:18:28,125 --> 00:18:30,208 - Maurice had unique insight 460 00:18:30,292 --> 00:18:32,083 into the way Robin and I thought. 461 00:18:32,167 --> 00:18:33,708 [experimental piano chords] 462 00:18:33,791 --> 00:18:35,958 He would just be fiddling around on the piano. 463 00:18:36,041 --> 00:18:38,417 He'd suddenly play something, and, 464 00:18:38,499 --> 00:18:39,541 "What was that?" 465 00:18:39,624 --> 00:18:41,624 He was trying to please us 466 00:18:41,708 --> 00:18:44,167 and the way that we would all try to please each other, 467 00:18:44,250 --> 00:18:46,833 and that sometimes was the birth of a song. 468 00:18:46,916 --> 00:18:48,000 - All of a sudden, we'll wake each other's 469 00:18:48,083 --> 00:18:49,958 little instincts up and the melodies come. 470 00:18:50,041 --> 00:18:52,499 It's wonderful when you hear it taking shape. 471 00:18:52,583 --> 00:18:53,791 Then it all blossoms. 472 00:18:53,875 --> 00:18:55,458 - The third verse is four bars. 473 00:18:55,541 --> 00:18:56,958 - It's rolling. 474 00:18:57,041 --> 00:18:58,833 - They'd say, "Okay, we're ready to roll," right? 475 00:18:58,916 --> 00:19:00,791 And they'd play the song, and I'd work the chords out. 476 00:19:00,875 --> 00:19:02,125 Colin would figure out 477 00:19:02,208 --> 00:19:03,916 what he's gonna do on the drums. 478 00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:05,583 They'd say, "Right, here we go. 479 00:19:05,666 --> 00:19:07,125 Let's go. Bang, bang, bang." 480 00:19:07,208 --> 00:19:08,167 Down it went. 481 00:19:08,250 --> 00:19:10,458 ["Idea"] 482 00:19:10,541 --> 00:19:14,791 And that spontaneity came out in the songs. 483 00:19:14,875 --> 00:19:17,916 - In those days, you knocked an album out in three weeks. 484 00:19:18,000 --> 00:19:20,167 I think we had three albums out in one year. 485 00:19:20,250 --> 00:19:23,333 both: ♪ But that was when I got an idea ♪ 486 00:19:23,417 --> 00:19:26,125 ♪ Came like a gun and shot in my ear ♪ 487 00:19:26,208 --> 00:19:27,250 [crowd shouting] 488 00:19:27,333 --> 00:19:28,833 - ♪ Don't you think it's time you got up ♪ 489 00:19:28,916 --> 00:19:31,000 ♪ And stood alone? ♪ 490 00:19:31,083 --> 00:19:32,125 ♪ ♪ 491 00:19:32,208 --> 00:19:33,833 - When we went to Europe, 492 00:19:33,916 --> 00:19:36,499 there'd always be a big bunch of kids outside 493 00:19:36,583 --> 00:19:38,167 waiting for us to arrive. 494 00:19:38,250 --> 00:19:39,833 It was a frightening time, 495 00:19:39,916 --> 00:19:42,375 because they crawled all over the Mercedes. 496 00:19:42,458 --> 00:19:45,292 They were on the roof. They were at the window. 497 00:19:45,375 --> 00:19:47,208 It was crazy. 498 00:19:47,292 --> 00:19:48,583 "Hey, guys. 499 00:19:48,666 --> 00:19:50,958 Do you think we're famous? Could be." 500 00:19:51,041 --> 00:19:51,958 [laughs] 501 00:19:52,041 --> 00:19:54,041 [crowd cheering] 502 00:19:54,125 --> 00:19:55,375 - The Bee Gees, 503 00:19:55,458 --> 00:19:58,333 the most exciting sound in the world. 504 00:19:58,417 --> 00:19:59,499 ["World"] 505 00:19:59,583 --> 00:20:01,833 - ♪ Now ♪ 506 00:20:01,916 --> 00:20:04,666 ♪ I found ♪ 507 00:20:04,749 --> 00:20:07,458 ♪ That the world ♪ 508 00:20:07,541 --> 00:20:09,833 ♪ Is round ♪ 509 00:20:09,916 --> 00:20:12,167 - If you've never been famous, 510 00:20:12,250 --> 00:20:13,583 the first time it happens, 511 00:20:13,666 --> 00:20:15,875 it's a very difficult thing to handle. 512 00:20:15,958 --> 00:20:17,541 You don't know how to behave. 513 00:20:17,624 --> 00:20:19,167 You don't know how to experience it. 514 00:20:19,250 --> 00:20:22,375 And that affected all of us in its own way. 515 00:20:22,458 --> 00:20:24,041 [somber rock music] 516 00:20:24,125 --> 00:20:26,417 - I had six Rolls-Royces before I was 21. 517 00:20:26,499 --> 00:20:27,749 I don't know where they are now. 518 00:20:27,833 --> 00:20:28,749 [laughs] 519 00:20:28,833 --> 00:20:30,375 But I mean, that's how crazy it was. 520 00:20:30,458 --> 00:20:33,125 - We were all very selfish at that point. 521 00:20:33,208 --> 00:20:35,833 The testosterone kicked in, 522 00:20:35,916 --> 00:20:38,041 and the competition of life began. 523 00:20:38,125 --> 00:20:40,041 ["I've Gotta Get a Message to You"] 524 00:20:40,125 --> 00:20:41,250 [mellow music] 525 00:20:41,333 --> 00:20:45,791 ♪ I told him I'm in no hurry ♪ 526 00:20:45,875 --> 00:20:48,417 ♪ But if I broke her heart ♪ 527 00:20:48,499 --> 00:20:50,499 ♪ Then won't you tell her I'm sorry? ♪ 528 00:20:50,583 --> 00:20:54,083 - There was always a conflict between Barry and Robin 529 00:20:54,167 --> 00:20:56,749 'cause they both had fantastic voices 530 00:20:56,833 --> 00:20:58,708 and Robin wanted to sing the song 531 00:20:58,791 --> 00:21:00,041 and Barry wanted to sing it. 532 00:21:00,125 --> 00:21:05,083 both: ♪ I've just gotta get a message to you ♪ 533 00:21:05,167 --> 00:21:07,791 all: ♪ Hold on ♪ 534 00:21:07,875 --> 00:21:09,916 ♪ Hold on ♪ 535 00:21:10,000 --> 00:21:12,624 - Both of us wanted to be individual performers. 536 00:21:12,708 --> 00:21:14,916 We all wanted individual recognition. 537 00:21:15,000 --> 00:21:18,583 And therein lies the issue. 538 00:21:18,666 --> 00:21:22,333 all: ♪ Hold on ♪ 539 00:21:22,417 --> 00:21:26,083 - I'm speaking to you from a club in Hamburg, 540 00:21:26,167 --> 00:21:27,791 and I'm Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees. 541 00:21:27,875 --> 00:21:29,083 Robin here. 542 00:21:29,167 --> 00:21:30,958 Robin, we've heard rumors that the group is splitting up. 543 00:21:31,041 --> 00:21:32,458 Would you like to verify those rumors? 544 00:21:32,541 --> 00:21:33,749 - If I was to say that was true, 545 00:21:33,833 --> 00:21:35,749 then I would be the premier of Russia. 546 00:21:35,833 --> 00:21:37,125 - I don't know. 547 00:21:37,208 --> 00:21:38,250 - Thank you very much, Mr. Petersen. 548 00:21:38,333 --> 00:21:39,333 How about you, Mr. Melouney? 549 00:21:39,417 --> 00:21:40,791 - Oh, no. I don't think it is. 550 00:21:40,875 --> 00:21:43,250 - No. No. No. 551 00:21:43,333 --> 00:21:46,125 ["Don't Wanna Live Inside Myself"] 552 00:21:46,208 --> 00:21:50,125 - I always say that making music 553 00:21:50,208 --> 00:21:52,666 with your family 554 00:21:52,749 --> 00:21:55,916 is equally the greatest strength 555 00:21:56,000 --> 00:21:57,791 and the greatest weakness you could ever have 556 00:21:57,875 --> 00:21:59,833 in a musical partnership. 557 00:21:59,916 --> 00:22:01,624 [somber piano ballad] 558 00:22:01,708 --> 00:22:03,958 To get to the top or near the top, 559 00:22:04,041 --> 00:22:06,250 you've gotta be incredibly driven, 560 00:22:06,333 --> 00:22:09,167 and what drives you is your ego. 561 00:22:09,250 --> 00:22:10,666 And when you get there 562 00:22:10,749 --> 00:22:12,958 and everybody's got an ego about it, 563 00:22:13,041 --> 00:22:15,375 it can be tricky to stay there. 564 00:22:15,458 --> 00:22:17,833 - ♪ I am the searcher ♪ 565 00:22:17,916 --> 00:22:22,375 ♪ Of my fortunes ♪ 566 00:22:22,458 --> 00:22:25,666 ♪ I got my right hand ♪ 567 00:22:25,749 --> 00:22:28,167 ♪ On the wheel ♪ 568 00:22:28,250 --> 00:22:30,041 - The three of us stopped looking inwards to each other 569 00:22:30,125 --> 00:22:31,958 and all started looking outwards 570 00:22:32,041 --> 00:22:34,666 to what we could be individually. 571 00:22:34,749 --> 00:22:36,833 "To hell with what my brothers think." 572 00:22:36,916 --> 00:22:39,499 And each one of us was thinking that. 573 00:22:39,583 --> 00:22:42,666 both: ♪ Don't wanna live ♪ 574 00:22:42,749 --> 00:22:46,000 ♪ Inside myself ♪ 575 00:22:46,083 --> 00:22:47,292 - To travel the world when you're young 576 00:22:47,375 --> 00:22:48,458 with a family member 577 00:22:48,541 --> 00:22:50,875 gives you a certain sense of who you are 578 00:22:50,958 --> 00:22:52,958 and where you've come from and all that. 579 00:22:53,041 --> 00:22:56,167 So you kind of walk that tightrope. 580 00:22:56,250 --> 00:22:58,208 - We'd been together all our lives, don't forget. 581 00:22:58,292 --> 00:22:59,875 - We'd been together since Robin and I were five, 582 00:22:59,958 --> 00:23:01,417 singing professionally. 583 00:23:01,499 --> 00:23:02,749 You know, it's a lot of years. 584 00:23:02,833 --> 00:23:05,041 - We'd been kids living together with each other 585 00:23:05,125 --> 00:23:06,708 right up until the time we arrived 586 00:23:06,791 --> 00:23:09,375 and even after we arrived in England. 587 00:23:09,458 --> 00:23:14,375 - ♪ Don't wanna live inside myself ♪ 588 00:23:14,458 --> 00:23:15,708 Robin was first to say, 589 00:23:15,791 --> 00:23:18,541 "Well, I'm quitting the group." 590 00:23:18,624 --> 00:23:22,499 I stopped really knowing Robin 591 00:23:22,583 --> 00:23:26,250 and his personal life once we became famous. 592 00:23:26,333 --> 00:23:27,708 And the same with Mo. 593 00:23:27,791 --> 00:23:31,375 Our three lives were three different lives. 594 00:23:31,458 --> 00:23:33,666 We were no longer living the same life. 595 00:23:33,749 --> 00:23:40,708 ♪ ♪ 596 00:23:40,791 --> 00:23:42,208 - Brothers... 597 00:23:42,292 --> 00:23:44,749 in general, it's a very complicated thing, 598 00:23:44,833 --> 00:23:46,875 you know? 599 00:23:46,958 --> 00:23:48,208 Emotions are heightened, 600 00:23:48,292 --> 00:23:52,167 and there's things that go back to childhood about, you know, 601 00:23:52,250 --> 00:23:54,833 if one kid got more attention than the other, 602 00:23:54,916 --> 00:23:56,708 and all these things play out 603 00:23:56,791 --> 00:23:58,541 in front of just a small group of friends, 604 00:23:58,624 --> 00:24:00,875 but when you magnify that with the whole world, 605 00:24:00,958 --> 00:24:02,791 it changes the game a little bit. 606 00:24:02,875 --> 00:24:04,875 - Robin, that's a good picture. 607 00:24:04,958 --> 00:24:07,583 That's you, Barry, Colin, Vince. 608 00:24:07,666 --> 00:24:09,749 - That's correct, yes. - Do you miss 'em? 609 00:24:09,833 --> 00:24:11,125 - Well, it's not really a matter 610 00:24:11,208 --> 00:24:12,458 of missing them, really. 611 00:24:12,541 --> 00:24:14,083 But I still see them on and off, you know, 612 00:24:14,167 --> 00:24:16,125 so that's the way things go. 613 00:24:16,208 --> 00:24:18,000 I'll show you the studio anyway. 614 00:24:18,958 --> 00:24:21,333 [George Bizet's "Habanera"] 615 00:24:21,417 --> 00:24:24,624 - It was really me and Robin that were in conflict, 616 00:24:24,708 --> 00:24:26,624 and I think Maurice was in the middle. 617 00:24:26,708 --> 00:24:28,458 - Story of my life, really. [laughs] 618 00:24:28,541 --> 00:24:29,499 Barry would call me up and say, 619 00:24:29,583 --> 00:24:30,666 "Well, can you call Robin and tell him 620 00:24:30,749 --> 00:24:31,791 if he wants to do this?" 621 00:24:31,875 --> 00:24:33,125 And Robin would go, "Well, give Barry a call 622 00:24:33,208 --> 00:24:34,292 and let him know that I'm gonna be over." 623 00:24:34,375 --> 00:24:35,624 I said, "Robin, you call Barry." 624 00:24:35,708 --> 00:24:36,958 "Barry, you call Robin." 625 00:24:37,041 --> 00:24:39,125 And they both said, "No, we won't." 626 00:24:39,208 --> 00:24:41,000 And for 18 months, they never did. 627 00:24:41,083 --> 00:24:42,833 - We had this fascination 628 00:24:42,916 --> 00:24:46,250 with calling the newspapers up. 629 00:24:46,333 --> 00:24:49,417 You called "NME" or you called "Disc" or "Music Echo" 630 00:24:49,499 --> 00:24:50,791 and you'd say... [grumbles] 631 00:24:50,875 --> 00:24:52,583 "Robin said this about me, and I just wanna be able 632 00:24:52,666 --> 00:24:55,167 to correct the record," and all that stuff. 633 00:24:55,250 --> 00:24:57,583 - It was a whole strange episode of our lives, 634 00:24:57,666 --> 00:25:00,292 but a lot of things had gone down at that time, 635 00:25:00,375 --> 00:25:04,000 and we needed time apart to think about them. 636 00:25:04,083 --> 00:25:06,541 - At Caxton Hall, VIP transport 637 00:25:06,624 --> 00:25:09,208 for very important pop star Barry Gibb. 638 00:25:09,292 --> 00:25:10,333 He's getting married 639 00:25:10,417 --> 00:25:12,167 to 20-year-old former Miss Edinburgh 640 00:25:12,250 --> 00:25:13,833 Linda Gray. 641 00:25:13,916 --> 00:25:16,333 [cheery music] 642 00:25:16,417 --> 00:25:18,708 - Their world was crazy at that time. 643 00:25:18,791 --> 00:25:20,833 You know, at one time, there was three brothers, 644 00:25:20,916 --> 00:25:24,167 and then all of a sudden, it was three wives. 645 00:25:24,250 --> 00:25:27,000 - Maurice Gibb and Lulu became Mr. and Mrs. 646 00:25:27,083 --> 00:25:28,791 at St. James' Parish Church 647 00:25:28,875 --> 00:25:31,333 at Gerrards Cross in Buckinghamshire. 648 00:25:31,417 --> 00:25:34,541 - You think, by marrying someone 649 00:25:34,624 --> 00:25:37,375 that you absolutely adore, 650 00:25:37,458 --> 00:25:39,708 you think it's gonna solve all your problems, 651 00:25:39,791 --> 00:25:41,250 but really... 652 00:25:41,333 --> 00:25:42,499 - At Caxton Hall, 653 00:25:42,583 --> 00:25:45,083 Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees marries Molly Hullis. 654 00:25:45,167 --> 00:25:46,375 [upbeat rock music] 655 00:25:46,458 --> 00:25:48,541 - Molly was my first real love. 656 00:25:48,624 --> 00:25:50,417 The first serious one. 657 00:25:50,499 --> 00:25:52,375 But it was a very traumatic time for me. 658 00:25:52,458 --> 00:25:55,375 [bombastic music] 659 00:25:55,458 --> 00:25:57,583 I went with my manager. 660 00:25:57,666 --> 00:25:59,000 He said, "Look, Robin, 661 00:25:59,083 --> 00:26:00,583 I'm gonna send you to New Zealand." 662 00:26:00,666 --> 00:26:03,666 He says, "You're doing the Redwood Park Festival." 663 00:26:03,749 --> 00:26:04,833 So I went there, and of course, 664 00:26:04,916 --> 00:26:06,583 it was advertised that the Bee Gees were coming, 665 00:26:06,666 --> 00:26:08,041 not just Robin Gibb, you see. 666 00:26:08,125 --> 00:26:11,708 [crowd shouting] 667 00:26:11,791 --> 00:26:13,833 All right. Okay. 668 00:26:13,916 --> 00:26:16,208 - How'd you feel last night? 669 00:26:16,292 --> 00:26:17,583 - I have an obligation to my audience 670 00:26:17,666 --> 00:26:19,041 not to look scared, and... 671 00:26:19,125 --> 00:26:22,250 I can't say I really felt scared. 672 00:26:22,333 --> 00:26:23,458 I was terrified. [laughs] 673 00:26:25,499 --> 00:26:29,041 ♪ How far am I able to ♪ 674 00:26:29,125 --> 00:26:31,417 [microphone feedback whining] 675 00:26:31,499 --> 00:26:34,499 [crowd screaming] 676 00:26:37,791 --> 00:26:40,041 - All three of us became isolated, 677 00:26:40,125 --> 00:26:44,083 and all three of us did things to each other 678 00:26:44,167 --> 00:26:46,083 that I think we're all sorry for. 679 00:26:46,167 --> 00:26:48,916 [soft music] 680 00:26:49,000 --> 00:26:50,083 We loved each other. 681 00:26:50,167 --> 00:26:52,624 There was an enormous amount of love between us. 682 00:26:52,708 --> 00:26:54,749 Growing up, we did everything together. 683 00:26:54,833 --> 00:26:57,375 - We often thought we were triplets. 684 00:26:57,458 --> 00:27:00,125 Because we all had the same love. 685 00:27:00,208 --> 00:27:01,208 We had the same sense of humor. 686 00:27:01,292 --> 00:27:03,375 We had the same love of the same kind of music. 687 00:27:03,458 --> 00:27:05,458 - Just typical kids, you know? 688 00:27:05,541 --> 00:27:07,958 But the one thing that no one else was doing 689 00:27:08,041 --> 00:27:09,458 was that we were singing in harmony, 690 00:27:09,541 --> 00:27:12,250 and beyond anything else, that's all we cared about. 691 00:27:12,333 --> 00:27:14,499 ♪ ♪ 692 00:27:14,583 --> 00:27:16,916 We fell in love with the Mills Brothers. 693 00:27:17,000 --> 00:27:19,958 They all did something unique in their own way. 694 00:27:20,041 --> 00:27:20,958 And at the same time, 695 00:27:21,041 --> 00:27:23,000 Robin and I did two different leads, 696 00:27:23,083 --> 00:27:25,666 and Maurice would always know where to put that other melody 697 00:27:25,749 --> 00:27:27,000 to make a three-part harmony. 698 00:27:27,083 --> 00:27:29,791 They mirrored what we wanted to be. 699 00:27:29,875 --> 00:27:32,458 - Do you find you miss Robin and Maurice musically? 700 00:27:32,541 --> 00:27:33,624 - Yeah. [chuckles] 701 00:27:33,708 --> 00:27:35,749 Not musically. 702 00:27:35,833 --> 00:27:38,292 I miss them both as brothers. 703 00:27:38,375 --> 00:27:40,749 - Something about entering the world 704 00:27:40,833 --> 00:27:43,125 from the same place, I think, has an effect 705 00:27:43,208 --> 00:27:44,916 on your ability to sing together, 706 00:27:45,000 --> 00:27:49,541 your creative awareness, and your artistic voice. 707 00:27:49,624 --> 00:27:52,875 - Could we see the Bee Gees back together again? 708 00:27:52,958 --> 00:27:56,167 - That's a very strong point that it could be. 709 00:27:56,250 --> 00:27:57,333 I can't say definitely, 710 00:27:57,417 --> 00:27:59,875 but I'd like to see the Bee Gees again. 711 00:27:59,958 --> 00:28:02,375 [solemn music] 712 00:28:02,458 --> 00:28:05,375 - Mr. Epstein has been unwell now for some months. 713 00:28:05,458 --> 00:28:07,458 And he's been in the habit of taking tablets 714 00:28:07,541 --> 00:28:09,208 to help him sleep at night. 715 00:28:09,292 --> 00:28:11,292 He was found in his second-floor bedroom 716 00:28:11,375 --> 00:28:14,167 just after 2:00 this afternoon by his housekeeper. 717 00:28:14,250 --> 00:28:17,666 - When Brian died and we restructured NEMS, 718 00:28:17,749 --> 00:28:19,333 Robert asked to become 719 00:28:19,417 --> 00:28:21,000 a more important senior executive 720 00:28:21,083 --> 00:28:22,833 for the Beatles, 721 00:28:22,916 --> 00:28:24,708 and that wasn't acceptable to them, 722 00:28:24,791 --> 00:28:28,250 so he then left the company 723 00:28:28,333 --> 00:28:31,875 and took with him Eric Clapton and Bee Gees 724 00:28:31,958 --> 00:28:33,833 so he could start off on his own. 725 00:28:33,916 --> 00:28:35,208 - We were an asset. 726 00:28:35,292 --> 00:28:37,041 We were one of those people Robert needed 727 00:28:37,125 --> 00:28:39,041 as an element of going public. 728 00:28:39,125 --> 00:28:40,708 [camera shutters snapping] 729 00:28:40,791 --> 00:28:42,375 It was at the launching of the company 730 00:28:42,458 --> 00:28:43,958 where we started to communicate again. 731 00:28:44,041 --> 00:28:45,875 [applause] 732 00:28:45,958 --> 00:28:47,916 And once we came back together again, 733 00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:49,666 we wrote "Lonely Days," 734 00:28:49,749 --> 00:28:52,875 which reflected the idea that we'd been broken up. 735 00:28:52,958 --> 00:28:56,708 - We'd always been boys going up together, 736 00:28:56,791 --> 00:28:59,208 and I think we came back together as men. 737 00:28:59,292 --> 00:29:01,292 We respected each other's opinions, 738 00:29:01,375 --> 00:29:02,875 which we didn't before that. 739 00:29:02,958 --> 00:29:05,000 ["How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"] 740 00:29:05,083 --> 00:29:06,208 If anything, that was the good thing 741 00:29:06,292 --> 00:29:07,666 about the breakup. 