Bee Gees
吉他谱: 40 粉丝: 6


由Barry Gibb、Robin Gibb与Maurice Gibb三兄弟于1958年组成的BeeGees组合。从1964年开始,三兄弟以完美无缺的合音技巧活跃于20世纪60年代至90年代,被誉为史上最成功及最完美的三重唱,并缔造了两项空前绝后的纪录:乐坛史上唯一连续创造出6首全美冠军歌曲的歌手乐队以及唯一同时拥有5首歌曲在美国单曲榜Top 10的歌手,共获得过7次葛莱美大奖,创造了全球最畅销原声音乐大碟。他们的音乐跨越三个年代而流行不衰,殿堂地位影响至深,更是不少天皇巨星的偶像,改编翻唱BeeGees歌曲的天王天后级人马包括有猫王,芭芭拉史翠珊、席琳狄翁、Diana Ross、谭咏麟、张学友、张国荣等,翻唱次数高达6500次。

早期的比吉斯以充满灵魂的音乐为走向。在70年代中期,比吉斯转向他们称之为“蓝眼灵魂乐”的音乐风格,以假声唱腔搭配富有旋律的曲调与肥厚的贝斯声线,俨然成为新式的R&B风潮。1975年发行的《Main Course》这张专辑中的单曲Nights on Broadway更在1997年轰动各大舞池。如今专辑在全球累计销售量突破1亿张大关的比吉斯,不仅是惟一在60~90年代都能夺得排行榜冠军的歌手,更是历史上最成功的三重唱。拥抱过7次葛莱美奖的比吉斯,缔造了两项空前绝后的纪录:乐坛历史上惟一连续创作出6首全美冠军曲的艺人,以及惟一同时拥有5首歌曲在美国单曲榜TOP10的歌手。

其实论成立时间的长久,和在歌坛持续走红的时间Bee gees应该是最长的一个乐队组合了,它成立于上个世纪六十年代由兄弟三人Robin,Maurice和Barry组成,其中Robin,Maurice是一对双胞胎兄弟,Robin和Barry的独特的假声唱法使得乐队在乐坛中独树一帜,也是这个乐队的特有标志,而Maurice最是擅长于各种乐吉他,贝斯和键盘无一不精,他们成立于澳洲,但成功则是在他们的祖国英国。1967推出首张大碟The Bee Gees First,使乐坛为之轰动一时,当时的成名曲New York Mining Disaster 1941、I Started A Joke,Massachusetts、Holiday和Words是那个时代的代表作,其中Words被许多团体所翻唱

进入70年代后Bee gees更是一发不可收拾,随着How Can You Mend A Broken Heart在70年代初期夺下排行榜的冠军后,Bee gees曲风转向R&B但又不失他们的特色假声唱法,再配以强劲的贝司作为伴奏,成为了另一种新式的R&B曲风,专辑Saturday Night Fever成为70年代最受欢迎的专辑,狂卖4000万张。接下来的Spirits Having Flown专辑有奠定了乐坛最伟大乐队的地位。

Robin Gibb是BeeGees的灵魂人物兼主音,以独特的怀柔唱腔引绎BeeGees在欧美乐坛的至尊地位,改编翻唱BeeGees的歌曲高达500多首。

80时年代Beegees开始单飞发展,成绩也非常令人欣喜,Beegees不仅作为上个世纪夺得排行榜冠军最多的组合,也是历史上最成功的三重唱组合。

2001年新专辑This Is Where I Came In又令我们看到了这个常青组合的魅力无穷。

令我们感到悲伤的是Maurice于2002年时去世,2003年的格莱美特别颁发“传奇成就特别奖Legend Award”给Bee gees这支经典流行组合,以表彰他们对音乐发展的卓越贡献与重大影响。

