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Best of Bee Gees

Best of Bee Gees
 

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The Bee Gees

Best of Bee Gees

 
Cover Best of Bee Gees click the image to get it in cd-cover size
Release Date:
Label: Universal/Polydor
Rating: 4.5
 
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Description: Long before they reinvented themselves as the kings of Saturday Night Fever, The Bee Gees were an amazing Australian trio singing songs that were more rooted by lilting folk guitar melodies than dance floor beats. The high, almost falsetto, harmonies were in place even in their hits of the mid- and late-1960s. The melodicism of hits like "Holiday" and "I've Gotta Get a Message to You" had a darker, even eerie, quality compared to the more typically melancholy "To Love Somebody." Comparing the music on Best of the Bee Gees, Volume I to the later antics of the Brothers Gibb is the proverbial apples and oranges. It's clear that the boys truly knew how to craft a hit regardless of the genre, but it does beg the question, "Will the real Bee Gees please stand up?" While both periods have their moments, the smart money seems to be on their earlier work. --Steve Gdula
 
 

 
Tracklist of Best of Bee Gees

Disc 1
1 Holiday  2:58 view lyrics
2 I've Gotta Get a Message to You   no lyrics yet - submit it
3 I Can't See Nobody  3:48 view lyrics
4 Words   view lyrics
5 I Started a Joke   view lyrics
6 Tomorrow, Tomorrow  4:08 no lyrics yet - submit it
7 First of May   view lyrics
8 World   view lyrics
9 Massachusetts   view lyrics
10 To Love Somebody   view lyrics
11 Every Christian Lion Hearted Man Will Show You  3:40 view lyrics
12 New York Mining Disaster 1941   view lyrics

Reviews:

Great

Great songs, great melodies. This is a treasure!!



How can you mend a broken heart? Listen to this heart warming music!

Sixties folk-pop classics

This is a straight re-issue of their earliest hits compilation, containing most of their UK hits up to mid-1969. It stops just too soon to include either Saved by the bell (a Robin Gibb solo) or Don't forget to remember (my favorite Bee Gees song) but the can be found on volume 2

Their impact on the American charts in this period was somewhat patchy, but most of these reached the UK top ten, while Massachusetts and I've gotta get a message to you both topped the British charts. To love somebody was a huge UK hit for Nina Simone. On this collection, my favorite is First of May but Massachusetts, Words and World are not far behind. The songs cover a variety of themes - reflective songs, sad songs and even death songs. If you are looking for bright, cheerful music, you won't find a lot here.

Death songs were common in the sixties - remember Leader of the pack (Shangri-Las), Terry (Twinkle) and Tell Laura I love her, just to name a few - so the Bee Gees were just carrying on the tradition by recording the two that appear on this album. I've gotta get a message to you is about a man facing execution, trying to pass a final message to somebody. New York mining disaster 1941 is actually about a disaster elsewhere in the world, but changed to obscure its identity - I believe it may really be about a coal tip that caused a landslide on to a school in Aberfan in 1966. The actual lyrics only refer to a man searching for his wife after the landslide, so the song could be applicable to any landslide disaster, anywhere in the world. If it was about Aberfan, I can understand why the Bee Gees didn't want to put it in the song title when they were still looking for their first UK hit and Aberfan was still topical. The song gave them their first hit, peaking at twelve in the British charts.

The remainder of the album, though often reflective or sad, is not really that depressing. Massachusetts, for example, has brilliant, atmospheric music, so you may not take any notice of the lyrics.

There are many excellent songs here although many of them can be found on later compilations that also cover later aspects of their career. Great as they are, it is sometimes nice to be able to focus on one aspect of their career - in this case their sixties music. We still await a definitive collection of their folk-pop music but until then we have this and Best of Bee Gees volume 2.

I've Gotta Get A Message To You

To my mind and memory, this "Best of The Bee Gees" is exactly that - simply the best. It represented their best up to the year it had been first issued and it remains the best even up until now and will undoubtedly remain "the best" for all time to come.
"Massachusettes" makes this album an absolute must have. But my all time favorite track on this album, and of the entire Bee Gees' musical catalogue was and is and remains "The First of May" -- there has never been a better more nostalgic and reverie of life provoking song ever been written or performed by The Bee Gees nor by any other pop/rock group.
If you can get only one Bee Gees album/cd - make it this collection. You won't regret it ever. "When we were small . . . and Christmas trees were tall . . . now we are tall . . .and Christmas trees are small . . .and you don't ask the time of day . . and guess who'll cry come First of May?" -- Thanks Barry, Robin, and Maurice for this song . . . and for all the rest.