742 00:29:07,749 --> 00:29:09,708 [soft ballad] 743 00:29:09,791 --> 00:29:12,791 ♪ I can think of younger days ♪ 744 00:29:12,875 --> 00:29:14,875 - I had already started a first verse and chorus. 745 00:29:14,958 --> 00:29:17,250 I knew what "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?" was, 746 00:29:17,333 --> 00:29:19,125 but then Robin walks in. 747 00:29:19,208 --> 00:29:21,250 I said, "I'm just working on this song. 748 00:29:21,333 --> 00:29:22,624 Do you wanna do it with me?" 749 00:29:22,708 --> 00:29:23,958 And he went, "Yeah, of course." 750 00:29:24,041 --> 00:29:29,417 - ♪ I could never see tomorrow ♪ 751 00:29:29,499 --> 00:29:31,458 - We'd been apart for two years. 752 00:29:31,541 --> 00:29:32,624 If we hadn't been brothers, 753 00:29:32,708 --> 00:29:34,208 we wouldn't have lasted half an hour. 754 00:29:34,292 --> 00:29:36,250 It just wouldn't have happened. 755 00:29:36,333 --> 00:29:38,583 ♪ ♪ 756 00:29:38,666 --> 00:29:40,458 ♪ And ♪ 757 00:29:40,541 --> 00:29:43,458 ♪ How can you mend ♪ 758 00:29:43,541 --> 00:29:44,875 ♪ A broken heart? ♪ 759 00:29:44,958 --> 00:29:48,583 Things started to just improve over time, you know? 760 00:29:48,666 --> 00:29:50,583 ♪ How can you stop the rain ♪ 761 00:29:50,666 --> 00:29:52,250 ♪ From falling down? ♪ 762 00:29:52,333 --> 00:29:54,292 We became the Bee Gees again. 763 00:29:54,375 --> 00:29:58,000 all: ♪ How can you stop ♪ 764 00:29:58,083 --> 00:30:01,250 ♪ The sun from shining? ♪ 765 00:30:01,333 --> 00:30:05,292 ♪ What makes the world go round? ♪ 766 00:30:05,375 --> 00:30:07,167 ♪ ♪ 767 00:30:07,250 --> 00:30:08,749 - We came back together, and we made 768 00:30:08,833 --> 00:30:10,417 two number one records in America, 769 00:30:10,499 --> 00:30:12,083 so we were on a bit of a high. 770 00:30:12,167 --> 00:30:14,624 ♪ ♪ 771 00:30:14,708 --> 00:30:17,292 But we were not really that good 772 00:30:17,375 --> 00:30:20,958 when it came to just doing anything without a pill, 773 00:30:21,041 --> 00:30:22,791 you know, or without a drink. 774 00:30:22,875 --> 00:30:24,125 It was destroying us. 775 00:30:24,208 --> 00:30:26,458 all: ♪ My broken heart ♪ 776 00:30:26,541 --> 00:30:29,333 And that became the battle, 777 00:30:29,417 --> 00:30:31,833 the fight to survive being a pop group. 778 00:30:31,916 --> 00:30:35,041 all: ♪ Da-da-da-da ♪ 779 00:30:35,125 --> 00:30:39,333 - ♪ Da-da-da-da-da-da ♪ 780 00:30:39,417 --> 00:30:42,417 [cheers and applause] 781 00:30:47,541 --> 00:30:50,292 Thank you very, very much on behalf of my brothers, 782 00:30:50,375 --> 00:30:52,833 Robin 783 00:30:52,916 --> 00:30:56,083 and Maurice, 784 00:30:56,167 --> 00:30:59,417 and this beautiful orchestra, 785 00:30:59,499 --> 00:31:03,208 our lead guitarist, Alan Kendall... 786 00:31:03,292 --> 00:31:04,333 - Robert Stigwood said, 787 00:31:04,417 --> 00:31:06,333 "The Bee Gees are gonna go on a tour, 788 00:31:06,417 --> 00:31:08,666 and they want a guitar player who can play bass as well," 789 00:31:08,749 --> 00:31:10,666 'cause in those days, 790 00:31:10,749 --> 00:31:14,791 Maurice played bass, but he would go on piano sometimes. 791 00:31:14,875 --> 00:31:18,499 And so I called him and I said, "Well, I can't play bass," 792 00:31:18,583 --> 00:31:21,000 and he said, "Just say you can play bass," 793 00:31:21,083 --> 00:31:23,083 so I said, "Okay, I can play bass." 794 00:31:23,167 --> 00:31:25,875 [mellow rock music] 795 00:31:25,958 --> 00:31:29,250 I'll be honest, I was very much into the lifestyle. 796 00:31:29,333 --> 00:31:30,541 I just loved being on the road. 797 00:31:30,624 --> 00:31:33,083 I loved playing music, chasing women. 798 00:31:33,167 --> 00:31:34,749 ♪ ♪ 799 00:31:34,833 --> 00:31:36,000 Maurice is so funny, 800 00:31:36,083 --> 00:31:38,041 'cause he was good at magic tricks, 801 00:31:38,125 --> 00:31:41,208 and he'd like to drink a little, as I did. 802 00:31:41,292 --> 00:31:43,250 Robin, I never really knew. 803 00:31:43,333 --> 00:31:46,583 I mean, I'd converse with him but not as much as the others. 804 00:31:46,666 --> 00:31:48,916 And I would bump into him every now and then 805 00:31:49,000 --> 00:31:51,875 wandering the corridors of the hotel. 806 00:31:51,958 --> 00:31:55,041 And there's Barry with his glamorous wife 807 00:31:55,125 --> 00:31:57,083 smoking a bowl, you know? 808 00:31:57,167 --> 00:31:58,333 ♪ ♪ 809 00:31:58,458 --> 00:32:00,916 My early days with the Bee Gees 810 00:32:01,000 --> 00:32:03,791 were, for me, thrilling, 811 00:32:03,875 --> 00:32:06,375 even though I can understand why it wasn't for them, 812 00:32:06,458 --> 00:32:08,958 'cause they weren't necessarily selling out. 813 00:32:09,041 --> 00:32:11,624 [solemn music] 814 00:32:11,708 --> 00:32:12,916 - When we were broken up, 815 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:15,958 the world changed radically very quickly. 816 00:32:16,041 --> 00:32:17,749 And that was the beginning of the period 817 00:32:17,833 --> 00:32:20,583 when there was just no interest in us at all. 818 00:32:20,666 --> 00:32:22,292 - Remember, we were on tour. 819 00:32:22,375 --> 00:32:23,875 They'd try to keep Robin 820 00:32:23,958 --> 00:32:25,708 from looking out into the audience, 821 00:32:25,791 --> 00:32:27,916 in case it was only half full. 822 00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:30,541 - When we got back home, I turned to more drinking. 823 00:32:30,624 --> 00:32:33,583 I'd go to the pubs. The police knew my car. 824 00:32:33,666 --> 00:32:36,583 I was becoming the town drunk. 825 00:32:36,666 --> 00:32:38,624 I mean, I think I had about 2 grand in the bank 826 00:32:38,708 --> 00:32:40,833 and lived next order to a fish and chips shop. 827 00:32:40,916 --> 00:32:42,916 - So by '74, 828 00:32:43,000 --> 00:32:46,292 we didn't think there was gonna be much of a future. 829 00:32:46,375 --> 00:32:48,958 When you become famous, you think everyone loves you 830 00:32:49,041 --> 00:32:50,250 and they're gonna love you forever, 831 00:32:50,333 --> 00:32:51,624 and it's not true. 832 00:32:51,708 --> 00:32:53,791 ["Marley Purt Drive"] 833 00:32:53,875 --> 00:32:55,624 [bluesy rock ballad] 834 00:32:55,708 --> 00:32:57,292 - All of a sudden now, we had to work the clubs 835 00:32:57,375 --> 00:32:59,208 at the north of England to pay the taxman, 836 00:32:59,292 --> 00:33:01,083 so we had the Sheffield Fiesta, 837 00:33:01,167 --> 00:33:02,458 the Golden Garter in Manchester, 838 00:33:02,541 --> 00:33:04,292 Batley Variety Club, 839 00:33:04,375 --> 00:33:06,083 great clubs of our time. 840 00:33:06,167 --> 00:33:07,749 - The Batley thing, 841 00:33:07,833 --> 00:33:10,125 it's where all the has-beens went to play, 842 00:33:10,208 --> 00:33:11,624 and not saying that they were has-beens, 843 00:33:11,708 --> 00:33:14,292 but it was like, "Oh, God, not Batley," you know? 844 00:33:14,375 --> 00:33:16,333 - ♪ Sunday morning, woke up ♪ 845 00:33:16,417 --> 00:33:19,375 - I was a waitress at the Batley Variety Club. 846 00:33:19,458 --> 00:33:23,499 I really wasn't a fan of the Bee Gees. 847 00:33:23,583 --> 00:33:25,708 The only thing I knew about them was, 848 00:33:25,791 --> 00:33:26,791 you know, Maurice was mar-- 849 00:33:26,875 --> 00:33:29,541 well, he was going through a divorce with Lulu. 850 00:33:29,624 --> 00:33:33,041 - Yvonne came in, and I saw her eyes. 851 00:33:33,125 --> 00:33:34,292 I don't know about the rest of her. 852 00:33:34,375 --> 00:33:36,000 I just saw her eyes. 853 00:33:36,083 --> 00:33:39,000 And I said, "I'm gonna marry her." 854 00:33:39,083 --> 00:33:41,583 And I knew I was gonna marry her. 855 00:33:41,666 --> 00:33:43,125 - He was so cute. 856 00:33:43,208 --> 00:33:45,833 His personality was amazing. 857 00:33:45,916 --> 00:33:47,624 - Maurice had this childlike quality, 858 00:33:47,708 --> 00:33:50,333 which is something very special in men. 859 00:33:50,417 --> 00:33:53,708 - He loved dressing up in police uniforms. 860 00:33:53,791 --> 00:33:55,875 Wherever we went on tour, 861 00:33:55,958 --> 00:33:57,708 they'd give him a hat, give him a badge. 862 00:33:57,791 --> 00:33:58,791 - Is that his wallet? - It's a badge. 863 00:33:58,875 --> 00:34:00,333 - Whoa! [laughter] 864 00:34:00,417 --> 00:34:02,666 What was that? - I'm not showing you now. 865 00:34:02,749 --> 00:34:04,041 - People loved him. 866 00:34:04,125 --> 00:34:05,875 He had the best smile ever. 867 00:34:05,958 --> 00:34:09,375 - I remember him teaching me the showbiz smile, 868 00:34:09,458 --> 00:34:10,875 and he said, "Well, the trick is, 869 00:34:10,958 --> 00:34:13,250 "you don't move your eyes 870 00:34:13,333 --> 00:34:15,583 and you just go like this." 871 00:34:15,666 --> 00:34:17,375 [laughs] 872 00:34:17,458 --> 00:34:19,000 And I'll be honest with you, 873 00:34:19,083 --> 00:34:22,208 I think Maurice was the glue that held it all together. 874 00:34:22,292 --> 00:34:24,000 - Oh, I'm Mr. Fix-It. 875 00:34:24,083 --> 00:34:27,083 Either some discrepancy between Barry and Robin, 876 00:34:27,167 --> 00:34:28,916 or if we're gonna make a decision about something, 877 00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:30,375 "Well, what does Maurice think?" 878 00:34:30,458 --> 00:34:33,708 But most of the time, I'm like my mum. 879 00:34:33,791 --> 00:34:34,916 I'm the peacemaker. 880 00:34:35,000 --> 00:34:36,708 - You know, if they'd not been brothers, 881 00:34:36,791 --> 00:34:38,875 they would not be together. 882 00:34:38,958 --> 00:34:41,250 No doubt in my mind. 883 00:34:41,333 --> 00:34:44,375 ♪ ♪ 884 00:34:44,458 --> 00:34:46,041 [soft music] 885 00:34:46,125 --> 00:34:48,250 - I met the Gibbs when they were on a bit of a-- 886 00:34:48,333 --> 00:34:50,125 shall we say, a downturn in their career. 887 00:34:50,208 --> 00:34:51,624 Robert Stigwood made me, 888 00:34:51,708 --> 00:34:53,624 unaccountably, the head of his record label. 889 00:34:53,708 --> 00:34:55,916 I was only 21 years old. 890 00:34:56,000 --> 00:34:57,417 I truly believed it was because I was 891 00:34:57,499 --> 00:34:59,791 the only guy in the room that I got the job. 892 00:34:59,875 --> 00:35:00,916 It was odd to me because I thought, 893 00:35:01,000 --> 00:35:02,041 "If they can write those songs, 894 00:35:02,125 --> 00:35:03,791 how come they can't be consistent?" 895 00:35:03,875 --> 00:35:05,083 If you got the ability to write 896 00:35:05,167 --> 00:35:06,250 "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?" 897 00:35:06,333 --> 00:35:07,541 and "To Love Somebody," 898 00:35:07,624 --> 00:35:09,583 where does that talent go? 899 00:35:09,666 --> 00:35:13,208 - I mean, there was two albums in a row that were dismal. 900 00:35:13,292 --> 00:35:15,292 - Ahmet Ertegun said to Robert, 901 00:35:15,375 --> 00:35:17,250 "You know, maybe their time has gone," 902 00:35:17,333 --> 00:35:18,749 'cause it was Atlantic who were paying 903 00:35:18,833 --> 00:35:19,958 for these recordings, 904 00:35:20,041 --> 00:35:22,250 and Robert wouldn't hear of it, of course. 905 00:35:22,333 --> 00:35:24,125 He would never let the Bee Gees go. 906 00:35:24,208 --> 00:35:27,833 - There was this thing about Stigwood--[laughs] 907 00:35:27,916 --> 00:35:31,417 Stigwood and his loyalties. 908 00:35:31,499 --> 00:35:33,666 I had a kind of deep-seated resentment 909 00:35:33,749 --> 00:35:37,458 about the fact that, you know, they were still 910 00:35:37,541 --> 00:35:38,499 his favorite. 911 00:35:38,583 --> 00:35:40,417 [Eric Clapton's "Motherless Children"] 912 00:35:40,499 --> 00:35:42,333 [rollicking guitar music] 913 00:35:42,417 --> 00:35:44,833 I had come out of a long period 914 00:35:44,916 --> 00:35:46,624 of addiction and alcoholism, 915 00:35:46,708 --> 00:35:49,583 and I went into the sort of recovery period. 916 00:35:49,666 --> 00:35:51,167 ♪ ♪ 917 00:35:51,250 --> 00:35:54,292 All these musical ambitions came to the surface, 918 00:35:54,375 --> 00:35:57,666 so I went to Miami to record. 919 00:35:57,749 --> 00:36:00,875 ♪ ♪ 920 00:36:00,958 --> 00:36:02,125 - We had a conversation with Eric 921 00:36:02,208 --> 00:36:03,958 about making a comeback. 922 00:36:04,041 --> 00:36:05,167 Eric said, "Well, I've just made this album 923 00:36:05,250 --> 00:36:07,749 "called '461 Ocean Boulevard' in Miami. 924 00:36:07,833 --> 00:36:09,333 "Why don't you guys make an album in America 925 00:36:09,417 --> 00:36:11,499 "instead of always making an album in England, 926 00:36:11,583 --> 00:36:13,417 "and maybe the change of environment 927 00:36:13,499 --> 00:36:15,666 will do something for you?" 928 00:36:15,749 --> 00:36:18,041 - The studio there was unbelievable, 929 00:36:18,125 --> 00:36:21,666 and I think that's what 930 00:36:21,749 --> 00:36:23,833 the suggestion was about, really. 931 00:36:23,916 --> 00:36:27,833 I thought those guys were actually an R&B band 932 00:36:27,916 --> 00:36:30,541 that hadn't really worked that out yet. 933 00:36:30,624 --> 00:36:32,833 And I thought, "Man, this would be so good 934 00:36:32,916 --> 00:36:36,000 if they could pick up on what's going on in America." 935 00:36:36,083 --> 00:36:39,624 - I do know that they had to change something. 936 00:36:39,708 --> 00:36:40,833 That's when the whole idea 937 00:36:40,916 --> 00:36:43,958 of actually being more of a band together 938 00:36:44,041 --> 00:36:45,125 rather than, you know, 939 00:36:45,208 --> 00:36:47,499 musicians and orchestras and all that stuff. 940 00:36:47,583 --> 00:36:49,292 ["Mr. Natural"] 941 00:36:49,375 --> 00:36:51,375 - Alan Kendall, who was a friend of mine, 942 00:36:51,458 --> 00:36:54,624 said, "The Bee Gees are looking for a drummer. 943 00:36:54,708 --> 00:36:56,916 You know, are you interested?" 944 00:36:57,000 --> 00:36:59,708 And I went, "Yes." [laughs] 945 00:36:59,791 --> 00:37:02,624 "I think I'm interested. Yeah. I am interested." 946 00:37:02,708 --> 00:37:05,208 - We needed to get more energized 947 00:37:05,292 --> 00:37:06,708 and don't rely so much 948 00:37:06,791 --> 00:37:09,083 on the ballads that we had been doing. 949 00:37:09,167 --> 00:37:12,041 - We wanted to be a band so bad, 950 00:37:12,125 --> 00:37:14,041 and that was basically the birth of it. 951 00:37:14,125 --> 00:37:16,875 - We had a great bass player, Maurice. 952 00:37:16,958 --> 00:37:19,041 We had a great guitar player, Alan. 953 00:37:19,125 --> 00:37:20,541 So really, the only thing we needed 954 00:37:20,624 --> 00:37:22,375 was a keyboard player, 955 00:37:22,458 --> 00:37:24,375 and I thought, "Blue." 956 00:37:24,458 --> 00:37:27,375 [lively piano solo] 957 00:37:27,458 --> 00:37:30,916 ♪ ♪ 958 00:37:31,000 --> 00:37:32,708 - Dennis called and said, 959 00:37:32,791 --> 00:37:34,375 "Look, you know, I'm putting a band together 960 00:37:34,458 --> 00:37:35,624 "with the Bee Gees, 961 00:37:35,708 --> 00:37:39,167 "and I've spoken to Barry, and everybody's in agreement. 962 00:37:39,250 --> 00:37:40,916 Are you interested?" 963 00:37:41,000 --> 00:37:42,749 I said, "No. No. 964 00:37:42,833 --> 00:37:45,916 I'm having great fun. I'm in a rock and roll band." 965 00:37:46,000 --> 00:37:47,708 Queen was our support act. 966 00:37:47,791 --> 00:37:50,749 I'm touring America and living the rock and roll life. 967 00:37:50,833 --> 00:37:53,958 all: ♪ You don't get me, I'm part of the union ♪ 968 00:37:54,041 --> 00:37:57,875 ♪ You don't get me, I'm part of the union ♪ 969 00:37:57,958 --> 00:38:01,041 - We'd grown up together playing in bands in Cardiff. 970 00:38:01,125 --> 00:38:02,417 I said, "We've known each other 971 00:38:02,499 --> 00:38:03,541 for a long time, right?" 972 00:38:03,624 --> 00:38:06,333 He said, "Den, don't do this to me." 973 00:38:06,417 --> 00:38:08,417 And I said, "I am doing it to you." 974 00:38:08,499 --> 00:38:10,541 I said, "Just do me one favor: 975 00:38:10,624 --> 00:38:12,417 "meet Barry. 976 00:38:12,499 --> 00:38:15,791 "And after you've met Barry, if you don't wanna do it, 977 00:38:15,875 --> 00:38:17,624 I'll leave you alone." 978 00:38:17,708 --> 00:38:19,125 ["Voices"] 979 00:38:19,208 --> 00:38:21,292 - Maurice and I had moved to the Isle of Man, 980 00:38:21,375 --> 00:38:22,958 which is where we were born. 981 00:38:23,041 --> 00:38:25,916 Blue was the guy who was gonna come to the Isle of Man 982 00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:28,167 and audition for us on piano. 983 00:38:28,250 --> 00:38:32,791 - ♪ If I were you and you were me ♪ 984 00:38:32,875 --> 00:38:34,583 - We were staying in Barry's house, 985 00:38:34,666 --> 00:38:37,624 and it was Linda, and then Maurice came over 986 00:38:37,708 --> 00:38:40,292 and Huey, the father. 987 00:38:40,375 --> 00:38:43,000 Instantly, you feel comfortable with them. 988 00:38:43,083 --> 00:38:45,417 - They started talking about synthesizers 989 00:38:45,499 --> 00:38:47,916 and Moogs, 990 00:38:48,000 --> 00:38:49,749 and Blue had them all. 991 00:38:49,833 --> 00:38:51,583 - There's the Sunday evening I was leaving, 992 00:38:51,666 --> 00:38:55,083 and Huey said, "Hey, we haven't heard you play." 993 00:38:55,167 --> 00:38:56,167 [laughs] 994 00:38:56,250 --> 00:38:58,833 - But my piano was so bad 995 00:38:58,916 --> 00:39:02,000 that he played something and it just sounded awful. 996 00:39:02,083 --> 00:39:04,624 - It was just, like, totally embarrassing. 997 00:39:04,708 --> 00:39:07,000 - I said, "Sounds fine to me, man. 998 00:39:07,083 --> 00:39:08,292 Let's do it," you know? 999 00:39:08,375 --> 00:39:10,000 - Barry offered him the job. 1000 00:39:10,083 --> 00:39:12,208 - I'd always loved the music, 1001 00:39:12,292 --> 00:39:14,666 but the first time you ever hear the Bee Gees 1002 00:39:14,749 --> 00:39:16,499 just when they're in a room like this, 1003 00:39:16,583 --> 00:39:18,167 you know, it's just magic. 1004 00:39:18,250 --> 00:39:20,833 I think that's what won me over with them. 1005 00:39:20,916 --> 00:39:22,083 I said yes, 1006 00:39:22,167 --> 00:39:25,167 and January the 1st, we left. 1007 00:39:25,250 --> 00:39:27,167 all: ♪ Doo-doo-doo, doo-doo-doo ♪ 1008 00:39:27,250 --> 00:39:30,791 ♪ Doo-dee-doo, dah, day ♪ 1009 00:39:35,417 --> 00:39:38,791 ["Wind of Change"] 1010 00:39:38,875 --> 00:39:41,749 [upbeat R&B music] 1011 00:39:41,833 --> 00:39:48,833 ♪ ♪ 1012 00:39:51,583 --> 00:39:53,250 - Miami's a gateway city, 1013 00:39:53,333 --> 00:39:56,041 but in those days, it was kind of sleepy. 1014 00:39:56,125 --> 00:39:59,333 You know, a little off the beaten path. 1015 00:39:59,417 --> 00:40:01,916 But in the winter, that was the place to be, 1016 00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:04,875 so Atlantic Records would always book their acts 1017 00:40:04,958 --> 00:40:06,541 down at Criteria. 1018 00:40:06,624 --> 00:40:08,583 - ♪ And the lights ♪ 1019 00:40:08,666 --> 00:40:10,250 - I was about the number three engineer 1020 00:40:10,333 --> 00:40:11,375 at the studio. 1021 00:40:11,458 --> 00:40:12,499 I worked my way up, 1022 00:40:12,583 --> 00:40:14,833 and I was at that point in my career 1023 00:40:14,916 --> 00:40:17,167 where I was ready for anything. 