by Bruce Eder
No popular music act of the 60s, 70s, 80s, or 90s experienced more ups and downs in popularity, or attracted a more varied audience across the decades than the Bee Gees. Beginning in the mid- to late 60s as a Beatlesque ensemble, they quickly developed as songwriters in their own right and style, perfecting in the process a progressive pop sound all their own. Then, after hitting a trough in their popularity in the early 70s, they reinvented themselves as perhaps the most successful white soul act of all time during the disco era. Their popularity faded with the passing of discos appeal, but the Bee Gees made a successful comeback in virtually every corner of the globe. What remained a constant through their history is their extraordinary singing, rooted in three voices that were appealing individually and comprised so perfectly and naturally by melding together that they make such acts as the Beatles, the Everly Brothers, and Simon & Garfunkel — all noted for their harmonies — almost seem arch and artificial.

The group was also rocks most successful brother act. Barry Gibb, born on September 1, 1946, in Manchester, England, and his fraternal twin brothers Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb, born on December 22, 1949, on the Isle of Man, were three of five children of Hugh Gibb, a bandleader, and Barbara Gibb, a former singer. The three of them gravitated toward music very early on, encouraged by their father, who reportedly saw his sons at first as a diminutive version of the Mills Brothers, a 30s and 40s black American harmony group. The three Gibb brothers made their earliest performances at local movie theaters in Manchester in 1955, singing between shows. Their intention was merely to mime to records as a novelty entertainment act, but when the records got broken, they sang for real and got a rousing response from the delighted audience. They performed under a variety of names, including the Blue Cats and (reportedly) the Rattlesnakes, and for a time, fell under the influence of Englands skiffle king, Lonnie Donegan, and proto-rock & roller Tommy Steele.

Their early lives were interrupted when the family moved to Australia in 1958, resettling in Brisbane. The trio, known as the Brothers Gibb — with Barry writing songs by then — continued performing at talent shows and attracted the attention of a local DJ, Bill Gates, which led to an extended engagement at the Beachcomber Nightclub. They eventually got their own local television show in Brisbane, and it was around this time that they took on the name the Bee Gees (for Brothers Gibb). In 1962, they landed their first recording contract with the Festival Records label in Australia, debuting with the single Three Kisses of Love. The trio was astoundingly popular among the press and on television, and performed to very enthusiastic audience response. They eventually released an LP, The Bee Gees Sing and Play 14 Barry Gibb Songs, but actual hit records eluded them in Australia. They were witness during 1963 and 1964 to the explosion of British beat music half a world away with the success of the Beatles, whose harmony-based approach to rock & roll and reliance on original songs only encouraged the three Gibb brothers to keep pushing in those directions.

By late 1966, however, theyd decided to stop trying to conquer the Australian music world, or to reach the rest of the world from Australia, and return to England — which, thanks to the Beatles, was now the center of rock and popular music for the whole world. It was while on the boat, in mid-ocean, that the Gibb family learned that the Bee Gees had finally topped the charts back in Australia with their final release, Spicks and Specks. Just as the Seekers had done upon leaving Australia, the group had sent demo recordings ahead of them to England, and Spicks and Specks had attracted the interest of Robert Stigwood (an associate of Brian Epstein). The trio was signed by Stigwood to a five-year contract upon their arrival, and they began shaping their sound anew in the environment of Swinging London in 1967. Barry Gibb and Robin Gibb alternated the lead vocal spot, harmonizing together and with Maurice Gibb. Barry played rhythm guitar as well, while Maurice, in addition to his backing vocal spot, was the triple-threat musician in the core lineup, playing bass, piano, organ, and Mellotron, among other instruments. The brothers soon expanded the group with the addition of guitarist Vince Melouney and drummer Colin Petersen, whose presence turned them into a fully functional performing group. Their first English recording, New York Mining Disaster 1941, released in mid-1967, made the Top 20 in England and America and established a pattern for the groups work for the next two years. As an original by the group, it had a haunting melody and a strange lyric; it wasnt so much psychedelic (though it could pass for psychedelia in a pop vein) as it was surreal. They had successful follow-ups with Holiday and To Love Somebody.

