When Maurice Gibb died suddenly in 2003, the hearts of music fans around the
world broke.
Famously he and his brothers once asked the musical question “how do you mend a broken heart”?
It’s not starting a joke or even heading to Massachusetts – it’s remembering the music that made the Bee Gees one of the biggest groups in the world.
Memories fade, but music brings them back to life again.
Can you remember what you were doing in 1967 when the airwaves were filled with the melodic tunes of the soon to be super-group the “Bee Gees”? Or were you lacing up your platform shoes and donning those wide lapels in the late seventies only to come down with an incurable case of “Saturday Night Fever”?
It was all followed by the extremely successful “One Night Only” Tour and subsequent CD and DVD sales, but now the never to be repeated live performances are only a memory.
However, audiences have the chance to enjoy an evening of music and those unmistakable vocal tones of the Bee Gees.
The Very Best of the Bee Gees is a complete discography of the Bee Gees’ finest songs. A live seven-piece band presents this historical journey from 1967 to 1999 and every song played is live with no recording or sequencing. The production boasts approximately thirty tracks in two sets, beginning with such songs as “New York Mining Disaster” and “Massachusetts”, through the Disco period of “Stayin’ Alive” and “Night Fever” culminating with their current hit “Alone”.
The Very Best of the Bee Gees is performed with full four-part harmony as it sounds on the original recordings. For some of the very best memories, see the Very Best of the Bee Gees and this first class presentation will leave you wanting more.
Bee Gee memories stayin’ alive
Bee Gee memories stayin’ alive