1024 00:40:17,250 --> 00:40:18,875 - ♪ Get on up ♪ 1025 00:40:18,958 --> 00:40:20,749 ♪ Look around ♪ 1026 00:40:20,833 --> 00:40:24,749 ♪ Can't you feel the wind of change? ♪ 1027 00:40:24,833 --> 00:40:26,791 - When we got to Miami, all of a sudden, sunshine, 1028 00:40:26,875 --> 00:40:28,708 and, oh, you know? 1029 00:40:28,791 --> 00:40:30,458 This is paradise. 1030 00:40:30,541 --> 00:40:31,541 - We'd come from England, 1031 00:40:31,624 --> 00:40:34,083 and so there was nothing sleepy about America. 1032 00:40:34,167 --> 00:40:36,250 - Put them in the same house I'd rented for Eric Clapton, 1033 00:40:36,333 --> 00:40:38,417 461 Ocean Boulevard. 1034 00:40:38,499 --> 00:40:39,958 - I think the first thing all of us did was 1035 00:40:40,041 --> 00:40:41,958 take pictures against that palm tree, you know, 1036 00:40:42,041 --> 00:40:44,250 doing the Eric Clapton pose. 1037 00:40:44,333 --> 00:40:47,083 - ♪ We need a god down here ♪ 1038 00:40:47,167 --> 00:40:48,541 - Being in that house together, 1039 00:40:48,624 --> 00:40:50,292 you know, we were creative, 1040 00:40:50,375 --> 00:40:51,292 and we were a family. 1041 00:40:51,375 --> 00:40:53,083 I mean, I felt like that. 1042 00:40:53,167 --> 00:40:55,041 - It did make us close. 1043 00:40:55,125 --> 00:40:58,041 I mean, you had to be. And we'd all watch TV at night. 1044 00:40:58,125 --> 00:41:00,083 The chemistry was very exciting. 1045 00:41:00,167 --> 00:41:01,292 - When you got up in the morning, 1046 00:41:01,375 --> 00:41:02,958 you went to breakfast; you had a cup of tea. 1047 00:41:03,041 --> 00:41:05,833 It was all very relaxed. 1048 00:41:05,916 --> 00:41:11,167 - ♪ Can't you see the wind of change? ♪ 1049 00:41:11,250 --> 00:41:13,624 - It was strange, considering the amount of pressure 1050 00:41:13,708 --> 00:41:16,083 that was really on the Bee Gees at that time. 1051 00:41:16,167 --> 00:41:17,541 - They were about to drop us. 1052 00:41:17,624 --> 00:41:19,417 We had to adopt a new sound. 1053 00:41:19,499 --> 00:41:21,167 We had to adopt a new attitude. 1054 00:41:21,250 --> 00:41:23,624 - So the next step was, we brought Arif Mardin in 1055 00:41:23,708 --> 00:41:24,791 to produce them. 1056 00:41:24,875 --> 00:41:26,333 [Aretha Franklin's "Day Dreaming"] 1057 00:41:26,417 --> 00:41:28,791 - ♪ Daydreaming and I'm thinking of you ♪ 1058 00:41:28,875 --> 00:41:30,125 - We'd often work with other people, 1059 00:41:30,208 --> 00:41:31,499 but they weren't producers, 1060 00:41:31,583 --> 00:41:34,000 and this man was a literal producer. 1061 00:41:34,083 --> 00:41:36,417 - They had expressed how much they wanted to do 1062 00:41:36,499 --> 00:41:38,250 American R&B kind of stuff, 1063 00:41:38,333 --> 00:41:41,000 and Arif was, you know, top of the heap for that. 1064 00:41:41,083 --> 00:41:44,208 - Arif was so instrumental in producing Black artists, 1065 00:41:44,292 --> 00:41:45,666 and we wanted that input. 1066 00:41:45,749 --> 00:41:51,292 - ♪ It turns me right on when I hear him say ♪ 1067 00:41:51,375 --> 00:41:54,333 - We actually did an album with Arif before that, 1068 00:41:54,417 --> 00:41:57,000 but Arif said, "We've gotta go more into R&B," 1069 00:41:57,083 --> 00:41:58,791 and we started working together 1070 00:41:58,875 --> 00:42:02,083 right here in Miami, down at Criteria. 1071 00:42:03,083 --> 00:42:05,000 - Well, I was in Studio B, 1072 00:42:05,083 --> 00:42:06,875 and Arif says to me, 1073 00:42:06,958 --> 00:42:09,875 "Carl, have I got a group for you." 1074 00:42:09,958 --> 00:42:12,666 And of course, everybody knew the Bee Gees. 1075 00:42:12,749 --> 00:42:14,833 It was a surprise out of nowhere. 1076 00:42:14,916 --> 00:42:16,000 I was excited. 1077 00:42:16,083 --> 00:42:17,250 You know, they sing like angels. 1078 00:42:17,333 --> 00:42:20,125 And they were as excited as I was. 1079 00:42:20,208 --> 00:42:22,333 And Arif was right in there with them. 1080 00:42:22,417 --> 00:42:23,499 - He said, "Look, 1081 00:42:23,583 --> 00:42:25,916 "if you're ever going to break out brand-new, 1082 00:42:26,000 --> 00:42:27,083 "you gotta start now. 1083 00:42:27,167 --> 00:42:28,417 "You gotta shock the pants off these people 1084 00:42:28,499 --> 00:42:29,708 who don't believe in you." 1085 00:42:29,791 --> 00:42:32,541 - Robert came and saw us when we were making the album, 1086 00:42:32,624 --> 00:42:35,499 sat down with us on the beach, and said, "Right. 1087 00:42:35,583 --> 00:42:37,250 "We're gonna start from scratch. 1088 00:42:37,333 --> 00:42:38,791 "This is gonna be it. 1089 00:42:38,875 --> 00:42:40,083 Let's make it big." 1090 00:42:40,167 --> 00:42:42,041 - ♪ Whoa ♪ 1091 00:42:42,125 --> 00:42:44,250 - If you said to me or anyone, 1092 00:42:44,333 --> 00:42:46,875 "Just go and write a hit song right now," 1093 00:42:46,958 --> 00:42:48,708 they would be able to craft something good, 1094 00:42:48,791 --> 00:42:51,000 but it would probably be missing this magic 1095 00:42:51,083 --> 00:42:53,208 that, if you work in music long enough, 1096 00:42:53,292 --> 00:42:56,791 you understand is running everything. 1097 00:42:56,875 --> 00:42:59,708 Like surfers with waves. Surfers don't make the waves. 1098 00:42:59,791 --> 00:43:01,833 Fishermen don't make the fish. 1099 00:43:01,916 --> 00:43:03,333 Songwriters don't really write songs. 1100 00:43:03,417 --> 00:43:04,749 You receive songs. 1101 00:43:04,833 --> 00:43:06,417 ["Jive Talkin'"] 1102 00:43:06,499 --> 00:43:08,916 - Driving backwards and forwards to Criteria, 1103 00:43:09,000 --> 00:43:11,417 this clickity-click thing was going on in this bridge 1104 00:43:11,499 --> 00:43:13,292 every time we crossed over it. 1105 00:43:13,375 --> 00:43:14,708 And in my head, it sounded like, 1106 00:43:14,791 --> 00:43:15,749 "ch, ch-ch, ch-ch." 1107 00:43:15,833 --> 00:43:19,125 [rhythmic clacking] 1108 00:43:19,208 --> 00:43:20,708 And it was gone. 1109 00:43:20,791 --> 00:43:23,749 And eventually, I started singing to it in my head. 1110 00:43:23,833 --> 00:43:26,666 ♪ Just your jive talkin' ♪ 1111 00:43:26,749 --> 00:43:28,083 - I remember going to the studio. 1112 00:43:28,167 --> 00:43:30,624 Barry said, "Can you do chicken picking, Alan?" 1113 00:43:30,708 --> 00:43:33,583 I didn't really know what it was. 1114 00:43:33,666 --> 00:43:35,708 So I just played this one note and muted it. 1115 00:43:35,791 --> 00:43:37,083 Thought it sounded like a chicken. 1116 00:43:37,167 --> 00:43:39,875 [mimicking guitar lick] 1117 00:43:39,958 --> 00:43:41,250 And mixed with Barry's rhythm part, 1118 00:43:41,333 --> 00:43:43,208 it really worked, you know? 1119 00:43:43,292 --> 00:43:45,916 - ♪ It's just your jive talkin' ♪ 1120 00:43:46,000 --> 00:43:48,333 ♪ You're telling me lies, yeah ♪ 1121 00:43:48,417 --> 00:43:50,250 ♪ Jive talkin' ♪ 1122 00:43:50,333 --> 00:43:52,624 ♪ You wear a disguise ♪ 1123 00:43:52,708 --> 00:43:54,417 ♪ Jive talkin' ♪ 1124 00:43:54,499 --> 00:43:56,958 ♪ So misunderstood, yeah ♪ 1125 00:43:57,041 --> 00:43:58,791 ♪ Jive talkin' ♪ 1126 00:43:58,875 --> 00:44:01,000 ♪ You really no good ♪ 1127 00:44:01,083 --> 00:44:02,125 - At that time, you know, 1128 00:44:02,208 --> 00:44:04,499 a handful of R&B artists were using synthesizers, 1129 00:44:04,583 --> 00:44:08,125 so we went into this field 1130 00:44:08,208 --> 00:44:10,499 pioneering, in a way. 1131 00:44:10,583 --> 00:44:13,499 [synth solo] 1132 00:44:13,583 --> 00:44:14,666 ♪ ♪ 1133 00:44:14,749 --> 00:44:18,499 - Music is this huge energy flying around everywhere, 1134 00:44:18,583 --> 00:44:20,791 and if you're lucky, you get little slices of it 1135 00:44:20,875 --> 00:44:21,916 that turn into songs. 1136 00:44:22,000 --> 00:44:23,083 - There is a sort of-- 1137 00:44:23,167 --> 00:44:25,167 - Like a radio transmitter. - It's exactly like that. 1138 00:44:25,250 --> 00:44:26,791 It's almost as if somebody's already written 1139 00:44:26,875 --> 00:44:28,916 the songs in the air and they're giving them to us. 1140 00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:32,333 ♪ Leaving me looking like a dumbstruck fool ♪ 1141 00:44:32,417 --> 00:44:34,791 ♪ With all your jive talkin' ♪ 1142 00:44:34,875 --> 00:44:35,833 ♪ You're telling me lies ♪ 1143 00:44:35,916 --> 00:44:37,041 - It was Robert who really pressed 1144 00:44:37,125 --> 00:44:39,333 for "Jive Talkin'" to come out as the first single, 1145 00:44:39,417 --> 00:44:41,875 because it was something totally unexpected from us. 1146 00:44:41,958 --> 00:44:43,125 - We sent the record out 1147 00:44:43,208 --> 00:44:44,666 but without naming the Bee Gees on it, 1148 00:44:44,749 --> 00:44:48,167 because by then, their stock had fallen so low 1149 00:44:48,250 --> 00:44:49,875 with radio stations in America, 1150 00:44:49,958 --> 00:44:52,167 and within hours 1151 00:44:52,250 --> 00:44:53,624 of the record landing at all the radio stations, 1152 00:44:53,708 --> 00:44:55,000 they were calling in, saying, "Who is this? 1153 00:44:55,083 --> 00:44:56,458 This is amazing." 1154 00:44:56,541 --> 00:44:59,292 [radio tuning] 1155 00:44:59,375 --> 00:45:01,833 - The British group who move into number one this week 1156 00:45:01,916 --> 00:45:02,833 hit number one 1157 00:45:02,916 --> 00:45:05,292 exactly four years ago to the week. 1158 00:45:05,375 --> 00:45:06,375 [drumroll] 1159 00:45:06,458 --> 00:45:09,167 The brand-new number one song in the USA, 1160 00:45:09,250 --> 00:45:12,041 the Bee Gees and "Jive Talkin'." 1161 00:45:12,125 --> 00:45:16,791 ♪ ♪ 1162 00:45:16,875 --> 00:45:18,375 - When "Jive Talkin'" came out, 1163 00:45:18,458 --> 00:45:19,624 everybody went, "Who? 1164 00:45:19,708 --> 00:45:21,541 "The Bee Gees? 'Broken Heart' Bee Gees? 1165 00:45:21,624 --> 00:45:22,916 Are you kidding?" 1166 00:45:23,000 --> 00:45:24,541 - Something different was happening, 1167 00:45:24,624 --> 00:45:26,167 and the brothers felt it too. 1168 00:45:26,250 --> 00:45:27,417 Miami, Miami Beach, 1169 00:45:27,499 --> 00:45:29,499 that whole vibe turned them on. 1170 00:45:29,583 --> 00:45:31,875 - I just fell in love with the atmosphere here. 1171 00:45:31,958 --> 00:45:34,749 It reminded me so much of growing up in Australia. 1172 00:45:35,624 --> 00:45:36,833 - That's great, Rob. 1173 00:45:36,916 --> 00:45:38,875 - And from "Jive Talkin'" onwards, 1174 00:45:38,958 --> 00:45:40,875 we kicked it up. 1175 00:45:40,958 --> 00:45:43,167 - The songwriting was just very unique. 1176 00:45:43,250 --> 00:45:44,333 Nothing like it. 1177 00:45:44,417 --> 00:45:45,708 They would write on the spot, 1178 00:45:45,791 --> 00:45:47,875 and they would bounce off each other. 1179 00:45:47,958 --> 00:45:50,417 - Okay, you let us know when you're ready. 1180 00:45:50,499 --> 00:45:52,208 - "Nights on Broadway" was one of those. 1181 00:45:52,292 --> 00:45:54,292 The guys had been to New York, and they go, "Oh, this is-- 1182 00:45:54,375 --> 00:45:56,250 we gotta write a New York kind of song." 1183 00:45:56,333 --> 00:45:57,833 - Here we go. Take ten. 1184 00:45:57,916 --> 00:45:59,916 - They just did it naturally in the studio, 1185 00:46:00,000 --> 00:46:01,417 and everybody chipped in. 1186 00:46:01,499 --> 00:46:02,458 - Three, four. 1187 00:46:02,541 --> 00:46:05,916 [funky music] 1188 00:46:06,000 --> 00:46:08,041 ♪ ♪ 1189 00:46:08,125 --> 00:46:11,417 - ♪ Well, here we are ♪ 1190 00:46:11,499 --> 00:46:13,541 ♪ In a room full of strangers ♪ 1191 00:46:13,624 --> 00:46:15,583 Ahmet Ertegun came to Miami. 1192 00:46:15,666 --> 00:46:18,083 He was there when we were cutting "Nights on Broadway." 1193 00:46:18,167 --> 00:46:20,458 At the time, it was "Lights on Broadway." 1194 00:46:20,541 --> 00:46:22,749 ♪ Blaming it all ♪ 1195 00:46:22,833 --> 00:46:24,875 ♪ On the lights on Broadway ♪ 1196 00:46:24,958 --> 00:46:25,875 [music distorts] 1197 00:46:25,958 --> 00:46:28,458 And Ahmet went, "No." [laughs] 1198 00:46:28,541 --> 00:46:30,791 He said, "You know, you've got to get more adult 1199 00:46:30,875 --> 00:46:32,375 about the song." 1200 00:46:32,458 --> 00:46:34,749 So "Lights on Broadway" became "Nights on Broadway." 1201 00:46:34,833 --> 00:46:38,624 - ♪ Well, I had to follow you ♪ 1202 00:46:38,708 --> 00:46:40,250 ♪ ♪ 1203 00:46:40,333 --> 00:46:43,916 both: ♪ Though you did not want me to ♪ 1204 00:46:44,000 --> 00:46:46,000 ♪ ♪ 1205 00:46:46,083 --> 00:46:49,083 all: ♪ But that won't stop my loving you ♪ 1206 00:46:49,167 --> 00:46:50,791 ♪ ♪ 1207 00:46:50,875 --> 00:46:54,541 ♪ I can't stay away ♪ 1208 00:46:54,624 --> 00:46:57,125 ♪ Blaming it all ♪ 1209 00:46:57,208 --> 00:47:00,125 ♪ On the nights on Broadway ♪ 1210 00:47:00,208 --> 00:47:02,458 ♪ Singing them love songs ♪ 1211 00:47:02,541 --> 00:47:04,708 ♪ Singing them "straight to the heart" songs ♪ 1212 00:47:04,791 --> 00:47:06,250 - We were completing "Nights on Broadway." 1213 00:47:06,333 --> 00:47:08,167 We'd just done most of the vocal tracks. 1214 00:47:08,250 --> 00:47:09,499 Usually, you know, at the end, you know, 1215 00:47:09,583 --> 00:47:11,167 you have some ad-libs or some kind of thing 1216 00:47:11,250 --> 00:47:12,666 to take us away from the original melody 1217 00:47:12,749 --> 00:47:13,958 and have some fun. 1218 00:47:14,041 --> 00:47:15,666 - Arif suggested to the band, 1219 00:47:15,749 --> 00:47:18,167 "Hey, you know, we really need some kind of background parts 1220 00:47:18,250 --> 00:47:21,375 that come in and express the meaning of the song." 1221 00:47:21,458 --> 00:47:23,833 - He was looking for one of us to scream, 1222 00:47:23,916 --> 00:47:25,875 in tune, if possible. 1223 00:47:25,958 --> 00:47:28,208 I said, "I'll go out and give it a shot." 1224 00:47:28,292 --> 00:47:30,624 - Are we almost ready? Let's do it. 1225 00:47:30,708 --> 00:47:32,000 - So he went out there and he did 1226 00:47:32,083 --> 00:47:35,666 the "blaming it alls." 1227 00:47:35,749 --> 00:47:36,916 - [falsetto] ♪ Blame it all ♪ 1228 00:47:37,000 --> 00:47:38,458 - ♪ On the nights on Broadway ♪ 1229 00:47:38,541 --> 00:47:41,000 - ♪ Blame it on the nights on Broadway ♪ 1230 00:47:41,083 --> 00:47:42,875 - Everybody in the control room woke up, 1231 00:47:42,958 --> 00:47:45,666 and it was like, "Oh, this is a new sound." 1232 00:47:45,749 --> 00:47:46,791 - ♪ Blame it all ♪ 1233 00:47:46,875 --> 00:47:48,458 - ♪ On the nights on Broadway ♪ 1234 00:47:48,541 --> 00:47:49,916 - ♪ Blame it on the nights on Broadway ♪ 1235 00:47:50,000 --> 00:47:51,333 I was thinking, "My God, I don't-- 1236 00:47:51,417 --> 00:47:52,458 "where is this coming from? 1237 00:47:52,541 --> 00:47:53,499 I can do this." 1238 00:47:53,583 --> 00:47:55,958 My whole life, I didn't know I could do this. 1239 00:47:56,041 --> 00:47:57,333 - Everybody's giving me credit. 1240 00:47:57,458 --> 00:47:59,583 No, he was singing it. I said, "Keep on doing it." 1241 00:47:59,666 --> 00:48:01,666 - ♪ Blame it on the nights on Broadway ♪ 1242 00:48:01,749 --> 00:48:03,417 ♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah ♪ 1243 00:48:03,499 --> 00:48:05,083 ♪ Ah ♪ 1244 00:48:05,167 --> 00:48:07,167 ♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah ♪ 1245 00:48:07,250 --> 00:48:09,083 - Arif brought it out of us, all that. 1246 00:48:09,167 --> 00:48:10,708 I mean, we weren't the first to sing falsetto. 1247 00:48:10,791 --> 00:48:14,541 [The Stylistics' "Can't Give You Anything (But My Love)"] 1248 00:48:14,624 --> 00:48:15,708 We loved the Stylistics. 1249 00:48:15,791 --> 00:48:18,708 We loved the Spinners, the Delfonics. 1250 00:48:18,791 --> 00:48:21,333 They were all falsetto lead singers. 1251 00:48:21,417 --> 00:48:24,749 - ♪ If I had money, I'd go out ♪ 1252 00:48:24,833 --> 00:48:29,208 ♪ Buy you furs, dress you like a queen ♪ 1253 00:48:29,292 --> 00:48:31,250 - There's something to be said about all music 1254 00:48:31,333 --> 00:48:33,541 is that it doesn't happen in a vacuum. 1255 00:48:33,624 --> 00:48:37,208 The falsetto is very much a Black tradition, 1256 00:48:37,292 --> 00:48:38,541 but they've translated it 1257 00:48:38,624 --> 00:48:42,624 into this interesting interpretation of soul. 1258 00:48:42,708 --> 00:48:44,458 But I guess more importantly for me, 1259 00:48:44,541 --> 00:48:45,458 it's emotional. 1260 00:48:45,541 --> 00:48:50,916 - [falsetto] ♪ Ah ♪ 1261 00:48:51,000 --> 00:48:52,417 Because we were so excited about this, 1262 00:48:52,499 --> 00:48:54,791 we started writing songs for this voice. 1263 00:48:54,875 --> 00:48:57,250 - It created another dimension of sound-- 1264 00:48:57,333 --> 00:48:59,417 that's what we thought-- you know, emotionally. 1265 00:48:59,499 --> 00:49:02,875 It became another icon of the Gibbs. 1266 00:49:02,958 --> 00:49:05,417 Everybody knew, when you heard that falsetto, 1267 00:49:05,499 --> 00:49:07,041 that's the Bee Gees. 1268 00:49:07,125 --> 00:49:09,250 both: ♪ Be tender ♪ 1269 00:49:09,333 --> 00:49:12,208 ♪ With my love ♪ 1270 00:49:12,292 --> 00:49:16,417 ♪ You know how easy it is to hurt me ♪ 1271 00:49:16,499 --> 00:49:17,749 - When we sing songs like... 1272 00:49:17,833 --> 00:49:21,624 ♪ You know how easy it is to hurt me ♪ 1273 00:49:21,708 --> 00:49:23,499 It's Barry and Robin singing in unison. 1274 00:49:23,583 --> 00:49:27,000 But they mesh together so well that it sounds like one voice. 1275 00:49:27,083 --> 00:49:30,125 But it's a different voice from them separately. 1276 00:49:30,208 --> 00:49:31,958 - ♪ With my love ♪ 1277 00:49:32,041 --> 00:49:36,624 both: ♪ You know how easy it is to hurt me ♪ 1278 00:49:36,708 --> 00:49:38,791 ♪ Fanny, be tender ♪ 1279 00:49:38,875 --> 00:49:40,916 - It's delivered with such delicacy, 1280 00:49:41,000 --> 00:49:45,624 and the message in the lyrics 1281 00:49:45,708 --> 00:49:49,624 was what guys should say, didn't say, couldn't say, 1282 00:49:49,708 --> 00:49:50,791 for whatever reasons. 1283 00:49:50,875 --> 00:49:52,624 It's the kind of music you might've bought 1284 00:49:52,708 --> 00:49:53,749 and given to your girlfriend. 1285 00:49:53,833 --> 00:49:55,000 [laughs] 1286 00:49:55,083 --> 00:49:57,333 But that's what was special about them. 1287 00:49:57,417 --> 00:50:00,958 both: [vocalizing] 1288 00:50:01,041 --> 00:50:03,333 ♪ Fanny, be tender ♪ 1289 00:50:03,417 --> 00:50:04,541 ♪ With my love ♪ 1290 00:50:04,624 --> 00:50:07,167 - "Main Course" became a turning point for us. 1291 00:50:07,250 --> 00:50:08,958 Dennis Bryon on drums 1292 00:50:09,041 --> 00:50:12,000 and Blue Weaver and Alan Kendall, 1293 00:50:12,083 --> 00:50:13,708 that became our band. 1294 00:50:13,791 --> 00:50:15,666 ♪ With my love ♪ 1295 00:50:15,749 --> 00:50:18,167 - ♪ 'Cause it's all that I've got ♪ 1296 00:50:18,250 --> 00:50:21,125 ♪ And my love won't desert me ♪ 1297 00:50:21,208 --> 00:50:23,292 both: ♪ Be tender with my love ♪ 1298 00:50:23,375 --> 00:50:26,708 - One of their best qualities was adaptability. 1299 00:50:26,791 --> 00:50:30,833 In many ways, they were chameleons of pop. 1300 00:50:30,916 --> 00:50:32,333 - The way they changed 1301 00:50:32,417 --> 00:50:34,458 and the groove they got into there 1302 00:50:34,541 --> 00:50:36,499 was so profound. 