Robert Stigwood arranged for Polydor to release the Bee Gees records in England and Europe, and for Atlantic Records to issue their work in America. Atlantic had missed out on the entire British Invasion and now they had a group whose music resembled that of the Beatles at their most accessible. The Bee Gees records had gorgeous melodies and arrangements and were steeped in romantic yet complex lyrics, many of them containing a strangely downbeat mood that no one seemed to mind. One curious offshoot of their appeal was that Stigwood was able to convince Atlantic Records, as part of the deal for the Bee Gees, to accept and release the recordings of a relatively unknown trio called Cream. At the time, Eric Clapton was not much more than a cult figure in the United States, more rumor than star (his recordings with the Yardbirds had never even appeared in America with his name mentioned on them), but Atlantic — which recorded Disraeli Gears — helped change that, selling millions of records in the bargain.

The Bee Gees single Massachusetts was a chart-topper in England and launched the group on their first wave of stardom. Their music was made even more attractive by the fact that their albums were unusually well put together. Reflecting the influence of the Beatles, a lot of attention was lavished on the groups LP tracks rather than relying on the presence of a hit or two to justify their existence. Bee Gees 1st, cut in early 1967, had its weaker spots, but not a throwaway track on it, while Horizontal and Idea were strong LPs filled with beautiful and unusual songs and lush arrangements (courtesy of conductor Bill Shepherd), all carefully recorded, mixing electric instruments and orchestra. What made their work even more impressive was that after Bee Gees 1st, which was produced by their Australian friend Ossie Byrne, the three Gibb brothers took over producing their own records; even more surprising, as is now known from various bootleg releases of live performances of the period, the group — with Melouney and Petersen in the lineup — was also able to perform their music note-perfect, with spot-on vocals while on-stage, something that the Beatles had never even attempted seriously with their post-1965 efforts.

The group enjoyed two major hits in 1968, I Started a Joke and Ive Gotta Get a Message to You, both from Idea. Whatever they put out seemed to work, including the delightful psychedelic pop ode Barker of the UFO, a B-side that is a spot-on perfect example of late-60s English freakbeat, hardly a genre on which the Bee Gees are commonly thought to have contributed. It was easy, amid the sheer beauty of their records, to overlook the range of influences that went into their sound — the Bee Gees may have been making pop/rock, but their underlying sounds came from a multitude of sources, including American country music and soul music. Indeed, one of the groups biggest hits, To Love Somebody, had been written for Otis Redding to record, but the Stax/Volt singing legend didnt live long enough to record it himself. At this point in their history, they were most comfortable deconstructing elements in the singing and harmonies of black American music and rebuilding them in their style, as the Beatles had done with the music of the Shirelles and various Motown acts.

It was in 1969 when the trio lost all the momentum theyd built up, ironically over a dispute involving their most ambitious recording to date. Theyd just finished a double-LP set, called Odessa, a lushly orchestrated, heavily overdubbed, and thoroughly haunting body of music. The seven-minute-long title track was filled with eerie images and ideas and gorgeous choruses around a haunting lead performance and it was only the jumping-off point for the album. The brothers, however, were unable to agree on which song was to be the single and in the resulting dispute, Robin decided to part company with Barry and Maurice. They held on to the Bee Gees name for one LP, Cucumber Castle, while Robin released the album Robins Reign, on which he was producer, arranger, and songwriter, and sang all of the parts himself.

Eventually, even Barry and Maurice Gibb parted company. Melouney had left at the outset of the Odessa sessions and Petersen left the two-man group behind a few days into Cucumber Castle, though not without a good deal of legal squabbling. (At one point the drummer, in a bizarre twist, filed a lawsuit claiming that he owned the Bee Gees name.) Without a group to tour behind or even make television appearances promoting it, the Odessa album never sold the way it might have, even with a hit, First of May. Cucumber Castle was at least peripherally connected to a British television special of the same name — sort of the Bee Gees better (and funnier) answer to the Beatles Magical Mystery Tour movie — and generated several singles that were successful in England and/or Germany, including the reggae-influenced I.O.I.O. and Dont Forget to Remember. Ironically, even during a period with their music partnership in tatters, the Gibb brothers were writing and recording profoundly beautiful songs — Robin Gibbs Saved by the Bell, with its lush, ornate multi-layered vocals, justifiably topped the British charts, and the two-man Bee Gees B-side Sun in My Morning was one of the prettiest songs ever issued by the group.