1303 00:50:36,583 --> 00:50:40,000 If that was something that was initiated by me, 1304 00:50:40,083 --> 00:50:41,083 I can't think of any-- 1305 00:50:41,167 --> 00:50:43,833 one of the great things I've done in my life. 1306 00:50:43,916 --> 00:50:45,583 I'll take full credit. 1307 00:50:45,666 --> 00:50:47,208 [laughs] 1308 00:50:47,292 --> 00:50:50,292 [waves crashing] 1309 00:50:54,167 --> 00:50:57,583 - We're getting ready to record the next album, 1310 00:50:57,666 --> 00:50:58,666 and we get this phone call 1311 00:50:58,749 --> 00:51:01,666 that Arif can't be involved in this album. 1312 00:51:01,749 --> 00:51:04,000 [tense music] 1313 00:51:04,083 --> 00:51:06,375 Robert chose to take 1314 00:51:06,458 --> 00:51:08,417 the organization away from Atlantic Records 1315 00:51:08,499 --> 00:51:11,041 and go private. 1316 00:51:11,125 --> 00:51:13,333 Atlantic, who were not happy about that, said, 1317 00:51:13,417 --> 00:51:14,708 "Well, you're not using Arif anymore 1318 00:51:14,791 --> 00:51:16,375 as a house producer." 1319 00:51:16,458 --> 00:51:18,041 I said, "What about the next album?" 1320 00:51:18,125 --> 00:51:19,583 Arif--you know, I said, 1321 00:51:19,666 --> 00:51:21,916 "Who do you think can continue where you left off?" 1322 00:51:22,000 --> 00:51:23,916 ♪ ♪ 1323 00:51:24,000 --> 00:51:25,749 - I got a call from Barry, 1324 00:51:25,833 --> 00:51:27,791 and he said, "I want my studio time back 1325 00:51:27,875 --> 00:51:28,958 and I wanna work with you." 1326 00:51:29,041 --> 00:51:31,958 [scratchy music playing] 1327 00:51:32,041 --> 00:51:33,250 ♪ ♪ 1328 00:51:33,333 --> 00:51:35,000 And I'm in the control room. 1329 00:51:35,083 --> 00:51:36,708 I said to Dennis, the drummer, I says, you know, 1330 00:51:36,791 --> 00:51:37,875 "That pattern you're playing right now 1331 00:51:37,958 --> 00:51:39,583 is just a little too busy." 1332 00:51:39,666 --> 00:51:41,749 ♪ ♪ 1333 00:51:41,833 --> 00:51:43,417 He said, "Well, what do you mean?" 1334 00:51:43,499 --> 00:51:45,458 I said, "I can't get into specifics 1335 00:51:45,541 --> 00:51:47,250 about the note values." 1336 00:51:47,333 --> 00:51:50,250 I didn't have a technical term for the open and closed hi-hat 1337 00:51:50,333 --> 00:51:51,583 or any of that stuff. 1338 00:51:51,666 --> 00:51:55,250 So apparently, you know, I needed a communicator. 1339 00:51:55,333 --> 00:51:58,208 [funky groove] 1340 00:51:58,292 --> 00:51:59,666 - I was working as an independent producer 1341 00:51:59,749 --> 00:52:01,958 on some pub band in London. 1342 00:52:02,041 --> 00:52:04,417 Carl called and he said, "What are you doing?" 1343 00:52:04,499 --> 00:52:05,916 And I said, "Well, I just finished the mix. 1344 00:52:06,000 --> 00:52:06,958 I'm on a plane tomorrow." 1345 00:52:07,041 --> 00:52:08,916 - Albhy went to Berklee School of Music 1346 00:52:09,000 --> 00:52:09,958 in New England, 1347 00:52:10,041 --> 00:52:12,458 and he was one of my best friends. 1348 00:52:12,541 --> 00:52:14,749 And he says, "I'll be on the next flight to Florida." 1349 00:52:14,833 --> 00:52:17,208 - ♪ Baby, keep it coming ♪ 1350 00:52:17,292 --> 00:52:19,958 - I got off the plane. I went straight to the studio. 1351 00:52:20,041 --> 00:52:21,125 I walked in. 1352 00:52:21,208 --> 00:52:23,167 They were working on "You Should Be Dancing." 1353 00:52:23,250 --> 00:52:24,292 They came in the control room, 1354 00:52:24,375 --> 00:52:25,916 and Barry said, "What did you think?" 1355 00:52:26,000 --> 00:52:27,458 And I said, "Well, I just got in, 1356 00:52:27,541 --> 00:52:29,624 but sounds awfully good." 1357 00:52:29,708 --> 00:52:32,125 We seemed to hit it off, so I came back the next day. 1358 00:52:32,208 --> 00:52:34,292 - Now, what you have to remember at the time, 1359 00:52:34,375 --> 00:52:35,499 Albhy was a hippie. 1360 00:52:35,583 --> 00:52:37,125 I mean, he was just different. 1361 00:52:37,208 --> 00:52:39,833 - ♪ I get nothing ♪ 1362 00:52:39,916 --> 00:52:42,125 - Albhy used to hang around the studio, 1363 00:52:42,208 --> 00:52:43,624 and I got on really well with him. 1364 00:52:43,708 --> 00:52:46,791 I found out he played on "I Shot the Sheriff" 1365 00:52:46,875 --> 00:52:47,958 with Eric. 1366 00:52:48,041 --> 00:52:51,499 - Albhy had an inroad into technology, 1367 00:52:51,583 --> 00:52:52,749 and he had a great ear. 1368 00:52:52,833 --> 00:52:55,624 - Everybody just seemed to be, I think, relieved 1369 00:52:55,708 --> 00:52:59,000 to have another ear in the control room 1370 00:52:59,083 --> 00:53:01,250 to hear what they were doing as a whole. 1371 00:53:01,333 --> 00:53:04,208 ["Love So Right"] 1372 00:53:04,292 --> 00:53:07,208 [mellow ballad] 1373 00:53:07,292 --> 00:53:10,167 ♪ ♪ 1374 00:53:10,250 --> 00:53:12,167 In the beginning, when I came, 1375 00:53:12,250 --> 00:53:14,666 the three brothers were clearly a unit. 1376 00:53:14,749 --> 00:53:16,499 Each of them knew the way their brothers sang 1377 00:53:16,583 --> 00:53:18,041 and would be on the same mic 1378 00:53:18,125 --> 00:53:19,833 and they would lean in or lean out 1379 00:53:19,916 --> 00:53:22,125 or complement each other's voices. 1380 00:53:22,208 --> 00:53:24,000 They were in perfect synchrony. 1381 00:53:24,083 --> 00:53:27,833 all: ♪ How a love so right ♪ 1382 00:53:27,916 --> 00:53:31,875 ♪ Can turn out to be so wrong ♪ 1383 00:53:31,958 --> 00:53:34,499 - We found another sound. We found a new sound. 1384 00:53:34,583 --> 00:53:36,666 I came up with a lot of new ideas 1385 00:53:36,749 --> 00:53:38,333 to suit the falsetto. 1386 00:53:38,417 --> 00:53:40,208 Everybody was saying the same thing: 1387 00:53:40,292 --> 00:53:42,541 "Do that falsetto again. Do that falsetto again." 1388 00:53:42,624 --> 00:53:45,041 And so that was fine for me. I was having a ball. 1389 00:53:45,125 --> 00:53:48,041 ["You Should Be Dancing"] 1390 00:53:48,125 --> 00:53:50,708 [upbeat disco music] 1391 00:53:50,791 --> 00:53:54,375 - A lot of new music has been coming out of Miami lately, 1392 00:53:54,458 --> 00:53:56,541 enough so that we've even heard mentioned 1393 00:53:56,624 --> 00:53:59,041 the term "Miami Sound." 1394 00:53:59,125 --> 00:54:00,208 ♪ ♪ 1395 00:54:00,292 --> 00:54:03,916 - ♪ My baby moves at midnight ♪ 1396 00:54:04,000 --> 00:54:06,708 ♪ Goes right on till the dawn ♪ 1397 00:54:06,791 --> 00:54:08,708 - This is actually a really important period 1398 00:54:08,791 --> 00:54:11,833 for musicianship and production and songwriting 1399 00:54:11,916 --> 00:54:13,791 that targets the dance floor. 1400 00:54:13,875 --> 00:54:15,624 ♪ ♪ 1401 00:54:15,708 --> 00:54:17,250 - ♪ What you doing on your back? ♪ 1402 00:54:17,333 --> 00:54:18,583 - It's a different emotional energy, 1403 00:54:18,666 --> 00:54:21,083 which is about, can you make the body move? 1404 00:54:21,167 --> 00:54:22,958 Can you make the body happy? 1405 00:54:23,041 --> 00:54:25,499 - ♪ You should be dancing ♪ 1406 00:54:25,583 --> 00:54:27,749 ♪ Yeah ♪ 1407 00:54:27,833 --> 00:54:29,583 ♪ Dancing, yeah ♪ 1408 00:54:29,666 --> 00:54:31,083 - And certain songs sounded like 1409 00:54:31,167 --> 00:54:34,791 the human embodiment of a brass section. 1410 00:54:34,875 --> 00:54:36,916 The same way a horn just punches... 1411 00:54:37,000 --> 00:54:38,250 - Yeah. 1412 00:54:38,333 --> 00:54:39,958 - That's what Barry's voice reminds me of. 1413 00:54:40,041 --> 00:54:42,958 - ♪ Gives me power ♪ 1414 00:54:43,041 --> 00:54:45,624 ♪ Goes right down to my blood ♪ 1415 00:54:45,708 --> 00:54:49,417 - I was always into arrangement of instruments. 1416 00:54:49,499 --> 00:54:50,708 "You Should Be Dancing," 1417 00:54:50,791 --> 00:54:54,208 their voices together sound like trumpets to me. 1418 00:54:54,292 --> 00:54:58,000 - ♪ You should be dancing, yeah ♪ 1419 00:54:58,083 --> 00:54:59,624 - I am not high, for the record. 1420 00:54:59,708 --> 00:55:02,958 I just wanna-- [laughter] 1421 00:55:03,041 --> 00:55:06,916 - [scatting to horn section] 1422 00:55:07,000 --> 00:55:07,916 It was a discovery. 1423 00:55:08,000 --> 00:55:09,916 We've discovered a new audience. 1424 00:55:10,000 --> 00:55:10,916 - At the clubs, 1425 00:55:11,000 --> 00:55:13,499 "You Should Be Dancing" exploded. 1426 00:55:13,583 --> 00:55:15,666 Not just, "Oh, well, I heard that record 1427 00:55:15,749 --> 00:55:16,916 and I really liked it." 1428 00:55:17,000 --> 00:55:21,417 It was three times a night at any club that you went to. 1429 00:55:21,499 --> 00:55:23,292 There was a whole industry 1430 00:55:23,375 --> 00:55:26,208 that was built around this clubbing thing. 1431 00:55:26,292 --> 00:55:30,458 "Billboard" started a chart that was dance music chart. 1432 00:55:30,541 --> 00:55:34,499 This billion-dollar industry was being built 1433 00:55:34,583 --> 00:55:36,499 way before the Bee Gees. 1434 00:55:36,583 --> 00:55:38,624 A lot of people don't realize 1435 00:55:38,708 --> 00:55:42,708 disco started in the gay and the Black community. 1436 00:55:42,791 --> 00:55:44,167 People don't understand 1437 00:55:44,250 --> 00:55:46,791 what it was like back then for gay people. 1438 00:55:46,875 --> 00:55:48,375 There was a law in New York 1439 00:55:48,458 --> 00:55:51,833 that did not allow people of the same sex 1440 00:55:51,916 --> 00:55:53,333 to dance together 1441 00:55:53,417 --> 00:55:57,000 in a place that had a liquor license. 1442 00:55:57,083 --> 00:55:59,041 And then the law changed, 1443 00:55:59,125 --> 00:56:01,875 and that allowed me to open my club. 1444 00:56:01,958 --> 00:56:03,375 - ♪ Whoo-hoo ♪ 1445 00:56:03,458 --> 00:56:06,292 - A new era of dance music started 1446 00:56:06,375 --> 00:56:09,041 in the gay underground clubs. 1447 00:56:09,125 --> 00:56:12,499 - [scatting to disco beat] 1448 00:56:12,583 --> 00:56:13,666 [Don Downing's "Dream World"] 1449 00:56:13,749 --> 00:56:18,333 - So the record industry wants to name it, 1450 00:56:18,458 --> 00:56:20,749 package it, sell it. 1451 00:56:20,833 --> 00:56:23,541 That was the explosion 1452 00:56:23,624 --> 00:56:26,000 of the disco sound. 1453 00:56:26,083 --> 00:56:28,208 - ♪ Dream world ♪ 1454 00:56:28,292 --> 00:56:32,708 ♪ ♪ 1455 00:56:32,791 --> 00:56:35,541 - We're down at Criteria Sound Studios, 1456 00:56:35,624 --> 00:56:37,875 and currently, it's the studio 1457 00:56:37,958 --> 00:56:40,292 that's being used by the Bee Gees. 1458 00:56:40,375 --> 00:56:43,041 What particular thing about the studio 1459 00:56:43,125 --> 00:56:44,333 makes it so attractive? 1460 00:56:44,417 --> 00:56:46,333 - It's cheap. - It's cheap, yeah. 1461 00:56:46,417 --> 00:56:50,208 - No. Cheap it isn't, but-- 1462 00:56:50,292 --> 00:56:53,000 - But the actual atmosphere of the place is very relaxing. 1463 00:56:53,083 --> 00:56:54,583 We create better here than we do anywhere else. 1464 00:56:54,666 --> 00:56:55,708 - Yeah. 1465 00:56:55,791 --> 00:56:57,208 - That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. 1466 00:56:57,292 --> 00:56:58,916 [laughter] 1467 00:56:59,000 --> 00:57:02,375 [upbeat disco music] 1468 00:57:02,458 --> 00:57:04,916 America was the ultimate dream. 1469 00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:07,250 As three kids, we said, 1470 00:57:07,333 --> 00:57:09,250 "One day, we're gonna have houses in America 1471 00:57:09,333 --> 00:57:11,583 all next door to each other with swimming pools." 1472 00:57:11,666 --> 00:57:12,791 [laughs] 1473 00:57:12,875 --> 00:57:14,125 And we thought, "Oh, that'll be great." 1474 00:57:14,208 --> 00:57:19,417 ♪ ♪ 1475 00:57:19,499 --> 00:57:21,791 - It was a huge uprooting. 1476 00:57:21,875 --> 00:57:23,458 ♪ ♪ 1477 00:57:23,541 --> 00:57:25,541 It's a very large family, 1478 00:57:25,624 --> 00:57:28,417 and it just kept getting bigger and bigger over time. 1479 00:57:28,499 --> 00:57:30,250 ♪ ♪ 1480 00:57:30,333 --> 00:57:33,583 Mum and Dad came to Miami as quickly as we did. 1481 00:57:33,666 --> 00:57:35,749 I think they were probably the happiest they'd ever been 1482 00:57:35,833 --> 00:57:36,958 in their lives. 1483 00:57:37,041 --> 00:57:40,375 And of course, Andy came here with them. 1484 00:57:42,541 --> 00:57:45,833 - Andy was a gift out of left field. 1485 00:57:45,916 --> 00:57:50,000 But I never knew he existed until one day, he shows up 1486 00:57:50,083 --> 00:57:52,958 fresh from Australia. 1487 00:57:53,041 --> 00:57:55,083 - Andy was a great kid. 1488 00:57:55,167 --> 00:57:57,458 He could do anything he set his mind to. 1489 00:57:57,541 --> 00:58:00,125 - Barry was Andy's idol. 1490 00:58:00,208 --> 00:58:02,250 They were almost like twins. 1491 00:58:02,333 --> 00:58:03,583 - We were very much alike. 1492 00:58:03,666 --> 00:58:05,833 We looked alike. We had the same birthmarks. 1493 00:58:05,916 --> 00:58:07,624 I would say that we were as much like twins 1494 00:58:07,708 --> 00:58:09,624 as Maurice and Robin. 1495 00:58:09,708 --> 00:58:11,583 - "Main Course" and "Children of the World," 1496 00:58:11,666 --> 00:58:12,624 which followed that, 1497 00:58:12,708 --> 00:58:13,749 they were, like, triple platinum. 1498 00:58:13,833 --> 00:58:16,624 I think he really wanted to be a part of that. 1499 00:58:16,708 --> 00:58:18,458 - They suggested that I go to Australia, 1500 00:58:18,541 --> 00:58:20,125 as my brothers first did in 1958 1501 00:58:20,208 --> 00:58:21,791 when I was only five months old, 1502 00:58:21,875 --> 00:58:25,000 and start working there and get some records released. 1503 00:58:25,083 --> 00:58:27,167 - Andy was very young then. 1504 00:58:27,250 --> 00:58:29,125 He had his little band. 1505 00:58:29,208 --> 00:58:30,708 - It was a process of building him up, 1506 00:58:30,791 --> 00:58:34,083 getting him to play live, getting him to be an artist. 1507 00:58:34,167 --> 00:58:35,499 - I was there for two years. 1508 00:58:35,583 --> 00:58:36,833 Out of the blue, a phone call came 1509 00:58:36,916 --> 00:58:37,791 from my brother Barry 1510 00:58:37,875 --> 00:58:39,541 and said, "I wanna produce you," 1511 00:58:39,624 --> 00:58:41,375 and I think it was, like, two weeks or something, 1512 00:58:41,458 --> 00:58:44,499 I was in the studio to do a new album in Miami. 1513 00:58:44,583 --> 00:58:46,167 I didn't think I was ready. 1514 00:58:46,250 --> 00:58:47,208 - The first few times 1515 00:58:47,292 --> 00:58:49,375 on a real professional studio microphone, 1516 00:58:49,458 --> 00:58:51,499 Andy was, like, petrified, 1517 00:58:51,583 --> 00:58:54,041 but, you know, Barry was there 1518 00:58:54,125 --> 00:58:56,875 and guided him through and helped him with lyrics. 1519 00:58:56,958 --> 00:58:59,666 He was very receptive to new ideas. 1520 00:58:59,749 --> 00:59:02,791 [Andy Gibb's "I Just Want to Be Your Everything"] 1521 00:59:02,875 --> 00:59:05,083 And it didn't take him long, you know, 1522 00:59:05,167 --> 00:59:08,208 to find, like, you know, another groove. 1523 00:59:08,292 --> 00:59:11,167 [upbeat pop music playing] 1524 00:59:11,250 --> 00:59:13,250 ♪ ♪ 1525 00:59:13,333 --> 00:59:16,708 - ♪ For so long ♪ 1526 00:59:16,791 --> 00:59:19,083 ♪ You and me been finding each other ♪ 1527 00:59:19,167 --> 00:59:21,208 ♪ For so long ♪ 1528 00:59:21,292 --> 00:59:23,708 - The Bee Gees' point of view was about having hit records 1529 00:59:23,791 --> 00:59:24,708 and being on the radio, 1530 00:59:24,791 --> 00:59:27,208 and so the greatest gift that you could give 1531 00:59:27,292 --> 00:59:28,583 to your younger brother 1532 00:59:28,666 --> 00:59:30,417 would be to give him that success, 1533 00:59:30,499 --> 00:59:33,333 to write songs with him, to teach him to be a star. 1534 00:59:33,417 --> 00:59:36,000 - ♪ I, I ♪ 1535 00:59:36,083 --> 00:59:39,916 ♪ I just want to be your everything ♪ 1536 00:59:40,000 --> 00:59:41,541 - And then suddenly, out of nowhere, 1537 00:59:41,624 --> 00:59:43,916 Andy had about three number ones in a row. 1538 00:59:44,000 --> 00:59:45,875 - He was a teen idol. 1539 00:59:45,958 --> 00:59:47,958 There was talk about him becoming a Bee Gee. 1540 00:59:48,041 --> 00:59:50,208 I think Robert saw he had a younger audience. 1541 00:59:50,292 --> 00:59:52,208 Smart to keep him on his own. 1542 00:59:52,292 --> 00:59:55,916 - ♪ Oh, if I ♪ 1543 00:59:56,000 --> 00:59:58,708 ♪ If I stay here without you, darling ♪ 1544 00:59:58,791 --> 01:00:00,708 ♪ I will die ♪ 1545 01:00:00,791 --> 01:00:02,749 - All of a sudden, he was the big thing. 1546 01:00:02,833 --> 01:00:05,041 There was a period when we lived in the shadow 1547 01:00:05,125 --> 01:00:07,749 of Andy's band. 1548 01:00:07,833 --> 01:00:11,541 - ♪ To be your everything ♪ 1549 01:00:11,624 --> 01:00:16,749 ♪ ♪ 1550 01:00:16,833 --> 01:00:18,541 - After "Children of the World" album, 1551 01:00:18,624 --> 01:00:19,749 the next project, 1552 01:00:19,833 --> 01:00:22,000 we were booked to record in France 1553 01:00:22,083 --> 01:00:24,916 'cause of the Elton John album "Honky Château." 1554 01:00:25,000 --> 01:00:26,125 It sounded great. 1555 01:00:26,208 --> 01:00:29,250 - ♪ Bye-bye, château, I must leave you ♪ 1556 01:00:29,333 --> 01:00:30,749 ♪ Though it breaks my heart ♪ 1557 01:00:30,833 --> 01:00:33,000 - Robert sent us there-- 1558 01:00:33,083 --> 01:00:34,666 I think it was some kind of tax thing. 1559 01:00:34,749 --> 01:00:37,458 - We thought, "Well, if this studio sounds that good, 1560 01:00:37,541 --> 01:00:39,292 "hell yeah, let's go off to France. 1561 01:00:39,375 --> 01:00:40,333 Why not? 1562 01:00:40,417 --> 01:00:43,333 [Elton John's "Honky Cat"] 1563 01:00:43,417 --> 01:00:44,833 ♪ ♪ 1564 01:00:44,916 --> 01:00:48,583 - It wasn't the honky château that Elton John had used. 1565 01:00:48,666 --> 01:00:51,666 [upbeat piano rock] 1566 01:00:51,749 --> 01:00:53,624 - Now, château sounds absolutely gorgeous, 1567 01:00:53,708 --> 01:00:54,791 doesn't it? 1568 01:00:54,875 --> 01:00:56,958 Beautiful building, great grounds and gardens 1569 01:00:57,041 --> 01:00:58,458 and ponds and fountains. 1570 01:00:58,541 --> 01:00:59,458 No. 1571 01:00:59,541 --> 01:01:01,458 [laughs] It's nothing like that. 1572 01:01:01,541 --> 01:01:05,333 It was a half-built castle, no central heating, nothing, 1573 01:01:05,417 --> 01:01:06,458 and it was a dump. 1574 01:01:06,541 --> 01:01:08,958 - We seemed to be in the middle of nowhere. 1575 01:01:09,041 --> 01:01:11,083 Not a happy place to be. 1576 01:01:11,167 --> 01:01:12,833 - It was really kind of decrepit. 1577 01:01:12,916 --> 01:01:15,292 I think it'd been used to make porn movies. 1578 01:01:15,375 --> 01:01:17,167 - This was not right. 1579 01:01:17,250 --> 01:01:19,167 But because there was a contract, 1580 01:01:19,250 --> 01:01:22,417 we just decided to, you know, plow on through. 1581 01:01:22,499 --> 01:01:24,125 - We were going there to mix a live album 1582 01:01:24,208 --> 01:01:26,375 called "Here At Last...Live." 1583 01:01:26,458 --> 01:01:28,333 - But also, we were getting songs ready 1584 01:01:28,417 --> 01:01:29,583 for our new studio album, 1585 01:01:29,666 --> 01:01:32,000 which would be the follow-up to "Children of the World." 