In 1970, they finally decided to try and re-form. Almost two years older and a good deal wiser, they related to each other better and had also evolved musically out of pop-psychedelia and into a kind of pop-progressive rock sound, similar to the Moody Blues of the same era but with better singing and more attractive songs. They came back on a high note with two dazzling songs: Lonely Days, the groups first number one hit in America and their first gold record in the United States. The other was Morning of My Life, a song originally known as In the Morning, originally authored by Barry Gibb; included on the soundtrack to the movie Melody, it proved so popular with fans that the group was still doing it in concert several years later.

They enjoyed another huge international success with How Can You Mend a Broken Heart in 1971, but the accompanying album, Trafalgar, lacked some of the variety of sounds that had made their earlier LPs so interesting. Moreover, it and the 2 Years On LP that preceded it never reached higher than the mid-30s on the American charts (and never charted in England at all), a considerable falloff from their 60s albums sales. In 1972, the group had another Top 20 hit with Run to Me, but their album that year, To Whom It May Concern, was forgotten almost instantly after a brief run to number 35.

There was a sense that they were losing ground, particularly as the music world was increasingly defined by albums and driven by album sales. Pop/rock was developing around them in new and harder directions and the trios Beatlesque harmonies and Paul McCartney-like melodies were starting to run a little thin at the source. Their 1973 album Life in a Tin Can and the accompanying single, Saw a New Morning, which were used to launch the new RSO Records label, marked a change in the groups base of operations from England to America. Despite a heavy promotional tour, the single never made the Top 40 and the album stalled after climbing to the mid-60s.

When their proposed next album, tentatively titled A Kick in the Head (Is Worth Eight in the Pants), was rejected by Stigwood, the trio knew they were in a deep creative and commercial hole. Rescue came in the form of a suggestion by their RSO labelmate, Eric Clapton, that they try recording at the studio where hed just cut 461 Ocean Boulevard, at Criteria Studios in Miami, FL. Stigwood agreed and the Bee Gees came back in 1974 with Mr. Natural, produced by Arif Mardin. This record was a departure for them with its heavily Americanized, R&B-flavored sound. The album didnt even sell as well as Life in a Tin Can and it yielded no hits, but it got better reviews and it pointed in a direction that seemed promising. It also seemed to free up the brothers thinking about the kinds of songs they could do.

The next year, with Mardin again producing, they plunged head-first into the new sound with Main Course. This was the beginning of the Bee Gees second (or third, if you count their Australian period) era. The emphasis was now on dance rhythms, high harmonies, and a funk beat. They had a new band in place, with Alan Kendall on lead guitar, Dennis Byron at the drums, and Blue Weaver on keyboards, but spearheading the new sound was Barry Gibb, who, for the first time, sang falsetto and discovered that he could delight audiences in that register. Jive Talkin, the first single off the album, became their second American number one single, but it was a long way from Lonely Days in style. It was followed up with the hit Nights on Broadway and then the album Children of the World, which yielded the hits You Should Be Dancing and Love So Right. In the midst of this string of new hits, the group released their first concert LP, Bee Gees Live, which gingerly walked a line between their old and new hits.

Then in 1977, coming off of their recent success, the group was approached about contributing to the soundtrack of a forthcoming movie, called Saturday Night Fever. Their featured numbers — Stayin Alive, How Deep Is Your Love, and Night Fever — each made number one on the charts and the album stayed in the top spot for 24 weeks, even as the film broke existing box office records. In the process, the disco era was born — or more properly, reborn. It had already taken root in Europe, where it had become passé, and in the black and gay subcultures in America as well, but there it had stalled out. Saturday Night Fever, as an album and a film, supercharged the phenomenon and broadened its audience to tens of millions of middle-class and working-class white listeners, with the Bee Gees at the forefront of the music.