1586 01:01:32,083 --> 01:01:35,333 - And we got a call from Robert Stigwood. 1587 01:01:35,417 --> 01:01:38,333 [dramatic disco music] 1588 01:01:38,417 --> 01:01:41,541 ♪ ♪ 1589 01:01:41,624 --> 01:01:43,000 - A friend of mine, Nik Cohn, 1590 01:01:43,083 --> 01:01:45,041 wrote this piece for "New York" magazine, 1591 01:01:45,125 --> 01:01:46,833 "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night." 1592 01:01:46,916 --> 01:01:50,375 Disco was really underway, in Manhattan, anyway, 1593 01:01:50,458 --> 01:01:52,041 but Nik Cohn's point was that 1594 01:01:52,125 --> 01:01:54,000 rather than just being underground gay clubs, 1595 01:01:54,083 --> 01:01:56,375 straight couples are now going to do the hustle 1596 01:01:56,458 --> 01:01:58,541 on a Saturday night in the suburbs. 1597 01:01:58,624 --> 01:01:59,875 So I got Robert to buy the film rights 1598 01:01:59,958 --> 01:02:02,708 to a magazine article, of which there was no story. 1599 01:02:02,791 --> 01:02:04,417 But it caught Robert's attention 1600 01:02:04,499 --> 01:02:06,292 because he saw 1601 01:02:06,375 --> 01:02:08,083 that that's a lead role for an actor 1602 01:02:08,167 --> 01:02:09,708 if it was a movie. 1603 01:02:09,791 --> 01:02:10,749 He announced 1604 01:02:10,833 --> 01:02:12,208 at the Beverly Hills Hotel at breakfast, 1605 01:02:12,292 --> 01:02:14,499 "I'm signing John Travolta to a three-picture deal," 1606 01:02:14,583 --> 01:02:15,833 and people thought he was mad. 1607 01:02:15,916 --> 01:02:17,499 He was a TV actor. 1608 01:02:17,583 --> 01:02:19,833 No one gets a million dollars for three pictures. 1609 01:02:19,916 --> 01:02:21,708 Turned out to be the bargain of the century, of course, 1610 01:02:21,791 --> 01:02:23,417 because he got him for "Grease" 1611 01:02:23,499 --> 01:02:25,041 and the movie we don't talk about, 1612 01:02:25,125 --> 01:02:26,708 "Moment by Moment," 1613 01:02:26,791 --> 01:02:28,208 but two out of three's not bad. 1614 01:02:28,292 --> 01:02:30,375 [David Shire's "Salsation"] 1615 01:02:30,458 --> 01:02:31,875 I was still running RSO Records, 1616 01:02:31,958 --> 01:02:34,499 so my job was to do the soundtrack, 1617 01:02:34,583 --> 01:02:35,875 and my brief was, 1618 01:02:35,958 --> 01:02:37,916 "Put all of your favorite disco tracks 1619 01:02:38,000 --> 01:02:39,125 "and everyone will play it at a party 1620 01:02:39,208 --> 01:02:40,417 and they'll never stop dancing." 1621 01:02:40,499 --> 01:02:43,458 [percussive dance music] 1622 01:02:43,541 --> 01:02:45,583 ♪ ♪ 1623 01:02:45,666 --> 01:02:47,417 These were comparatively easy, 1624 01:02:47,499 --> 01:02:50,916 but we needed the Bee Gees to write a few songs. 1625 01:02:51,000 --> 01:02:52,541 - Phone call came through from Robert, 1626 01:02:52,624 --> 01:02:54,417 saying, "I wanna make this film." 1627 01:02:54,499 --> 01:02:56,749 - He said, "But I'm gonna need two or three songs." 1628 01:02:56,833 --> 01:02:59,083 - It wasn't the idea that they would do the soundtrack. 1629 01:02:59,167 --> 01:03:00,292 We knew they were busy. 1630 01:03:00,375 --> 01:03:02,208 "But have you got some songs?" Robert said, 1631 01:03:02,292 --> 01:03:05,250 and they said, "Yeah, sure." 1632 01:03:05,333 --> 01:03:07,749 - Robert said, "I'm sending you a script." 1633 01:03:07,833 --> 01:03:10,417 But we decided not to read the script. 1634 01:03:10,499 --> 01:03:12,624 - We weren't writing the "Fever" music. 1635 01:03:12,708 --> 01:03:16,417 We were writing our new album and just having fun doing it. 1636 01:03:16,499 --> 01:03:17,666 - They already had a couple of tunes 1637 01:03:17,749 --> 01:03:19,167 or some titles, anyway. 1638 01:03:19,250 --> 01:03:20,624 We thought, "Let's leave it with them." 1639 01:03:20,708 --> 01:03:25,458 - What we ended up doing was the demos of these songs. 1640 01:03:25,541 --> 01:03:26,499 - And I was really surprised 1641 01:03:26,583 --> 01:03:27,958 that, you know, it was only a few weeks later 1642 01:03:28,041 --> 01:03:30,083 we got the songs. 1643 01:03:30,167 --> 01:03:34,749 We got a cassette, and to this day, it's amazing. 1644 01:03:34,833 --> 01:03:37,749 ["Stayin' Alive"] 1645 01:03:37,833 --> 01:03:39,875 ♪ ♪ 1646 01:03:41,208 --> 01:03:42,458 [tape whirring] 1647 01:03:42,541 --> 01:03:44,749 - ♪ On the waves of the air ♪ 1648 01:03:44,833 --> 01:03:46,125 [tape whirring] 1649 01:03:46,208 --> 01:03:47,791 ♪ You're in my life ♪ 1650 01:03:47,875 --> 01:03:48,958 - It was just one after the other. 1651 01:03:49,041 --> 01:03:51,333 You know, "Stayin' Alive," "More Than a Woman," 1652 01:03:51,417 --> 01:03:53,833 "How Deep Is Your Love," "If I Can't Have You," 1653 01:03:53,916 --> 01:03:54,958 "Night Fever" 1654 01:03:55,041 --> 01:03:56,292 on one cassette. 1655 01:03:56,375 --> 01:03:58,333 And I thought, "Yes. 1656 01:03:58,417 --> 01:03:59,875 We've got a soundtrack." 1657 01:03:59,958 --> 01:04:01,791 - You know, you listen to that tape, 1658 01:04:01,875 --> 01:04:03,499 whoever was playing on those records, 1659 01:04:03,583 --> 01:04:04,541 they would've been hits. 1660 01:04:04,624 --> 01:04:05,791 Those songs are so good. 1661 01:04:05,875 --> 01:04:07,958 You think, "Shit," you know? 1662 01:04:08,041 --> 01:04:10,167 "That's so cool." 1663 01:04:10,250 --> 01:04:11,458 - We had the demos, 1664 01:04:11,541 --> 01:04:12,708 and then we went into the process 1665 01:04:12,791 --> 01:04:14,624 of making real records. 1666 01:04:14,708 --> 01:04:17,624 - Barry and Carl and I lived in that control room, 1667 01:04:17,708 --> 01:04:19,167 I don't know, 16 hours a day. 1668 01:04:19,250 --> 01:04:21,541 - Yeah. That was the only thing to do. 1669 01:04:21,624 --> 01:04:23,916 ["Night Fever"] 1670 01:04:24,000 --> 01:04:25,833 We recorded "Night Fever" first. 1671 01:04:25,916 --> 01:04:27,458 We actually had that in the can. 1672 01:04:27,541 --> 01:04:29,499 ♪ ♪ 1673 01:04:29,583 --> 01:04:32,499 - Robert called and said, "I need a title for the film." 1674 01:04:32,583 --> 01:04:35,292 "What I've got at the moment," I said, "is two titles: 1675 01:04:35,375 --> 01:04:37,499 'Stayin' Alive' and 'Night Fever.'" 1676 01:04:37,583 --> 01:04:40,499 And he said, "'Night Fever.' 1677 01:04:40,583 --> 01:04:42,208 Hmm," he said, "sounds okay," he said, 1678 01:04:42,292 --> 01:04:45,083 "but it sounds a bit too pornographic. 1679 01:04:45,167 --> 01:04:47,749 It'd need to be called 'Saturday Night,'" he said. 1680 01:04:47,833 --> 01:04:49,916 So it turned into "Saturday Night Fever." 1681 01:04:50,000 --> 01:04:53,041 ♪ Night fever, night fever ♪ 1682 01:04:53,125 --> 01:04:55,041 ♪ We know how to do it ♪ 1683 01:04:55,125 --> 01:04:57,875 - We were editing "Fever" on the lot at Paramount. 1684 01:04:57,958 --> 01:05:00,333 I was deluged by Paramount people saying, 1685 01:05:00,417 --> 01:05:02,375 "How's your little disco movie coming along?" 1686 01:05:02,458 --> 01:05:03,916 So that was a bit patronizing. 1687 01:05:04,000 --> 01:05:05,375 But the inspiring thing was 1688 01:05:05,458 --> 01:05:07,333 that Stigwood, during postproduction, said, 1689 01:05:07,417 --> 01:05:08,749 "Why do we wait for the release of the film? 1690 01:05:08,833 --> 01:05:09,958 Let's put out a single now." 1691 01:05:10,041 --> 01:05:12,250 And then he started with the heads of Paramount, 1692 01:05:12,333 --> 01:05:13,375 like, "How many theaters?" 1693 01:05:13,458 --> 01:05:15,167 And they told him something like 200. 1694 01:05:15,250 --> 01:05:17,708 He said, "I'm releasing the record in every city. 1695 01:05:17,791 --> 01:05:19,875 Why can't it be in every single city?" 1696 01:05:19,958 --> 01:05:21,208 So they made a deal 1697 01:05:21,292 --> 01:05:23,250 whereby if the record got to the top 20, 1698 01:05:23,333 --> 01:05:25,083 they would increase the number of screens. 1699 01:05:25,167 --> 01:05:27,208 If it got top ten, they'd go more. 1700 01:05:27,292 --> 01:05:28,749 He said, "I need the first record 1701 01:05:28,833 --> 01:05:29,791 to be number one." 1702 01:05:29,875 --> 01:05:32,749 ["How Deep Is Your Love"] 1703 01:05:32,833 --> 01:05:34,375 [soft ballad] 1704 01:05:34,458 --> 01:05:37,583 - Stigwood phoned up and said to Barry, 1705 01:05:37,666 --> 01:05:39,083 "I need the best love song 1706 01:05:39,167 --> 01:05:42,083 you've ever written for the movie." 1707 01:05:42,167 --> 01:05:44,916 So we went into a room in the château. 1708 01:05:45,000 --> 01:05:46,916 Chopin had stayed there. 1709 01:05:47,000 --> 01:05:48,541 So every time I looked at this piano, 1710 01:05:48,624 --> 01:05:51,208 I envisaged Chopin sitting down and playing. 1711 01:05:51,292 --> 01:05:52,749 ♪ ♪ 1712 01:05:52,833 --> 01:05:53,875 I sat down at the piano 1713 01:05:53,958 --> 01:05:56,417 and thought of his Prelude in E Flat, 1714 01:05:56,499 --> 01:05:59,875 and I knew Barry could sing in E flat. 1715 01:05:59,958 --> 01:06:01,250 When we were working like that, 1716 01:06:01,333 --> 01:06:03,083 I had a cassette player. 1717 01:06:03,167 --> 01:06:06,083 - [vocalizing with piano] 1718 01:06:06,167 --> 01:06:09,458 ♪ ♪ 1719 01:06:09,541 --> 01:06:13,250 [indistinct chatter] 1720 01:06:13,333 --> 01:06:17,292 ♪ Love again ♪ 1721 01:06:17,375 --> 01:06:19,458 ♪ Still in love ♪ 1722 01:06:19,541 --> 01:06:21,958 - And I'm sure it happened at that point. 1723 01:06:22,041 --> 01:06:24,208 Through the stained glass window 1724 01:06:24,292 --> 01:06:27,000 came a beam of sunlight, you know? 1725 01:06:27,083 --> 01:06:30,167 ♪ Your eyes in the morning sun ♪ 1726 01:06:30,250 --> 01:06:31,666 ♪ ♪ 1727 01:06:31,749 --> 01:06:35,958 - ♪ I know your eyes in the morning sun ♪ 1728 01:06:36,041 --> 01:06:40,666 ♪ I feel you touch me in the pouring rain ♪ 1729 01:06:40,749 --> 01:06:44,000 And that's a memory-- that'll last me all my life. 1730 01:06:44,083 --> 01:06:46,208 Never forget it. 1731 01:06:46,292 --> 01:06:47,333 Never forget it. 1732 01:06:47,417 --> 01:06:50,624 ♪ ♪ 1733 01:06:50,708 --> 01:06:51,666 - You know, all the feelings, 1734 01:06:51,749 --> 01:06:53,208 all the emotions are still there. 1735 01:06:53,292 --> 01:06:55,875 When you talk about it, it all comes back, you know? 1736 01:06:55,958 --> 01:06:58,083 ♪ ♪ 1737 01:06:58,167 --> 01:07:01,375 I have a-- 1738 01:07:01,458 --> 01:07:04,666 my heart is in that song. 1739 01:07:04,749 --> 01:07:08,958 - ♪ I know your eyes in the morning sun ♪ 1740 01:07:09,041 --> 01:07:13,749 ♪ I feel you touch me in the pouring rain ♪ 1741 01:07:13,833 --> 01:07:18,333 ♪ And the moment that you wander far from me ♪ 1742 01:07:18,417 --> 01:07:22,833 ♪ I wanna feel you in my arms again ♪ 1743 01:07:22,916 --> 01:07:27,541 ♪ And you come to me on a summer breeze ♪ 1744 01:07:27,624 --> 01:07:32,333 ♪ Keep me warm in your love, then you softly leave ♪ 1745 01:07:32,417 --> 01:07:35,875 ♪ And it's me you need to show ♪ 1746 01:07:35,958 --> 01:07:38,916 ♪ How deep is your love? ♪ - ♪ How deep is your love? ♪ 1747 01:07:39,000 --> 01:07:42,083 all: ♪ How deep is your love? ♪ 1748 01:07:42,167 --> 01:07:45,167 ♪ I really mean to learn ♪ 1749 01:07:45,250 --> 01:07:49,666 ♪ 'Cause we're living in a world of fools ♪ 1750 01:07:49,749 --> 01:07:52,541 ♪ Breaking us down ♪ 1751 01:07:52,624 --> 01:07:57,041 ♪ When they all should let us be ♪ 1752 01:07:57,125 --> 01:08:01,417 ♪ We belong to you and me ♪ 1753 01:08:01,499 --> 01:08:03,041 ♪ ♪ 1754 01:08:03,125 --> 01:08:05,541 - Everything came together. 1755 01:08:05,624 --> 01:08:08,417 But sadly, Dennis had had some bad news. 1756 01:08:08,499 --> 01:08:11,624 - My mother was in hospital. She had Alzheimer's. 1757 01:08:11,708 --> 01:08:14,875 So, you know, I told Barry what was going on. 1758 01:08:14,958 --> 01:08:18,292 He said, you know, "Get Dick to book you a flight now." 1759 01:08:18,375 --> 01:08:22,375 - He had to fly back to the UK, and we had no drummer. 1760 01:08:22,458 --> 01:08:24,417 - We thought, "Well, we gotta carry on writing 1761 01:08:24,499 --> 01:08:26,916 and getting these tracks together." 1762 01:08:27,000 --> 01:08:29,250 [distorted rewinding drum] 1763 01:08:29,333 --> 01:08:30,875 - Okay, I know now. 1764 01:08:32,333 --> 01:08:35,000 [drumbeat playing] 1765 01:08:35,083 --> 01:08:37,375 - When I was at Berklee, I had studied things 1766 01:08:37,458 --> 01:08:39,041 where they were moving tapes around 1767 01:08:39,125 --> 01:08:41,541 and make sort of these interesting sonic loops. 1768 01:08:41,624 --> 01:08:43,749 And when Dennis was not there, 1769 01:08:43,833 --> 01:08:46,125 I said, "Well, why don't we just 1770 01:08:46,208 --> 01:08:47,458 "take a bar out of 'Night Fever'? 1771 01:08:47,541 --> 01:08:48,833 "I think it's a little slower tempo. 1772 01:08:48,916 --> 01:08:50,333 "We'll slow it down a little bit 1773 01:08:50,417 --> 01:08:51,791 and see if we can make a loop out of it." 1774 01:08:51,875 --> 01:08:54,833 ["Night Fever" playing] 1775 01:08:54,916 --> 01:08:57,666 ♪ ♪ 1776 01:08:57,749 --> 01:09:00,833 We found a bar that we thought had a really nice feel to it. 1777 01:09:00,916 --> 01:09:02,458 We copied it over to a... 1778 01:09:02,541 --> 01:09:05,333 - 1/2 inch four-track. - 1/2 inch four-track. 1779 01:09:05,417 --> 01:09:08,749 - And spliced the tape into a loop. 1780 01:09:08,833 --> 01:09:09,791 Tape dump. 1781 01:09:09,875 --> 01:09:13,458 [drumbeat playing] 1782 01:09:13,541 --> 01:09:15,000 - I was pretty good at imagining 1783 01:09:15,083 --> 01:09:16,624 what you might be able to do, 1784 01:09:16,708 --> 01:09:18,749 but Carl was able to make it happen. 1785 01:09:18,833 --> 01:09:22,624 - It was just necessity being the mother of invention. 1786 01:09:22,708 --> 01:09:24,958 - No one had taken a drumbeat before 1787 01:09:25,041 --> 01:09:27,541 and created a two-bar phrase. 1788 01:09:27,624 --> 01:09:29,791 We were breaking new ground. 1789 01:09:29,875 --> 01:09:30,958 - Perfect. Good. 1790 01:09:31,041 --> 01:09:34,541 - This is the first time we had ever taken the song 1791 01:09:34,624 --> 01:09:36,875 and built it piece by piece from the ground up, 1792 01:09:36,958 --> 01:09:38,458 and we started with this drum loop. 1793 01:09:38,541 --> 01:09:40,000 [drumbeat] 1794 01:09:40,083 --> 01:09:41,791 And then we did a bass line. 1795 01:09:41,875 --> 01:09:43,666 [funky bass line] 1796 01:09:43,749 --> 01:09:44,833 And then a guitar part. 1797 01:09:44,916 --> 01:09:47,791 [swinging guitar riff] 1798 01:09:47,875 --> 01:09:49,833 ♪ ♪ 1799 01:09:49,916 --> 01:09:53,250 Never again would we rely as much on the liveness. 1800 01:09:53,333 --> 01:09:54,208 We would always know 1801 01:09:54,292 --> 01:09:55,541 that we could construct the song 1802 01:09:55,624 --> 01:09:56,833 and put the pieces together 1803 01:09:56,916 --> 01:09:59,499 based on the original vision of the song 1804 01:09:59,583 --> 01:10:01,000 and how we imagined it. 1805 01:10:01,083 --> 01:10:04,000 ["Stayin' Alive"] 1806 01:10:04,083 --> 01:10:07,624 - I got back to the sessions, and there was just a buzz. 1807 01:10:07,708 --> 01:10:08,624 - When we did it, we thought, 1808 01:10:08,708 --> 01:10:10,167 "We're just doing this temporarily," 1809 01:10:10,250 --> 01:10:11,499 and when Dennis comes back, 1810 01:10:11,583 --> 01:10:13,167 we'll replace it with real drums," 1811 01:10:13,250 --> 01:10:15,875 but what happened is, the feel was so amazing 1812 01:10:15,958 --> 01:10:17,041 that we couldn't get rid of it. 1813 01:10:17,125 --> 01:10:19,375 - He played it for me, and I could tell 1814 01:10:19,458 --> 01:10:21,000 from the first listen. 1815 01:10:21,083 --> 01:10:24,541 I said, "Man, that is amazing." 1816 01:10:24,624 --> 01:10:26,417 - When you listen to the drum track 1817 01:10:26,499 --> 01:10:29,000 on "Stayin' Alive," like, by itself, 1818 01:10:29,083 --> 01:10:31,708 it's really this super rugged, like, tough thing. 1819 01:10:31,791 --> 01:10:35,875 It's like... [mimicking drumbeat] 1820 01:10:35,958 --> 01:10:37,499 It's not pretty or pop like you remember. 1821 01:10:37,583 --> 01:10:38,499 It's pretty tough. 1822 01:10:38,583 --> 01:10:41,708 ♪ ♪ 1823 01:10:41,791 --> 01:10:43,499 - "Stayin' Alive" was the influence 1824 01:10:43,583 --> 01:10:45,541 that New York gave to us. 1825 01:10:45,624 --> 01:10:47,041 And the energy level at that point 1826 01:10:47,125 --> 01:10:50,333 in the late '70s was really that, you know? 1827 01:10:50,417 --> 01:10:51,875 It's survival. It's survival. 1828 01:10:51,958 --> 01:10:52,875 - This is '77. 1829 01:10:52,958 --> 01:10:54,749 Everybody know that time is hard now. 1830 01:10:54,833 --> 01:10:56,250 You know, if I was out there myself, 1831 01:10:56,333 --> 01:10:57,791 I would've got what I wanted too. 1832 01:10:57,875 --> 01:10:58,916 - You were not among the looters? 1833 01:10:59,000 --> 01:11:00,749 - No, I wasn't. Unfortunate. 1834 01:11:00,833 --> 01:11:01,958 - Do you feel personally threatened 1835 01:11:02,041 --> 01:11:03,250 by the .44 Caliber Killer? 1836 01:11:03,333 --> 01:11:04,417 - Yes, I do. 1837 01:11:04,499 --> 01:11:05,583 I don't feel free to go out, 1838 01:11:05,666 --> 01:11:08,083 to walk the streets or go out at all. 1839 01:11:08,167 --> 01:11:10,208 - Very few people realize 1840 01:11:10,292 --> 01:11:11,583 it's to do with anything but dance, 1841 01:11:11,666 --> 01:11:14,125 but the lyrics don't talk about dance at all, 1842 01:11:14,208 --> 01:11:16,583 and the lyrics very obviously state 1843 01:11:16,666 --> 01:11:18,125 the scenario of survival. 1844 01:11:18,208 --> 01:11:20,250 - ♪ Whether you're a brother or whether you're a mother ♪ 1845 01:11:20,333 --> 01:11:22,916 ♪ You're stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 1846 01:11:23,000 --> 01:11:24,958 ♪ Feel the city breaking and everybody shaking ♪ 1847 01:11:25,041 --> 01:11:27,708 ♪ And we're stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 1848 01:11:27,791 --> 01:11:29,916 ♪ Ah, ha, ha, ha ♪ 1849 01:11:30,000 --> 01:11:31,499 ♪ Stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 1850 01:11:31,583 --> 01:11:34,417 - If you think about... ♪ Ha, ha, ha, ha ♪ 1851 01:11:34,499 --> 01:11:37,624 I mean, that could very easily have just been a horn line, 1852 01:11:37,708 --> 01:11:39,624 but instead, their voices are so sick, 1853 01:11:39,708 --> 01:11:42,250 they're like, "Nah, we're gonna sing it." 1854 01:11:42,333 --> 01:11:43,250 ♪ ♪ 1855 01:11:43,333 --> 01:11:46,375 - ♪ Oh, when you walk ♪ 1856 01:11:46,458 --> 01:11:49,041 - The general fever at the time 1857 01:11:49,125 --> 01:11:51,624 was, "You must see this film." 1858 01:11:51,708 --> 01:11:55,292 The songs precipitated the interest. 1859 01:11:55,375 --> 01:11:57,958 It was this cultural phenomenon. 1860 01:11:58,041 --> 01:12:00,791 ["More Than a Woman"] 1861 01:12:00,875 --> 01:12:02,125 - In the first week of release, 1862 01:12:02,208 --> 01:12:05,167 they were having to hire extra staff in some cinemas 1863 01:12:05,250 --> 01:12:06,624 to stop them dancing in the aisles. 1864 01:12:06,708 --> 01:12:08,958 - ♪ Girl, I've know you very well ♪ 1865 01:12:09,041 --> 01:12:10,333 ♪ I've seen you growing every day ♪ 1866 01:12:10,417 --> 01:12:11,749 - Other movies were being put back 1867 01:12:11,833 --> 01:12:14,208 or taken out of other screens to make room for "Fever." 1868 01:12:14,292 --> 01:12:16,666 I mean, it was really quite a phenomenon. 1869 01:12:16,749 --> 01:12:19,333 John took me aside at one point and said, 1870 01:12:19,417 --> 01:12:20,458 "Hey, what do you think? 1871 01:12:20,541 --> 01:12:23,292 You think maybe an Academy Award nomination?" 1872 01:12:23,375 --> 01:12:24,791 And I'm thinking, "Jesus Christ, no." 1873 01:12:24,875 --> 01:12:26,292 I mean, this is ridiculous. 1874 01:12:26,375 --> 01:12:28,333 It's a dance movie, you know? 1875 01:12:28,417 --> 01:12:29,458 He had the last laugh. 1876 01:12:29,541 --> 01:12:31,833 - And John Travolta in "Saturday Night Fever." 1877 01:12:31,916 --> 01:12:34,624 [cheers and applause] 1878 01:12:34,708 --> 01:12:35,666 - The "Fever" thing happened. 1879 01:12:35,749 --> 01:12:37,167 That's when everything exploded. 1880 01:12:37,250 --> 01:12:39,000 Other record companies were printing it. 1881 01:12:39,083 --> 01:12:40,958 Then our record company couldn't keep up the pace. 1882 01:12:41,041 --> 01:12:42,000 - We didn't know what was going on 1883 01:12:42,083 --> 01:12:44,958 because this was just a soundtrack. 1884 01:12:45,041 --> 01:12:46,041 - Could I ask, for example, 1885 01:12:46,125 --> 01:12:48,541 what "Saturday Night Fever" has grossed thus far? 1886 01:12:48,624 --> 01:12:50,833 - Around 110 million. [audience cheers] 1887 01:12:50,916 --> 01:12:53,666 At the moment. In America. 1888 01:12:53,749 --> 01:12:55,499 - In America? - In America, yeah. 1889 01:12:55,583 --> 01:12:56,833 - And the album? 1890 01:12:56,916 --> 01:12:58,958 - The album, I think, is nearing 1891 01:12:59,041 --> 01:13:02,292 18 million double albums worldwide. 1892 01:13:02,375 --> 01:13:04,208 - But I mean, that would be the record-breaker of all time. 1893 01:13:04,292 --> 01:13:07,375 - Yes, it's already the biggest-grossing album 1894 01:13:07,458 --> 01:13:09,041 in the history of music. 1895 01:13:09,125 --> 01:13:11,541 - The statistics are just incredible. 1896 01:13:11,624 --> 01:13:14,250 Four singles from "Saturday Night Fever" 1897 01:13:14,333 --> 01:13:17,208 have hit number one since the album was released, 1898 01:13:17,292 --> 01:13:20,333 more than from any other new album in history. 1899 01:13:20,417 --> 01:13:22,208 That's just a few of the statistics 1900 01:13:22,292 --> 01:13:25,041 that lead to gold records like this. 1901 01:13:25,125 --> 01:13:27,125 And so it's my privilege to say, 1902 01:13:27,208 --> 01:13:29,417 ladies and gentlemen, will you welcome 1903 01:13:29,499 --> 01:13:31,041 the Bee Gees! 1904 01:13:31,125 --> 01:13:32,208 [cheers and applause] 1905 01:13:32,292 --> 01:13:33,749 [Walter Murphy's "A Fifth of Beethoven"] 1906 01:13:33,833 --> 01:13:37,250 Has it changed your lives, the enormous success of it? 1907 01:13:37,333 --> 01:13:38,833 [disco-tinged classical music] 1908 01:13:38,916 --> 01:13:41,791 - Yes, I can safely say it's changed our lives. 1909 01:13:41,875 --> 01:13:44,250 [camera shutters clicking] 1910 01:13:44,333 --> 01:13:46,791 - The Bee Gees, I think, were stunned by their success. 1911 01:13:46,875 --> 01:13:49,250 ♪ ♪ 1912 01:13:49,333 --> 01:13:51,875 - We were aware we were creating a specific sound, 1913 01:13:51,958 --> 01:13:53,375 but we didn't know what it was gonna do. 1914 01:13:53,458 --> 01:13:55,125 ♪ ♪ 1915 01:13:55,208 --> 01:13:57,250 - It did end up with them having half the top ten 1916 01:13:57,333 --> 01:13:59,125 with these songs. 1917 01:13:59,208 --> 01:14:00,333 It was extraordinary. 1918 01:14:00,417 --> 01:14:01,749 Kind of the same domination the Beatles had 1919 01:14:01,833 --> 01:14:03,292 in the '60s in America. 1920 01:14:03,375 --> 01:14:05,791 ♪ ♪ 1921 01:14:05,875 --> 01:14:08,292 - They were just everywhere. 1922 01:14:08,375 --> 01:14:10,250 - But our own friends don't treat us the same way. 1923 01:14:10,333 --> 01:14:11,749 - What, from a distance, they treat you? 1924 01:14:11,833 --> 01:14:14,083 - Well, I was speaking to one of my friends the other day, 1925 01:14:14,167 --> 01:14:15,916 and as he was cleaning my shoes, I said, "Listen." 1926 01:14:16,000 --> 01:14:17,292 [laughter] 1927 01:14:17,375 --> 01:14:18,916 - Stigwood said, 1928 01:14:19,000 --> 01:14:20,583 "Let's give the band half a point or a quarter." 1929 01:14:20,666 --> 01:14:23,791 Now, that's not a percentage. That's a tiny amount of money. 1930 01:14:23,875 --> 01:14:25,125 - But when you sell as many copies 1931 01:14:25,208 --> 01:14:27,708 as "Saturday Night Fever" sold, 1932 01:14:27,791 --> 01:14:29,833 it turns out to be big money. 1933 01:14:29,916 --> 01:14:31,833 ♪ ♪ 1934 01:14:31,916 --> 01:14:32,916 - What are you doing 1935 01:14:33,000 --> 01:14:34,541 with these millions of dollars? 1936 01:14:34,624 --> 01:14:36,292 - What are you doing with your millions of dollars? 1937 01:14:36,375 --> 01:14:38,666 - Oh, no. [laughter] 1938 01:14:38,749 --> 01:14:40,458 - It is the biggest night of the year 1939 01:14:40,541 --> 01:14:41,833 for people in the recording industry, 1940 01:14:41,916 --> 01:14:42,916 the Grammy Awards. 1941 01:14:43,000 --> 01:14:45,458 - And the winner is "Saturday Night Fever." 1942 01:14:45,541 --> 01:14:48,250 [cheers and applause] Whoo! 1943 01:14:48,333 --> 01:14:51,292 - For a soundtrack to win Best Album was amazing. 1944 01:14:51,375 --> 01:14:52,791 It went on to be one of the best-selling albums 1945 01:14:52,875 --> 01:14:54,167 in history. 1946 01:14:54,250 --> 01:14:56,791 ♪ ♪ 1947 01:14:56,875 --> 01:14:59,125 - We didn't know we were defining the culture. 1948 01:14:59,208 --> 01:15:01,250 We were just still Barry, Maurice, and Robin 1949 01:15:01,333 --> 01:15:02,749 wondering what the hell's going on. 1950 01:15:02,833 --> 01:15:09,708 ♪ ♪ 1951 01:15:11,083 --> 01:15:13,208 - The fever has been contagious. 1952 01:15:13,292 --> 01:15:16,000 Discos, the places in which to dance away the night 1953 01:15:16,083 --> 01:15:18,167 and the morning hours, are thriving. 1954 01:15:18,250 --> 01:15:19,791 What the fever has done is made 1955 01:15:19,875 --> 01:15:22,916 just about anything related to disco profitable. 1956 01:15:23,000 --> 01:15:24,499 Where there's money to be made, 1957 01:15:24,583 --> 01:15:26,292 disco is the business. 1958 01:15:26,375 --> 01:15:29,499 - We didn't categorize our songs as disco, 1959 01:15:29,583 --> 01:15:31,916 but then we weren't thinking that way at all. 1960 01:15:32,000 --> 01:15:33,333 We were just thinking about writing songs 1961 01:15:33,417 --> 01:15:35,624 based on this discovery of this falsetto voice 1962 01:15:35,708 --> 01:15:37,833 and how well that seemed to work. 1963 01:15:37,916 --> 01:15:39,041 - What the Bee Gees brought, 1964 01:15:39,125 --> 01:15:41,833 I always felt they brought melody to disco. 1965 01:15:41,916 --> 01:15:45,167 Most disco at that point was melody-free, you know? 1966 01:15:45,250 --> 01:15:47,583 This was a different take on disco. 1967 01:15:47,666 --> 01:15:49,458 It was completely for-- 1968 01:15:49,541 --> 01:15:51,541 for the broadest possible audience. 1969 01:15:51,624 --> 01:15:52,749 - You got the lyrics? - Yes. 1970 01:15:52,833 --> 01:15:53,791 - Great. - Right here. 1971 01:15:53,875 --> 01:15:55,250 - Okay. Let's go. - Straight into it. 1972 01:15:55,333 --> 01:15:56,749 [guitar strumming] 1973 01:15:56,833 --> 01:15:58,708 One, two, three, four. 1974 01:15:58,791 --> 01:16:02,208 [rough disco music playing] 1975 01:16:02,292 --> 01:16:03,833 Right. Okay. 1976 01:16:03,916 --> 01:16:07,041 ♪ ♪ 1977 01:16:07,125 --> 01:16:10,208 [both vocalizing] 1978 01:16:10,292 --> 01:16:12,875 ♪ ♪ 1979 01:16:12,958 --> 01:16:15,375 - Hey, guys. - It's too slow. 1980 01:16:15,458 --> 01:16:16,583 It would be nice if we could find a bigger sound 1981 01:16:16,666 --> 01:16:17,666 for that solo. 1982 01:16:17,749 --> 01:16:18,666 - Great. 1983 01:16:18,749 --> 01:16:19,666 - The way we rehearsed it last night. 1984 01:16:19,749 --> 01:16:21,916 - All right. [punchy synth notes] 1985 01:16:22,000 --> 01:16:23,041 - Yeah. Just like that. 1986 01:16:23,125 --> 01:16:24,041 Yeah. Beautiful. 1987 01:16:24,125 --> 01:16:25,375 Bring that sound in. That's great. 1988 01:16:25,458 --> 01:16:26,791 [synth note] Yeah. 1989 01:16:26,875 --> 01:16:28,375 - Okay, let's try it again. - Okay. 1990 01:16:28,458 --> 01:16:30,583 One, two, three, four. 1991 01:16:30,666 --> 01:16:32,125 ♪ Tragedy ♪ 1992 01:16:32,208 --> 01:16:34,125 ♪ When the feeling's gone and you can't go on ♪ 1993 01:16:34,208 --> 01:16:36,250 ♪ It's tragedy ♪ 1994 01:16:36,333 --> 01:16:38,458 ♪ When the morning cries and you don't know why ♪ 1995 01:16:38,541 --> 01:16:40,250 ♪ It's hard to bear ♪ 1996 01:16:40,333 --> 01:16:42,250 ♪ With no one beside you ♪ 1997 01:16:42,333 --> 01:16:44,749 ♪ You're going nowhere ♪ 1998 01:16:44,833 --> 01:16:45,916 ♪ ♪ 1999 01:16:46,000 --> 01:16:47,208 ♪ Ah ♪ 2000 01:16:47,292 --> 01:16:49,041 - When we brought out "Spirits Having Flown," 2001 01:16:49,125 --> 01:16:51,083 it did phenomenally well. 2002 01:16:51,167 --> 01:16:54,250 At the same time, "Fever" was still in the top ten. 2003 01:16:54,333 --> 01:16:56,749 You know, we could've left it another year, 2004 01:16:56,833 --> 01:16:59,333 and it still probably would've been a little too soon 2005 01:16:59,417 --> 01:17:01,458 with what was going on with "Fever." 2006 01:17:01,541 --> 01:17:04,541 [Odyssey's "Native New Yorker"] 2007 01:17:04,624 --> 01:17:07,958 [jazzy disco music] 2008 01:17:08,041 --> 01:17:10,583 ♪ ♪ 2009 01:17:10,666 --> 01:17:11,833 - Good morning, everybody. 2010 01:17:11,916 --> 01:17:13,791 Charley Steiner, 99X. 2011 01:17:13,875 --> 01:17:15,624 As is per usual for Monday, 2012 01:17:15,708 --> 01:17:19,125 a very busy day coming into town. 2013 01:17:19,208 --> 01:17:21,833 I'm working at a top 40 station 2014 01:17:21,916 --> 01:17:23,791 in New York, big one, 2015 01:17:23,875 --> 01:17:26,583 WXLO, but it was known as 99X. 2016 01:17:26,666 --> 01:17:29,541 And I was the morning news guy. 2017 01:17:29,624 --> 01:17:33,499 Most radio stations had a very small playlist, 2018 01:17:33,583 --> 01:17:37,791 and the Bee Gees probably had the top four, top five hits 2019 01:17:37,875 --> 01:17:38,875 any given week. 2020 01:17:38,958 --> 01:17:40,958 - 13 CFRW. 2021 01:17:41,041 --> 01:17:42,250 Music of the Bee Gees and "Tragedy." 2022 01:17:42,333 --> 01:17:43,292 - Get out on the dance floor 2023 01:17:43,375 --> 01:17:45,125 and do one more with the Bee Gees. 2024 01:17:45,208 --> 01:17:46,791 - All the Gibb brothers together, the Bee Gees, 2025 01:17:46,875 --> 01:17:47,958 "You Should Be Dancing." 2026 01:17:48,041 --> 01:17:49,499 You should be shaking that thing one time. 2027 01:17:49,583 --> 01:17:52,333 - And for those of us at the radio station, 2028 01:17:52,417 --> 01:17:53,499 we're-- [laughs] 2029 01:17:53,583 --> 01:17:55,125 We're gonna take hostages. 2030 01:17:55,208 --> 01:17:56,875 ["Too Much Heaven"] 2031 01:17:56,958 --> 01:17:59,167 - And if you haven't had enough Bee Gees music yet, 2032 01:17:59,250 --> 01:18:01,333 well, we've got more. 2033 01:18:01,417 --> 01:18:04,167 Guess you could kind of call it over-giving. 2034 01:18:04,250 --> 01:18:05,666 - And then Andy Gibb too. 2035 01:18:05,749 --> 01:18:09,125 He was like the caboose on this musical train. 2036 01:18:09,208 --> 01:18:12,958 It was like waves in the sea. 2037 01:18:13,041 --> 01:18:17,208 - ♪ Nobody gets too much heaven no more ♪ 2038 01:18:17,292 --> 01:18:19,375 - You're right on the top of the world. 2039 01:18:19,458 --> 01:18:22,666 What is it that drives you back on the road? 2040 01:18:22,749 --> 01:18:25,375 - When we make records and when we're in the studio, 2041 01:18:25,458 --> 01:18:28,333 we never really see who buys those records. 2042 01:18:28,417 --> 01:18:30,292 I think getting on the road means that to us. 2043 01:18:30,375 --> 01:18:33,208 It means that we come face-to-face with people 2044 01:18:33,292 --> 01:18:34,833 to whom our records mean a lot. 2045 01:18:34,916 --> 01:18:38,208 But to be sure, doing a tour is an enormous amount of work. 2046 01:18:38,292 --> 01:18:40,541 The only thing that I noticed that's not right is, 2047 01:18:40,624 --> 01:18:41,875 it doesn't actually say the Bee Gees, 2048 01:18:41,958 --> 01:18:43,041 and I think it should actually-- 2049 01:18:43,125 --> 01:18:44,125 the Bee Gees' name should be-- 2050 01:18:44,208 --> 01:18:46,583 it should be "Bee Gees, Spirits Having Flown." 2051 01:18:46,666 --> 01:18:49,208 ["Love You Inside Out"] 2052 01:18:49,292 --> 01:18:52,000 - The '79 tour was a complete sellout. 2053 01:18:52,083 --> 01:18:55,000 - The Bee Gees hadn't toured since 1976, 2054 01:18:55,083 --> 01:18:56,624 and that tour was a promotion 2055 01:18:56,708 --> 01:18:58,083 for the "Spirits Having Flown" album, 2056 01:18:58,167 --> 01:18:59,417 but it was celebrating 2057 01:18:59,499 --> 01:19:01,541 "Saturday Night Fever" as well, you know. 2058 01:19:01,624 --> 01:19:03,541 - 25,000 people are supposed to be here. 2059 01:19:03,624 --> 01:19:04,791 - It's gonna be great. 2060 01:19:04,875 --> 01:19:06,375 - You don't mind the Bee Gees in the rain? 2061 01:19:06,458 --> 01:19:07,916 - No. - No, not at all. 2062 01:19:08,000 --> 01:19:09,916 - We've been here since 9:00 this morning. 2063 01:19:10,000 --> 01:19:12,041 - They're worth waiting in the rain for. 2064 01:19:12,125 --> 01:19:14,583 - I mean, it was huge. 2065 01:19:14,666 --> 01:19:16,749 Dodger Stadium, places like that. 2066 01:19:16,833 --> 01:19:18,875 We used to dream of this. 2067 01:19:18,958 --> 01:19:20,958 Having people in the audience like Barbra Streisand 2068 01:19:21,041 --> 01:19:22,749 watching your show and loving it, you know, 2069 01:19:22,833 --> 01:19:25,292 I mean, these are fantasies. 2070 01:19:25,375 --> 01:19:27,083 You're in a sort of goldfish bowl on tour. 2071 01:19:27,167 --> 01:19:28,417 You know, it's like, you don't see much 2072 01:19:28,499 --> 01:19:29,417 of what's going on out there. 2073 01:19:29,499 --> 01:19:31,083 - Anyway, the most important thing is 2074 01:19:31,167 --> 01:19:32,292 what we're gonna do after the show. 2075 01:19:32,375 --> 01:19:33,708 [laughter] - What do you wanna do? 2076 01:19:33,791 --> 01:19:35,083 - That's what we're here to talk about. 2077 01:19:35,167 --> 01:19:36,583 - It's here. 2078 01:19:36,666 --> 01:19:38,417 The Disco Body Shaper, 2079 01:19:38,499 --> 01:19:40,666 the brand-new exerciser sensation 2080 01:19:40,749 --> 01:19:42,250 that's sweeping the country. 2081 01:19:42,333 --> 01:19:44,083 Send for yours today. 2082 01:19:44,167 --> 01:19:47,499 - Buy it today, be a disco star tonight. 2083 01:19:47,583 --> 01:19:49,583 - Let's disco to Burger King. 2084 01:19:49,666 --> 01:19:51,749 - It all goes back to one thing 2085 01:19:51,833 --> 01:19:53,417 and the same thing that's happening now: 2086 01:19:53,499 --> 01:19:54,583 greed. 2087 01:19:54,666 --> 01:19:56,292 [Rick Dees' "Disco Duck"] 2088 01:19:56,375 --> 01:20:00,292 Greed is the thing that happens in people 2089 01:20:00,375 --> 01:20:03,333 that really ruins a lot of shit. 2090 01:20:03,417 --> 01:20:04,958 - ♪ Went to a party the other night ♪ 2091 01:20:05,041 --> 01:20:06,000 - In the beginning, 2092 01:20:06,083 --> 01:20:07,958 you would buy a disco-bannered record 2093 01:20:08,041 --> 01:20:09,791 and it would be a great song, 2094 01:20:09,875 --> 01:20:11,666 no matter which one you picked out. 2095 01:20:11,749 --> 01:20:14,499 - ♪ Moving my feet to the disco beat ♪ 2096 01:20:14,583 --> 01:20:18,833 - But then some executive in diapers decided, 2097 01:20:18,916 --> 01:20:21,000 "Let's put 'disco' 2098 01:20:21,083 --> 01:20:23,749 on all these records we wanna sell," 2099 01:20:23,833 --> 01:20:26,125 and it wasn't good music anymore. 2100 01:20:26,208 --> 01:20:27,958 It was garbage. 2101 01:20:28,041 --> 01:20:29,624 - ♪ Look at me ♪ 2102 01:20:29,708 --> 01:20:33,125 ♪ I'm the disco duck ♪ 2103 01:20:33,208 --> 01:20:35,749 - [Donald Duck voice] Ah, get down, mama. 2104 01:20:35,833 --> 01:20:37,000 - So that was, I think, the straw 2105 01:20:37,083 --> 01:20:38,208 that broke the camel's back. 2106 01:20:38,292 --> 01:20:39,499 - ♪ Disco ♪ 2107 01:20:39,583 --> 01:20:40,708 ♪ Disco duck ♪ 2108 01:20:40,791 --> 01:20:42,916 - Disco as a purely musical form 2109 01:20:43,000 --> 01:20:45,000 is, you know, dead. 2110 01:20:45,083 --> 01:20:46,000 - I hated it. 2111 01:20:46,083 --> 01:20:47,458 Couldn't think of anything redeem-- 2112 01:20:47,541 --> 01:20:48,666 it was old people's music. 2113 01:20:48,749 --> 01:20:51,333 - It was a very easy thing 2114 01:20:51,417 --> 01:20:54,833 to get involved with for commercial reasons. 2115 01:20:54,916 --> 01:20:56,499 - [Donald Duck voice] ♪ Everybody's doing ♪ 2116 01:20:56,583 --> 01:20:58,375 ♪ The disco ♪ 2117 01:20:58,458 --> 01:20:59,833 - I'd like to show you 2118 01:20:59,916 --> 01:21:02,208 how we destroy the disco records. 2119 01:21:02,292 --> 01:21:04,499 This is how I do it. 2120 01:21:04,583 --> 01:21:06,833 Have to kind of get worked up a little bit. 2121 01:21:06,916 --> 01:21:08,125 It's like-- - Yeah. 2122 01:21:08,208 --> 01:21:10,000 - And then I just-- 2123 01:21:10,083 --> 01:21:11,958 [music slows to a stop] 2124 01:21:12,041 --> 01:21:13,333 Oof. That felt good. 2125 01:21:13,417 --> 01:21:14,458 [Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold"] 2126 01:21:14,541 --> 01:21:16,333 - Our next guest tonight is Steve Dahl. 2127 01:21:16,417 --> 01:21:19,208 And he is a disc jockey for station WLUP-FM 2128 01:21:19,292 --> 01:21:20,875 out in Chicago, Illinois, 2129 01:21:20,958 --> 01:21:22,541 and he hates disco music. 2130 01:21:22,624 --> 01:21:25,375 - Steve Dahl was kind of hard to avoid in Chicago. 2131 01:21:25,458 --> 01:21:28,541 [bold rock music] 2132 01:21:28,624 --> 01:21:34,041 ♪ ♪ 2133 01:21:34,125 --> 01:21:36,541 Steve Dahl was on the radio saying, "Disco sucks. 2134 01:21:36,624 --> 01:21:38,541 Disco sucks." 2135 01:21:38,624 --> 01:21:40,541 I was 14. 2136 01:21:40,624 --> 01:21:42,541 I listened to the Loop, 2137 01:21:42,624 --> 01:21:45,666 the radio station that this kind of centered around. 2138 01:21:45,749 --> 01:21:47,708 - He brings helium to the studio, 2139 01:21:47,791 --> 01:21:50,417 inhales it and imitates the Bee Gees on the air, 2140 01:21:50,499 --> 01:21:52,208 and then breaks up their records. 2141 01:21:52,292 --> 01:21:54,167 - [high-pitched] ♪ How deep is your love? ♪ 2142 01:21:54,250 --> 01:21:57,083 [laughter] ♪ How deep is your love? ♪ 2143 01:21:57,167 --> 01:22:01,250 ♪ I really need to know ♪ 2144 01:22:01,333 --> 01:22:04,916 - You know, when you do all those things, 2145 01:22:05,000 --> 01:22:06,458 like put out garbage, 2146 01:22:06,541 --> 01:22:10,250 you know, have radio being--feeling ostracized 2147 01:22:10,333 --> 01:22:13,250 and a lot of straight people feeling threatened, 2148 01:22:13,333 --> 01:22:17,250 it creates a real poison. 2149 01:22:17,333 --> 01:22:19,624 [crowd cheering] 2150 01:22:19,708 --> 01:22:21,041 - Hello again, everybody. 2151 01:22:21,125 --> 01:22:23,916 Harry Caray and Jimmy Piersall from Comiskey Park, 2152 01:22:24,000 --> 01:22:27,417 where we're gonna have a wild night tonight, 2153 01:22:27,499 --> 01:22:29,041 a twilight doubleheader. 2154 01:22:29,125 --> 01:22:31,583 - I was an usher at Comiskey Park. 2155 01:22:31,666 --> 01:22:33,125 That was my first job. 2156 01:22:33,208 --> 01:22:36,250 - Look at that crowd out there. 2157 01:22:36,333 --> 01:22:37,375 - 50,000 people, 2158 01:22:37,458 --> 01:22:38,708 the largest crowd of the season, 2159 01:22:38,791 --> 01:22:41,250 showed up at Chicago's Comiskey Park. 2160 01:22:41,333 --> 01:22:43,125 Many had come for Disco Demolition Night, 2161 01:22:43,250 --> 01:22:44,916 a promotional gimmick. 2162 01:22:45,000 --> 01:22:47,958 15,000 others had to be turned away. 2163 01:22:48,041 --> 01:22:49,125 - Steve Dahl says, 2164 01:22:49,208 --> 01:22:52,333 "We're gonna let everybody in the White Sox park 2165 01:22:52,417 --> 01:22:55,417 "for 98¢ 2166 01:22:55,499 --> 01:22:57,250 "if you bring a disco record, 2167 01:22:57,333 --> 01:22:58,791 "and we're gonna blow those records up 2168 01:22:58,875 --> 01:23:00,333 in the middle of center field." 2169 01:23:00,417 --> 01:23:02,624 [tense music] 2170 01:23:02,708 --> 01:23:05,125 We're letting people in. 2171 01:23:05,208 --> 01:23:09,250 I pointed out to my chief usher, 2172 01:23:09,333 --> 01:23:11,833 "That record, that record, that record, 2173 01:23:11,916 --> 01:23:14,167 "that record, that record, that record, 2174 01:23:14,250 --> 01:23:16,250 "those aren't disco records. 2175 01:23:16,333 --> 01:23:18,583 Those are just-- those are R&B records." 2176 01:23:18,666 --> 01:23:20,875 ♪ ♪ 2177 01:23:20,958 --> 01:23:24,000 And the thing that I noticed 2178 01:23:24,083 --> 01:23:26,333 more than anything 2179 01:23:26,417 --> 01:23:29,167 was just mostly Black records. 2180 01:23:29,250 --> 01:23:30,791 [crowd cheering] 2181 01:23:30,875 --> 01:23:31,958 - At the same time 2182 01:23:32,041 --> 01:23:34,000 all this stuff is going down in Chicago, 2183 01:23:34,083 --> 01:23:35,833 we were playing the stadiums. 2184 01:23:35,916 --> 01:23:38,375 It was an amazing tour. 2185 01:23:38,458 --> 01:23:41,000 We were sort of, like, in our own little world, 2186 01:23:41,083 --> 01:23:43,125 not thinking about the outside world. 2187 01:23:43,208 --> 01:23:46,125 [upbeat disco music playing] 2188 01:23:46,208 --> 01:23:50,292 ♪ ♪ 2189 01:23:50,375 --> 01:23:53,292 [crowd roaring] 2190 01:23:53,375 --> 01:24:00,375 ♪ ♪ 2191 01:24:15,791 --> 01:24:18,333 - He struck him out, and the ball game is over. 2192 01:24:18,417 --> 01:24:21,167 [cheers and applause] 2193 01:24:22,833 --> 01:24:26,375 - Okay, let's usher Steve down to the explosives 2194 01:24:26,458 --> 01:24:30,375 with a loud "Disco sucks" chant. 2195 01:24:30,458 --> 01:24:32,375 Disco sucks! 2196 01:24:32,458 --> 01:24:34,583 all: Disco sucks! 2197 01:24:34,666 --> 01:24:36,666 Disco sucks! 2198 01:24:36,749 --> 01:24:38,833 Disco sucks! 2199 01:24:38,916 --> 01:24:40,749 Disco sucks! 2200 01:24:40,833 --> 01:24:42,250 Disco sucks! 2201 01:24:42,333 --> 01:24:43,875 ["You Should Be Dancing" playing] 2202 01:24:43,958 --> 01:24:45,541 - Ladies and gentlemen, our brother Andy. 2203 01:24:45,624 --> 01:24:48,583 [crowd cheering] 2204 01:24:48,666 --> 01:24:50,583 ♪ ♪ 2205 01:24:50,666 --> 01:24:52,541 ♪ My baby moves at midnight ♪ 2206 01:24:52,624 --> 01:24:54,250 ♪ ♪ 2207 01:24:54,333 --> 01:24:55,791 ♪ Goes right on till the dawn ♪ 2208 01:24:55,875 --> 01:24:58,000 ♪ ♪ 2209 01:24:58,083 --> 01:25:00,292 ♪ My woman takes me higher ♪ 2210 01:25:00,375 --> 01:25:01,791 ♪ ♪ 2211 01:25:01,875 --> 01:25:03,916 ♪ My woman keeps me warm ♪ 2212 01:25:04,000 --> 01:25:05,916 ♪ ♪ 2213 01:25:06,000 --> 01:25:08,000 all: ♪ What you doing on your back? ♪ 2214 01:25:08,083 --> 01:25:09,292 ♪ Oh-ho ♪ 2215 01:25:09,375 --> 01:25:11,916 ♪ What you doing on your back? ♪ 2216 01:25:12,000 --> 01:25:15,417 ♪ Ah, you should be dancing ♪ 2217 01:25:15,499 --> 01:25:17,708 ♪ Yeah ♪ 2218 01:25:17,791 --> 01:25:20,541 ♪ Dancing, yeah ♪ 2219 01:25:20,624 --> 01:25:25,499 ♪ ♪ 2220 01:25:25,583 --> 01:25:26,749 - Come on! 2221 01:25:26,833 --> 01:25:28,541 - Andy joined us onstage for "You Should Be Dancing," 2222 01:25:28,624 --> 01:25:30,958 and it was the four of us together, 2223 01:25:31,041 --> 01:25:32,583 and Andy joined my mic, 2224 01:25:32,666 --> 01:25:34,458 so we were singing around the one mic, 2225 01:25:34,541 --> 01:25:36,666 and he kept looking up, and he stood back and he goes, 2226 01:25:36,749 --> 01:25:39,041 "Can you believe this shit?" 2227 01:25:39,125 --> 01:25:41,250 all: ♪ Yeah ♪ - Come on. 2228 01:25:41,333 --> 01:25:43,749 - Nobody could believe what was going on. 2229 01:25:43,833 --> 01:25:45,125 And to see the four of us onstage, 2230 01:25:45,208 --> 01:25:46,583 when I looked over and saw Barry and Robin 2231 01:25:46,666 --> 01:25:48,000 and I saw Andy in front of me, I thought, 2232 01:25:48,083 --> 01:25:50,458 "This is how it's gotta be." 2233 01:25:50,541 --> 01:25:53,583 - ♪ Yeah ♪ 2234 01:25:53,666 --> 01:25:58,833 ♪ ♪ 2235 01:25:58,916 --> 01:26:00,624 - How 'bout the Bee Gees? 2236 01:26:00,708 --> 01:26:04,458 [crowd booing] 2237 01:26:04,541 --> 01:26:06,292 Well, listen, we took all the disco records 2238 01:26:06,375 --> 01:26:08,499 that you brought tonight, 2239 01:26:08,583 --> 01:26:11,708 threw 'em in a giant box, 2240 01:26:11,791 --> 01:26:15,333 and we're gonna blow 'em up real good. 2241 01:26:15,417 --> 01:26:22,417 ♪ ♪ 2242 01:26:25,749 --> 01:26:28,167 [fireworks popping] 2243 01:26:28,250 --> 01:26:32,499 One, two, three, boom! 2244 01:26:32,583 --> 01:26:35,041 [explosion booms] 2245 01:26:35,125 --> 01:26:37,624 [cheers and applause] 2246 01:26:37,708 --> 01:26:40,000 That blew 'em up real good! 2247 01:26:40,083 --> 01:26:46,499 ♪ ♪ 2248 01:26:46,583 --> 01:26:48,292 - ♪ Dance ♪ 2249 01:26:48,375 --> 01:26:51,167 - They'd tell you as an usher, every now and then, 2250 01:26:51,250 --> 01:26:53,125 you're gonna get a drunk person 2251 01:26:53,208 --> 01:26:54,833 storming the field. 2252 01:26:54,916 --> 01:26:57,375 Try to grab 'em, hold on to 'em, or whatever. 2253 01:26:57,458 --> 01:27:00,167 But everybody ran on the field. 2254 01:27:00,250 --> 01:27:02,749 - ♪ Dance ♪ 2255 01:27:02,833 --> 01:27:04,375 ♪ Dance ♪ 2256 01:27:04,458 --> 01:27:06,250 ♪ Dance ♪ 2257 01:27:06,333 --> 01:27:08,833 ♪ Dance, dance ♪ 2258 01:27:08,916 --> 01:27:11,208 - When I got older, I recognized 2259 01:27:11,292 --> 01:27:15,708 that this was actually the end of a era. 2260 01:27:15,791 --> 01:27:17,208 - ♪ Dance ♪ 2261 01:27:17,292 --> 01:27:18,208 ♪ Dance ♪ 2262 01:27:18,292 --> 01:27:19,708 - It was a book burning. 2263 01:27:19,791 --> 01:27:22,167 It was a racist, 2264 01:27:22,250 --> 01:27:25,041 homophobic book burning. 2265 01:27:25,125 --> 01:27:28,666 And the Bee Gees got caught up in that 2266 01:27:28,749 --> 01:27:31,083 because they were part of that culture 2267 01:27:31,167 --> 01:27:33,875 that was lifting a lot of people up. 2268 01:27:33,958 --> 01:27:38,250 ♪ ♪ 2269 01:27:38,333 --> 01:27:39,583 [cheers and applause] 2270 01:27:39,666 --> 01:27:40,958 - Thank you. We love you. 2271 01:27:41,041 --> 01:27:43,333 And we'll see you again. Bye-bye. 2272 01:27:45,541 --> 01:27:48,458 [solemn music] 2273 01:27:48,541 --> 01:27:49,916 ♪ ♪ 2274 01:27:50,000 --> 01:27:53,791 - Nearly 7,000 spectators held their very own demolition. 2275 01:27:53,875 --> 01:27:56,666 Game two of the doubleheader was canceled last night. 2276 01:27:56,749 --> 01:28:00,208 That game will be forfeited. 2277 01:28:00,292 --> 01:28:02,499 - The anti-disco movement 2278 01:28:02,583 --> 01:28:05,083 was almost anti-Bee Gees at that point. 2279 01:28:05,167 --> 01:28:07,916 - Ironically, the soundtrack to "Saturday Night Fever," 2280 01:28:08,000 --> 01:28:09,916 the album that made them superstars, 2281 01:28:10,000 --> 01:28:12,583 also branded them as a disco group. 2282 01:28:12,666 --> 01:28:14,250 - Because you can dance to it, I mean, 2283 01:28:14,333 --> 01:28:15,916 doesn't necessarily make it a disco song. 2284 01:28:16,000 --> 01:28:17,583 I mean, you can dance to lots of songs. 2285 01:28:17,666 --> 01:28:20,000 - You really don't wanna be labeled "disco"... 2286 01:28:20,083 --> 01:28:21,292 - No, no. - At all, do you? 2287 01:28:21,375 --> 01:28:23,000 - Because our music is a variety 2288 01:28:23,083 --> 01:28:24,250 of different kinds of music. 2289 01:28:24,333 --> 01:28:25,958 It shouldn't be called just that. 2290 01:28:26,041 --> 01:28:28,000 - So people hated disco. 2291 01:28:28,083 --> 01:28:30,167 Hated it. 2292 01:28:30,250 --> 01:28:31,583 - We had FBI and Secret Service 2293 01:28:31,666 --> 01:28:33,624 around the airplane every time we landed in a certain place 2294 01:28:33,708 --> 01:28:35,458 'cause of the bomb threats. 2295 01:28:35,541 --> 01:28:37,958 It was scary stuff. 2296 01:28:38,041 --> 01:28:39,292 - We were perplexed, 2297 01:28:39,375 --> 01:28:40,708 'cause I got that vibe from them. 2298 01:28:40,791 --> 01:28:42,499 You know, "Why are people doing this?" 2299 01:28:42,583 --> 01:28:44,250 - The Bee Gees claim 2300 01:28:44,333 --> 01:28:46,458 some radio stations around the country 2301 01:28:46,541 --> 01:28:49,167 are refusing to play their new single. 2302 01:28:49,250 --> 01:28:50,458 - The Bee Gees are not allowed to have a hit 2303 01:28:50,541 --> 01:28:51,791 because they had a lot of success 2304 01:28:51,875 --> 01:28:52,958 with "Saturday Night Fever." 2305 01:28:53,041 --> 01:28:54,125 That, to me, is crap. 2306 01:28:54,208 --> 01:28:56,791 - Radio is, of course, very difficult to get back 2307 01:28:56,875 --> 01:28:58,250 once you lose them. 2308 01:28:58,333 --> 01:29:00,541 Back then, if you weren't on the radio, 2309 01:29:00,624 --> 01:29:01,624 there was nothing. 2310 01:29:01,708 --> 01:29:03,541 - Let's all grow up. We're just a pop group. 2311 01:29:03,624 --> 01:29:04,833 We're not a political force. 2312 01:29:04,916 --> 01:29:06,333 We're just making music. 2313 01:29:06,417 --> 01:29:07,916 But I don't think there's any reason to chalk us off 2314 01:29:08,000 --> 01:29:09,499 because we existed in the '70s 2315 01:29:09,583 --> 01:29:11,499 and we would like to exist in the '80s, you know. 2316 01:29:11,583 --> 01:29:14,375 Does anybody mind if we exist in the '80s, thank you? 2317 01:29:14,458 --> 01:29:17,000 - It was so overwhelming, 2318 01:29:17,083 --> 01:29:20,041 and the whole dynamic changed. 2319 01:29:20,125 --> 01:29:22,791 - There were just crazy days. 2320 01:29:22,875 --> 01:29:25,041 I preferred Maurice as Maurice not being a Bee Gee, 2321 01:29:25,125 --> 01:29:26,499 if that makes sense to you. 2322 01:29:26,583 --> 01:29:30,041 I preferred him as Maurice, not being a Bee Gee. 2323 01:29:30,125 --> 01:29:31,708 - Suddenly, they realized 2324 01:29:31,791 --> 01:29:34,000 that they were in a different position. 2325 01:29:34,083 --> 01:29:37,083 Robin went through a kind of-- 2326 01:29:37,167 --> 01:29:39,833 it wasn't a breakdown, but it was just something 2327 01:29:39,916 --> 01:29:43,208 where he felt very shy of being in public 2328 01:29:43,292 --> 01:29:45,417 and doing things for a while. 2329 01:29:45,499 --> 01:29:48,041 - The backlash was a very frightening experience. 2330 01:29:48,125 --> 01:29:49,833 When things get to that point, 2331 01:29:49,916 --> 01:29:53,208 you're out of control of the whole thing. 2332 01:29:53,292 --> 01:29:55,167 - We thought the Bee Gees better go on the back burner 2333 01:29:55,250 --> 01:29:57,375 for a while until this dies down 2334 01:29:57,458 --> 01:29:59,041 or something, you know. 2335 01:29:59,125 --> 01:30:01,417 We couldn't do anything as the Bee Gees at all. 2336 01:30:01,499 --> 01:30:03,208 ♪ ♪ 2337 01:30:03,292 --> 01:30:05,458 - Well, backlash, I'm really good on. 2338 01:30:09,666 --> 01:30:13,541 Any band that is successful 2339 01:30:13,624 --> 01:30:16,499 is going to have 2340 01:30:16,583 --> 01:30:20,208 some form of resist-- that's just the law of nature. 2341 01:30:20,292 --> 01:30:21,208 [somber music] 2342 01:30:21,292 --> 01:30:23,417 When they get so successful, 2343 01:30:23,499 --> 01:30:24,916 sometimes the only interesting thing 2344 01:30:25,000 --> 01:30:27,292 to say about them is, "Oh, I don't like them. 2345 01:30:27,375 --> 01:30:29,458 "Everyone else likes, you know, 'How Deep Is Your Love.' 2346 01:30:29,541 --> 01:30:32,333 I don't-- you know, it's stupid." 2347 01:30:32,417 --> 01:30:34,250 For bands of my generation, 2348 01:30:34,333 --> 01:30:36,250 you understand about the ups and downs. 2349 01:30:36,333 --> 01:30:38,583 You can see it. Like, where are the pitfalls? 2350 01:30:38,666 --> 01:30:40,916 What is the shit you're gonna take? 2351 01:30:41,000 --> 01:30:43,083 When might this happen? When might that happen? 2352 01:30:43,167 --> 01:30:44,958 For those people that were on the first wave 2353 01:30:45,041 --> 01:30:48,208 of sort of global pop superstardom, 2354 01:30:48,292 --> 01:30:49,958 if you wanna call it that, 2355 01:30:50,041 --> 01:30:51,083 it was new to them. 2356 01:30:51,167 --> 01:30:52,916 Like, "Why does everyone suddenly hate our band? 2357 01:30:53,000 --> 01:30:55,083 "We sold 8 billion records last year. 2358 01:30:55,167 --> 01:30:57,208 What's the deal?" 2359 01:30:57,292 --> 01:30:59,458 So it's confusing. 2360 01:30:59,541 --> 01:31:01,250 - It was not just the Bee Gees 2361 01:31:01,333 --> 01:31:05,791 but the idea of dance 2362 01:31:05,875 --> 01:31:07,458 in that period, 2363 01:31:07,541 --> 01:31:10,417 it was no longer acceptable 2364 01:31:10,499 --> 01:31:13,000 for this kind of music to carry the weight, 2365 01:31:13,083 --> 01:31:15,000 to carry the industry. 2366 01:31:15,083 --> 01:31:16,583 ♪ ♪ 2367 01:31:16,666 --> 01:31:18,499 Everybody was at that point in their lives 2368 01:31:18,583 --> 01:31:22,375 where they began to look for other things to do. 2369 01:31:23,875 --> 01:31:26,417 And Andy was having problems too. 2370 01:31:26,499 --> 01:31:28,125 - Andy? Andy... 2371 01:31:28,208 --> 01:31:30,125 - I saw him in Malibu. 2372 01:31:30,208 --> 01:31:31,250 He'd been involved 2373 01:31:31,333 --> 01:31:33,624 with a lot of people who were doing drugs, 2374 01:31:33,708 --> 01:31:35,333 and he was doing drugs. 2375 01:31:35,417 --> 01:31:37,791 He was doing cocaine. 2376 01:31:37,875 --> 01:31:40,583 I talked to him outside on the balcony, 2377 01:31:40,666 --> 01:31:42,583 saying, you know, "This is really a nice house, Andy. 2378 01:31:42,666 --> 01:31:44,749 "It's a nice car out there, that Porsche. 2379 01:31:44,833 --> 01:31:46,000 "Really nice. 2380 01:31:46,083 --> 01:31:48,375 You're not gonna keep all this, you know." 2381 01:31:48,458 --> 01:31:49,833 And he said, "What do you mean?" 2382 01:31:49,916 --> 01:31:51,833 I said, "You do what you're doing, 2383 01:31:51,916 --> 01:31:53,333 "this stuff will vanish. 2384 01:31:53,417 --> 01:31:54,791 "All this stuff will go. 2385 01:31:54,875 --> 01:31:57,167 Your career will go out the window, everything." 2386 01:31:57,250 --> 01:32:00,208 And he says, "I know. I know. I know what I have to do." 2387 01:32:00,292 --> 01:32:03,041 - There was a lot of chaos that I didn't witness, 2388 01:32:03,125 --> 01:32:05,666 but I was aware of it. 2389 01:32:05,749 --> 01:32:07,000 We were scattered all over the place 2390 01:32:07,083 --> 01:32:08,333 for a little while. 2391 01:32:08,417 --> 01:32:10,208 ♪ ♪ 2392 01:32:10,292 --> 01:32:14,041 Robin was either in New York, or Maurice was in England. 2393 01:32:14,125 --> 01:32:15,499 I was alone at the time, 2394 01:32:15,583 --> 01:32:18,000 and I got a phone call from Barbra. 2395 01:32:18,083 --> 01:32:20,708 ♪ ♪ 2396 01:32:20,791 --> 01:32:23,333 She asked me about writing songs for her, 2397 01:32:23,417 --> 01:32:26,666 and that terrified me. 2398 01:32:26,749 --> 01:32:29,375 I don't know if I can do this, you know? 2399 01:32:29,458 --> 01:32:30,708 So I called my brothers, 2400 01:32:30,791 --> 01:32:33,375 and I said, "This is what we gotta do. 2401 01:32:33,458 --> 01:32:35,499 And let's do it." 2402 01:32:35,583 --> 01:32:37,749 And that's how the "Guilty" album came about. 2403 01:32:37,833 --> 01:32:40,499 [Barry Gibb's "Woman in Love"] 2404 01:32:40,583 --> 01:32:41,875 [acoustic pop music] 2405 01:32:41,958 --> 01:32:44,833 We really could not get on the radio. 2406 01:32:44,916 --> 01:32:48,375 So the whole idea was to write for other people. 2407 01:32:48,458 --> 01:32:49,708 Let's be songwriters. 2408 01:32:49,791 --> 01:32:52,417 Let's try and graduate from being a group 2409 01:32:52,499 --> 01:32:55,583 that's probably... 2410 01:32:55,666 --> 01:32:58,000 beginning to fade, you know? 2411 01:32:58,083 --> 01:33:00,708 Let's see if we can dance around that. 2412 01:33:00,791 --> 01:33:04,292 ♪ Life is a moment in space ♪ 2413 01:33:04,375 --> 01:33:07,041 ♪ When the dream is gone ♪ 2414 01:33:07,125 --> 01:33:10,208 ♪ It's a lonelier place ♪ 2415 01:33:10,292 --> 01:33:12,583 - It was more about outlets for writing, 2416 01:33:12,666 --> 01:33:16,125 writing songs that aren't Bee Gees songs. 2417 01:33:16,208 --> 01:33:18,083 They have an attitude somewhere else. 2418 01:33:18,167 --> 01:33:19,833 - ♪ I stumble and fall ♪ 2419 01:33:19,916 --> 01:33:24,541 ♪ But I give you it all ♪ 2420 01:33:24,624 --> 01:33:28,292 ♪ I am a woman in love ♪ 2421 01:33:28,375 --> 01:33:30,417 ♪ And I do anything ♪ 2422 01:33:30,499 --> 01:33:33,458 ♪ To get you into my world ♪ 2423 01:33:33,541 --> 01:33:36,083 - Now, Robin, you and Barry cowrote "Woman in Love," 2424 01:33:36,167 --> 01:33:38,541 which became the international smash. 2425 01:33:38,624 --> 01:33:41,208 Was it difficult taking the woman's perspective? 2426 01:33:41,292 --> 01:33:43,791 - Oh, no. [laughter] 2427 01:33:43,875 --> 01:33:45,250 - It's our way of doing things. 2428 01:33:45,333 --> 01:33:46,292 We will assume that role 2429 01:33:46,375 --> 01:33:47,916 within the song to write the song. 2430 01:33:48,000 --> 01:33:49,875 - After the Barbra Streisand album, 2431 01:33:49,958 --> 01:33:52,083 managers would call up all the time: 2432 01:33:52,167 --> 01:33:53,958 "Gee, can I get together with you guys? 2433 01:33:54,041 --> 01:33:55,333 Will you make my record?" 2434 01:33:55,417 --> 01:33:56,833 And, you know, established artists. 2435 01:33:56,916 --> 01:33:58,333 - ♪ Oh ♪ 2436 01:33:58,417 --> 01:34:03,000 ♪ Why do you have to be a heartbreaker ♪ 2437 01:34:03,083 --> 01:34:04,541 ♪ When I'm just being ♪ 2438 01:34:04,624 --> 01:34:06,749 ♪ What you want me to be? ♪ 2439 01:34:06,833 --> 01:34:10,458 - ♪ Get in the middle of a chain reaction ♪ 2440 01:34:10,541 --> 01:34:12,624 ♪ You get a medal when you're lost in action ♪ 2441 01:34:12,708 --> 01:34:13,791 - It was just as important for us 2442 01:34:13,875 --> 01:34:15,583 to have an artist singing one of our songs 2443 01:34:15,666 --> 01:34:18,333 and being on the radio as it was for ourselves. 2444 01:34:18,417 --> 01:34:19,916 both: ♪ Islands in the stream ♪ 2445 01:34:20,000 --> 01:34:21,958 ♪ That is what we are ♪ 2446 01:34:22,041 --> 01:34:23,958 ♪ No one in between ♪ 2447 01:34:24,041 --> 01:34:26,333 ♪ How can we be wrong? ♪ 2448 01:34:26,417 --> 01:34:27,583 ♪ Sail away with me ♪ 2449 01:34:27,666 --> 01:34:29,458 - When you write a song with someone in mind 2450 01:34:29,541 --> 01:34:31,000 that you really love 2451 01:34:31,083 --> 01:34:33,833 and then that person ends up singing it, 2452 01:34:33,916 --> 01:34:35,624 there's no reward like it. 2453 01:34:35,708 --> 01:34:40,208 - ♪ Immortality ♪ 2454 01:34:40,292 --> 01:34:41,833 ♪ Oh, baby ♪ 2455 01:34:41,916 --> 01:34:45,541 ♪ There is a vision and a fire in me ♪ 2456 01:34:45,624 --> 01:34:47,624 ♪ Oh ♪ 2457 01:34:47,708 --> 01:34:50,833 - We wrote so many different types of song, 2458 01:34:50,916 --> 01:34:53,666 and that created that new determination 2459 01:34:53,749 --> 01:34:56,833 for us to become the Bee Gees again. 2460 01:34:56,916 --> 01:34:59,333 all: ♪ When a lonely heart breaks ♪ 2461 01:34:59,417 --> 01:35:02,541 ♪ It's the one that forsakes ♪ 2462 01:35:02,624 --> 01:35:05,833 ♪ It's the dream that we stole ♪ 2463 01:35:05,916 --> 01:35:07,583 - I think, over time, 2464 01:35:07,666 --> 01:35:10,041 we became more and more unified. 2465 01:35:10,125 --> 01:35:11,499 By '85, 2466 01:35:11,583 --> 01:35:13,041 we really got it together as a group. 2467 01:35:13,125 --> 01:35:15,167 ♪ ♪ 2468 01:35:15,250 --> 01:35:17,791 We became a real band again. 2469 01:35:17,875 --> 01:35:20,375 ["For Whom the Bell Tolls"] 2470 01:35:20,458 --> 01:35:23,541 all: ♪ For you, it's goodbye ♪ 2471 01:35:23,624 --> 01:35:25,708 ♪ For me, it's to cry ♪ 2472 01:35:25,791 --> 01:35:29,749 ♪ For whom the bell tolls ♪ 2473 01:35:29,833 --> 01:35:31,624 - We never really had a category. 2474 01:35:31,708 --> 01:35:33,875 We just had different periods, 2475 01:35:33,958 --> 01:35:36,499 and we managed to fit into different eras, 2476 01:35:36,583 --> 01:35:38,375 and we saw a lot of people 2477 01:35:38,458 --> 01:35:41,499 who were the champions of their era come and go. 2478 01:35:41,583 --> 01:35:44,499 We didn't always connect, but we stayed around. 2479 01:35:44,583 --> 01:35:46,791 We managed to defy the criticism 2480 01:35:46,875 --> 01:35:47,875 most of the time. 2481 01:35:47,958 --> 01:35:50,875 all: ♪ It's the one that forsakes ♪ 2482 01:35:50,958 --> 01:35:54,583 ♪ It's the dream that we stole ♪ 2483 01:35:54,666 --> 01:35:55,875 - And I just hope and pray 2484 01:35:55,958 --> 01:35:58,250 that the music lasts, you know? 2485 01:35:58,333 --> 01:35:59,749 Because I begin to recognize 2486 01:35:59,833 --> 01:36:01,875 that there's not as much time in front of me 2487 01:36:01,958 --> 01:36:04,624 as there is behind me. 2488 01:36:04,708 --> 01:36:07,624 [somber music] 2489 01:36:07,708 --> 01:36:10,749 ♪ ♪ 2490 01:36:10,833 --> 01:36:11,916 - Hi, Australia. 2491 01:36:12,000 --> 01:36:13,791 This is Andy Gibb here in Miami, 2492 01:36:13,875 --> 01:36:15,583 and I'd like to wish all you kids-- 2493 01:36:15,666 --> 01:36:16,958 One more time? 2494 01:36:17,041 --> 01:36:19,916 ♪ ♪ 2495 01:36:20,000 --> 01:36:21,083 Hi, Australia. 2496 01:36:21,167 --> 01:36:22,749 This is Andy Gibb here in Miami, 2497 01:36:22,833 --> 01:36:24,125 and I'd like to wish all the kids 2498 01:36:24,208 --> 01:36:26,791 and all my friends in Australia a very merry Christmas 2499 01:36:26,875 --> 01:36:28,125 and a happy New Year. 2500 01:36:28,208 --> 01:36:29,958 ♪ ♪ 2501 01:36:30,041 --> 01:36:34,250 - ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2502 01:36:34,333 --> 01:36:38,958 ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2503 01:36:39,041 --> 01:36:45,958 ♪ Ah, ah, ah ♪ 2504 01:36:46,041 --> 01:36:48,417 ♪ ♪ 2505 01:36:48,499 --> 01:36:49,666 - Barry was first, 2506 01:36:49,749 --> 01:36:51,791 and then, in fact, Robin's half an hour older than I am, 2507 01:36:51,875 --> 01:36:53,250 and we're twins, 2508 01:36:53,333 --> 01:36:55,958 and that's how we basically met. 2509 01:36:56,041 --> 01:36:56,958 [laughs] 2510 01:36:57,041 --> 01:37:01,125 - ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2511 01:37:01,208 --> 01:37:05,833 ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2512 01:37:05,916 --> 01:37:10,167 ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2513 01:37:10,250 --> 01:37:11,458 - Robert Stigwood, this is for you. 2514 01:37:11,541 --> 01:37:12,458 - No, you didn't do it. 2515 01:37:12,541 --> 01:37:13,791 You gotta react to the thing. - What line? 2516 01:37:13,875 --> 01:37:14,958 Oh, the reaction? 2517 01:37:15,041 --> 01:37:15,958 - Yeah. - All right. 2518 01:37:16,041 --> 01:37:17,499 - It's a close-up. - Okay. 2519 01:37:17,583 --> 01:37:19,041 Oh, yeah, that's right. Sorry, do it again. 2520 01:37:19,125 --> 01:37:20,458 - Yeah, do it again. - Do it again. 2521 01:37:20,541 --> 01:37:22,000 Okay. 2522 01:37:22,083 --> 01:37:23,624 Robert Stigwood, this is for you. 2523 01:37:23,708 --> 01:37:28,041 - ♪ Ah ♪ 2524 01:37:28,125 --> 01:37:33,375 ♪ Ah, ah, ah ♪ 2525 01:37:33,458 --> 01:37:37,833 ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2526 01:37:37,916 --> 01:37:41,375 ♪ Ah, ah ♪ 2527 01:37:41,458 --> 01:37:46,167 [cheers and applause] 2528 01:37:46,250 --> 01:37:47,292 - Ladies and gentlemen, 2529 01:37:47,375 --> 01:37:49,833 an Oscar nominee for "Saturday Night Fever," 2530 01:37:49,916 --> 01:37:52,458 John Travolta. 2531 01:37:52,541 --> 01:37:54,541 - Tonight 2532 01:37:54,624 --> 01:37:57,125 the Recording Academy is celebrating 2533 01:37:57,208 --> 01:38:00,167 three brothers who changed my life 2534 01:38:00,250 --> 01:38:02,541 and the world of music forever, 2535 01:38:02,624 --> 01:38:05,624 and though brothers Robin and Maurice are sadly gone, 2536 01:38:05,708 --> 01:38:08,666 we are thrilled to be joined by a brother like no other, 2537 01:38:08,749 --> 01:38:11,458 one of the most successful singer-songwriters 2538 01:38:11,541 --> 01:38:14,417 of our times, my friend Barry Gibb. 2539 01:38:14,499 --> 01:38:16,708 [cheers and applause] 2540 01:38:16,791 --> 01:38:21,208 - ♪ Hmm ♪ 2541 01:38:21,292 --> 01:38:25,666 [vocal looping] 2542 01:38:25,749 --> 01:38:28,666 ♪ Feel I'm going back ♪ 2543 01:38:28,749 --> 01:38:31,666 ♪ To Massachusetts ♪ 2544 01:38:31,749 --> 01:38:34,375 ♪ ♪ 2545 01:38:34,458 --> 01:38:37,375 ♪ Something's telling me ♪ 2546 01:38:37,458 --> 01:38:40,167 ♪ I must go home ♪ 2547 01:38:40,250 --> 01:38:43,292 - They're a brilliant chapter in the book of music. 2548 01:38:43,375 --> 01:38:44,875 You know, some people are a footnote. 2549 01:38:44,958 --> 01:38:45,916 Some people take up-- 2550 01:38:46,000 --> 01:38:48,458 the Beatles and Dylan take up huge-- 2551 01:38:48,541 --> 01:38:49,875 But the Bee Gees are there. 2552 01:38:49,958 --> 01:38:53,417 all: ♪ The day I left ♪ 2553 01:38:53,499 --> 01:38:57,208 ♪ Her standing on her own ♪ 2554 01:38:57,292 --> 01:38:59,458 - You go back and look at their body of work, 2555 01:38:59,541 --> 01:39:01,916 and it's some of the best songs ever written. 2556 01:39:02,000 --> 01:39:05,208 - ♪ About the life in Massachusetts ♪ 2557 01:39:05,292 --> 01:39:06,749 - There's nothing else to say about the Bee Gees 2558 01:39:06,833 --> 01:39:08,417 except they were fucking awesome. 2559 01:39:08,499 --> 01:39:11,458 - ♪ Speak about the people ♪ 2560 01:39:11,541 --> 01:39:15,292 ♪ I have seen ♪ 2561 01:39:15,375 --> 01:39:19,250 all: ♪ And the lights all went down ♪ 2562 01:39:19,333 --> 01:39:22,958 ♪ In Massachusetts ♪ 2563 01:39:23,041 --> 01:39:26,041 ♪ And Massachusetts ♪ 2564 01:39:26,125 --> 01:39:30,958 ♪ Is one place I have seen ♪ 2565 01:39:31,041 --> 01:39:34,083 - ♪ And Massachusetts ♪ 2566 01:39:34,167 --> 01:39:39,333 all: ♪ Is one place I have seen ♪ 2567 01:39:39,417 --> 01:39:42,417 [cheers and applause] 2568 01:39:46,541 --> 01:39:49,541 [birds singing] 2569 01:39:52,041 --> 01:39:55,458 - When I think about it now, 2570 01:39:55,541 --> 01:39:57,875 I think about how it all sort of started. 2571 01:39:59,541 --> 01:40:01,791 We just had this dream, 2572 01:40:01,875 --> 01:40:04,292 and we thought, "Well, 2573 01:40:04,375 --> 01:40:06,292 what do we want to be famous for?" 2574 01:40:08,417 --> 01:40:11,041 It turns out it was the songwriting. 2575 01:40:11,125 --> 01:40:14,833 [somber piano music] 2576 01:40:14,916 --> 01:40:18,041 And I think everything we set out to do, 2577 01:40:18,125 --> 01:40:20,208 we did, against all odds. 2578 01:40:20,292 --> 01:40:22,333 ♪ ♪ 2579 01:40:22,417 --> 01:40:24,333 I can't honestly come to terms with the fact 2580 01:40:24,417 --> 01:40:26,167 that they're not here anymore. 2581 01:40:26,250 --> 01:40:28,167 Never been able to do that. 2582 01:40:28,250 --> 01:40:32,333 ♪ ♪ 2583 01:40:32,417 --> 01:40:34,167 I'm always reliving it. 2584 01:40:34,250 --> 01:40:35,499 It's always, "What would Robin think?" 2585 01:40:35,583 --> 01:40:37,333 or, "What would Maurice think?" 2586 01:40:37,417 --> 01:40:39,167 And Andy. 2587 01:40:39,250 --> 01:40:40,624 It never goes away. 2588 01:40:40,708 --> 01:40:43,666 ♪ ♪ 2589 01:40:43,749 --> 01:40:47,041 And what I wanted to say earlier 2590 01:40:47,125 --> 01:40:49,000 is that I'd rather have 'em all back here, 2591 01:40:49,083 --> 01:40:50,583 no hits at all. 2592 01:40:50,666 --> 01:40:55,749 ♪ ♪ 2593 01:40:55,833 --> 01:40:58,749 ["Run to Me" playing] 2594 01:40:58,833 --> 01:41:01,749 [heartfelt acoustic guitar music] 2595 01:41:01,833 --> 01:41:05,541 ♪ ♪ 2596 01:41:05,624 --> 01:41:08,541 [cheers and applause] 2597 01:41:08,624 --> 01:41:13,541 ♪ ♪ 2598 01:41:13,624 --> 01:41:16,916 ♪ If ever you got rain in your heart ♪ 2599 01:41:17,000 --> 01:41:18,417 ♪ ♪ 2600 01:41:18,499 --> 01:41:20,041 ♪ Someone has hurt you ♪ 2601 01:41:20,125 --> 01:41:22,499 ♪ And torn you apart ♪ 2602 01:41:22,583 --> 01:41:23,666 ♪ ♪ 2603 01:41:23,749 --> 01:41:25,875 ♪ Am I unwise ♪ 2604 01:41:25,958 --> 01:41:28,208 ♪ To open up your eyes ♪ 2605 01:41:28,292 --> 01:41:30,916 ♪ To love me? ♪ 2606 01:41:31,000 --> 01:41:33,749 ♪ And when you got nothing to lose ♪ 2607 01:41:33,833 --> 01:41:35,125 ♪ ♪ 2608 01:41:35,208 --> 01:41:37,083 ♪ Nothing to pay for ♪ 2609 01:41:37,167 --> 01:41:39,375 ♪ And nothing to choose ♪ 2610 01:41:39,458 --> 01:41:40,417 ♪ ♪ 2611 01:41:40,499 --> 01:41:42,708 ♪ Am I unwise ♪ - ♪ Oh, no ♪ 2612 01:41:42,791 --> 01:41:44,916 - ♪ To open up your eyes ♪ 2613 01:41:45,000 --> 01:41:47,958 ♪ To love me? ♪ - ♪ Run to me ♪ 2614 01:41:48,041 --> 01:41:51,208 ♪ Whenever you're lonely ♪ 2615 01:41:51,292 --> 01:41:53,541 ♪ Run to me ♪ 2616 01:41:53,624 --> 01:41:56,624 ♪ If you need a shoulder ♪ 2617 01:41:56,708 --> 01:41:59,125 all: ♪ Now and then ♪ 2618 01:41:59,208 --> 01:42:01,875 ♪ You need someone older ♪ 2619 01:42:01,958 --> 01:42:05,958 ♪ So, darling ♪ 2620 01:42:06,041 --> 01:42:11,000 ♪ You run to me ♪ 2621 01:42:11,083 --> 01:42:14,208 [cheers and applause] 2622 01:42:38,666 --> 01:42:41,583 ["Stayin' Alive"] 2623 01:42:41,666 --> 01:42:48,666 ♪ ♪ 2624 01:42:51,791 --> 01:42:54,541 - ♪ Well, you can tell by the way I use my walk ♪ 2625 01:42:54,624 --> 01:42:57,208 ♪ I'm a woman's man, no time to talk ♪ 2626 01:42:57,292 --> 01:42:59,167 ♪ Music loud and women warm ♪ 2627 01:42:59,250 --> 01:43:01,499 ♪ I've been kicked around since I was born ♪ 2628 01:43:01,583 --> 01:43:04,000 all: ♪ And now it's all right, it's okay ♪ 2629 01:43:04,083 --> 01:43:06,333 ♪ And you may look the other way ♪ 2630 01:43:06,417 --> 01:43:08,708 ♪ We can try to understand ♪ 2631 01:43:08,791 --> 01:43:11,041 ♪ "The New York Times'" effect on man ♪ 2632 01:43:11,125 --> 01:43:13,167 ♪ Whether you're a brother or whether you're a mother ♪ 2633 01:43:13,250 --> 01:43:15,666 ♪ You're stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 2634 01:43:15,749 --> 01:43:17,791 ♪ Feel the city breaking and everybody shaking ♪ 2635 01:43:17,875 --> 01:43:20,333 ♪ And we're stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 2636 01:43:20,417 --> 01:43:22,666 ♪ Ah, ha, ha, ha ♪ 2637 01:43:22,749 --> 01:43:24,875 ♪ Stayin' alive, stayin' alive ♪ 2638 01:43:24,958 --> 01:43:27,125 ♪ Ah, ha, ha, ha ♪ 2639 01:43:27,208 --> 01:43:31,499 ♪ Stayin' alive ♪ 2640 01:43:31,583 --> 01:43:35,708 [cheers and applause] 2641 01:43:35,791 --> 01:43:37,499 - ♪ And you walk ♪ 2642 01:43:37,583 --> 01:43:41,375 ♪ ♪ 2643 01:43:41,458 --> 01:43:43,541 ♪ Life going nowhere ♪ 2644 01:43:43,624 --> 01:43:46,583 ♪ Somebody help me ♪ 2645 01:43:46,666 --> 01:43:48,375 ♪ Somebody help me, yeah ♪ 2646 01:43:48,458 --> 01:43:52,875 ♪ ♪ 2647 01:43:52,958 --> 01:43:55,041 ♪ Life going nowhere ♪ 2648 01:43:55,125 --> 01:43:58,250 ♪ Somebody help me ♪ 2649 01:43:58,333 --> 01:44:05,250 ♪ I'm stayin' alive ♪ 2650 01:44:05,333 --> 01:44:08,875 ♪ ♪ 2651 01:44:08,958 --> 01:44:11,041 ♪ Life going nowhere ♪ 2652 01:44:11,125 --> 01:44:13,833 ♪ Somebody help me ♪ 2653 01:44:13,916 --> 01:44:15,875 ♪ Somebody help me, yeah ♪ 2654 01:44:15,958 --> 01:44:17,916 ♪ ♪ 2655 01:44:18,000 --> 01:44:20,083 ♪ Somebody ♪ 2656 01:44:20,167 --> 01:44:22,417 ♪ Life going nowhere ♪ 2657 01:44:22,499 --> 01:44:25,958 ♪ Somebody help me ♪ 2658 01:44:26,041 --> 01:44:32,958 ♪ I'm stayin' alive ♪ 2659 01:44:33,041 --> 01:44:36,250 ♪ ♪ 2660 01:44:36,333 --> 01:44:39,333 [cheers and applause] 2661 01:44:56,125 --> 01:44:59,167 crowd: Barry, Barry, Barry, 2662 01:44:59,250 --> 01:45:03,666 Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry, 2663 01:45:03,749 --> 01:45:08,624 Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry, Barry. 2664 01:45:08,708 --> 01:45:11,624 ["Butterfly"] 2665 01:45:11,708 --> 01:45:14,125 [soft acoustic guitar music] 2666 01:45:14,208 --> 01:45:16,833 One, two, three, four. 2667 01:45:16,916 --> 01:45:23,875 ♪ ♪ 2668 01:45:27,541 --> 01:45:30,749 all: ♪ Green fields ♪ 2669 01:45:30,833 --> 01:45:34,749 ♪ Where we used to wander ♪ 2670 01:45:34,833 --> 01:45:36,791 ♪ ♪ 2671 01:45:36,875 --> 01:45:42,041 ♪ Purple valleys ♪ 2672 01:45:42,125 --> 01:45:45,167 ♪ Near my home ♪ 2673 01:45:45,250 --> 01:45:47,458 ♪ ♪ 2674 01:45:47,541 --> 01:45:52,167 ♪ We would play there ♪ 2675 01:45:52,250 --> 01:45:55,541 ♪ Beneath the sky ♪ 2676 01:45:55,624 --> 01:45:58,125 ♪ ♪ 2677 01:45:58,208 --> 01:46:00,708 ♪ Then I kissed you ♪ 2678 01:46:00,791 --> 01:46:03,499 ♪ ♪ 2679 01:46:03,583 --> 01:46:06,499 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2680 01:46:06,583 --> 01:46:10,208 ♪ ♪ 2681 01:46:10,292 --> 01:46:14,208 ♪ Young girl ♪ 2682 01:46:14,292 --> 01:46:17,708 ♪ You came restless ♪ 2683 01:46:17,791 --> 01:46:19,499 ♪ ♪ 2684 01:46:19,583 --> 01:46:24,875 ♪ And you left me ♪ 2685 01:46:24,958 --> 01:46:27,875 ♪ Here to cry ♪ 2686 01:46:27,958 --> 01:46:30,208 ♪ ♪ 2687 01:46:30,292 --> 01:46:35,375 ♪ My big teardrops ♪ 2688 01:46:35,458 --> 01:46:39,208 ♪ In red pastures ♪ 2689 01:46:39,292 --> 01:46:40,541 ♪ ♪ 2690 01:46:40,624 --> 01:46:43,167 ♪ For I loved you ♪ 2691 01:46:43,250 --> 01:46:45,916 ♪ ♪ 2692 01:46:46,000 --> 01:46:48,749 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2693 01:46:48,833 --> 01:46:51,083 ♪ ♪ 2694 01:46:51,167 --> 01:46:55,041 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2695 01:46:55,125 --> 01:46:57,541 ♪ Yeah ♪ 2696 01:46:57,624 --> 01:47:00,167 ♪ I dream about you ♪ 2697 01:47:00,250 --> 01:47:04,208 ♪ Lonely without you, butterfly ♪ 2698 01:47:04,292 --> 01:47:06,624 ♪ ♪ 2699 01:47:06,708 --> 01:47:10,417 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2700 01:47:10,499 --> 01:47:13,041 ♪ Yeah ♪ 2701 01:47:13,125 --> 01:47:15,624 ♪ Each night I'm sleeping ♪ 2702 01:47:15,708 --> 01:47:19,624 ♪ Your face comes creeping, butterfly ♪ 2703 01:47:19,708 --> 01:47:23,208 ♪ ♪ 2704 01:47:23,292 --> 01:47:26,375 ♪ Green fields ♪ 2705 01:47:26,458 --> 01:47:30,208 ♪ Where we used to wander ♪ 2706 01:47:30,292 --> 01:47:32,083 ♪ ♪ 2707 01:47:32,167 --> 01:47:37,417 ♪ Purple valleys ♪ 2708 01:47:37,499 --> 01:47:40,125 ♪ Near my home ♪ 2709 01:47:40,208 --> 01:47:42,417 ♪ ♪ 2710 01:47:42,499 --> 01:47:46,958 ♪ We would play there ♪ 2711 01:47:47,041 --> 01:47:50,499 ♪ Beneath the sky ♪ 2712 01:47:50,583 --> 01:47:52,791 ♪ ♪ 2713 01:47:52,875 --> 01:47:55,250 ♪ For I loved you ♪ 2714 01:47:55,333 --> 01:47:57,833 ♪ ♪ 2715 01:47:57,916 --> 01:48:00,833 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2716 01:48:00,916 --> 01:48:02,958 ♪ ♪ 2717 01:48:03,041 --> 01:48:06,458 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2718 01:48:06,541 --> 01:48:09,333 ♪ Yeah ♪ 2719 01:48:09,417 --> 01:48:11,791 ♪ I dream about you ♪ 2720 01:48:11,875 --> 01:48:15,791 ♪ Lonely without you, butterfly ♪ 2721 01:48:15,875 --> 01:48:18,083 ♪ ♪ 2722 01:48:18,167 --> 01:48:21,583 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2723 01:48:21,666 --> 01:48:24,333 ♪ Yeah ♪ 2724 01:48:24,417 --> 01:48:26,708 ♪ Each night I'm sleeping ♪ 2725 01:48:26,791 --> 01:48:30,958 ♪ Your face comes creeping, butterfly ♪ 2726 01:48:31,041 --> 01:48:33,375 ♪ ♪ 2727 01:48:33,458 --> 01:48:40,375 ♪ Butterfly ♪ 2728 01:48:40,458 --> 01:48:47,208 ♪ ♪ 2729 01:48:47,292 --> 01:48:50,208 ["Words"] 2730 01:48:50,292 --> 01:48:53,208 [soft piano ballad] 2731 01:48:53,292 --> 01:48:59,000 ♪ ♪ 2732 01:48:59,083 --> 01:49:03,333 - ♪ Smile an everlasting smile ♪ 2733 01:49:03,417 --> 01:49:07,333 ♪ A smile can bring you near to me ♪ 2734 01:49:07,458 --> 01:49:10,041 ♪ ♪ 2735 01:49:10,125 --> 01:49:15,041 ♪ Don't ever let me find you gone ♪ 2736 01:49:15,125 --> 01:49:19,417 ♪ 'Cause that would bring a tear to me ♪ 2737 01:49:19,499 --> 01:49:22,708 ♪ ♪ 2738 01:49:22,791 --> 01:49:26,833 ♪ Talk in everlasting words ♪ 2739 01:49:26,916 --> 01:49:31,250 ♪ And dedicate them all to me ♪ 2740 01:49:31,333 --> 01:49:33,875 ♪ ♪ 2741 01:49:33,958 --> 01:49:38,708 ♪ And I will give you all my life ♪ 2742 01:49:38,791 --> 01:49:43,083 ♪ I'm here if you should call to me ♪ 2743 01:49:43,167 --> 01:49:45,708 ♪ ♪ 2744 01:49:45,791 --> 01:49:47,499 ♪ You think ♪ 2745 01:49:47,583 --> 01:49:50,458 ♪ That I don't even mean ♪ 2746 01:49:50,541 --> 01:49:56,083 ♪ I single word I say ♪ 2747 01:49:56,167 --> 01:49:59,624 ♪ It's only words ♪ 2748 01:49:59,708 --> 01:50:02,708 ♪ And words are all I have ♪ 2749 01:50:02,791 --> 01:50:06,875 ♪ To take your heart away ♪ 2750 01:50:06,958 --> 01:50:08,417 ♪ ♪ 2751 01:50:08,499 --> 01:50:12,208 ♪ It's only words ♪ 2752 01:50:12,292 --> 01:50:15,749 ♪ And words are all I have ♪ 2753 01:50:15,833 --> 01:50:18,333 ♪ To take your heart ♪ 2754 01:50:18,417 --> 01:50:22,541 ♪ Away ♪ 2755 01:50:22,624 --> 01:50:29,624 ♪ ♪ 2756 01:50:40,041 --> 01:50:42,041 [bright tone] 186887

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.