Suddenly, they were outstripping the sales that the Beatles had enjoyed with their records in the 1960s, and were even eclipsing Paul McCartneys multi-platinum 70s-era popularity. It was a profound moment, joining the ranks of their one-time idols in the highest reaches of music success, if not musical or social significance. They could (and did) fill arenas across the country with their new fans, although some of their older admirers — who were admittedly a minority in the context of the tens of millions of record sales they were enjoying in the mid-70s — resented the groups new sound and the disco era that it embodied.

Ironically, there wasnt that much difference in the group between the two eras. Apart from Barry Gibbs falsetto, the voices were the same and as good as ever, and they had a superb band and all of the production resources that a recording act could want. And amid the dance numbers, the group still did a healthy portion of romantic ballads that each offered a high haunt count and memorable hooks. Theyd simply decided, at Arif Mardins urging, to forget the fact that they were white Englishmen — or the reticence that went with it — and plunged head first into soul music, emulating, in their own terms, the funkier Philadelphia soul sounds that all three brothers knew and loved. Luckily for them, they had the voices, the band, and the songwriting skills to do it convincingly, so much so that by 1977 the Bee Gees were getting played on black radio stations that were normally unwilling to run any white acts. Whats more, Nights on Broadway or Love So Right were no less beautiful songs or records than, say, Melody Fair or First of May, and if one accepted Dennis Byrons and Maurice Gibbs driving beat on You Should Be Dancing, it was impossible not to be impressed with the vocal acrobatics and the sheer panache of the song. In one fell swoop, the group had managed to meld every influence theyd ever embraced, from the Mills Brothers and the Beatles and early-70s soul, into something of their own that was virtually irresistible. The worldwide sales of the 1979 Spirits Having Flown album topped 30 million and was accompanied by three more number one singles in Tragedy, Too Much Heaven, and Love You Inside Out. As a sidelight to the groups success, a fourth Gibb brother, Andy Gibb, was enjoying massive chart success during this same period as a singer, working in a slightly lighter-textured dance vein.

By the end of the 70s, however, the disco era was on the wane, from a combination of the bad economy, political chaos domestically and around the world (leading to the election of Ronald Reagan), and a general burnout of the participants from too many drugs and profligate sex (which would precipitate an epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases and herald the outbreak of AIDS in the United States). There had already been an ad hoc reaction against the groups dominance of the airwaves with mass burnings of Bee Gees posters and albums at public forums spurred on by DJs and ordinary listeners weary of the dance hits by the group that seemed to soar effortlessly to the top of the charts; meanwhile, some radio stations began looking askance at new releases by the group after 1979. The group itself helped contribute to the end of the party with their own excesses, in particular their participation (at Stigwoods insistence) in the film Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, inspired (if thats the word) by the Beatles album and songs. The movie was a box office and critical disaster and an embarrassment to all concerned; the accompanying soundtrack LP was a $1.99 cut-out only six months after its 1978 release, lingering in bargain bins and warehouses for years afterward.

In 1981, the groups new LP, Living Eyes, was recorded after an extended layoff in the wake of four years of hard work, but didnt even make the Top 40. Suddenly, with the disco era over and out of favor, the Bee Gees couldnt even get arrested and were being shunned for the excesses that it represented. The most tragic of all was the fate of Andy Gibb. The older Gibb brothers had, at various times, struggled with personal demons such as alcohol and drug use, but the youngest sibling fell very hard when the 70s ended, eventually losing his life in 1988, five days after his 30th birthday at the end of a horrendous downward personal spiral. In America, the Bee Gees were virtually invisible as recording artists for most of the 80s. Instead, Barry Gibb pursued work as a producer for other artists, creating hits for Barbra Streisand and Diana Ross, among others; the Bee Gees had songs on the soundtrack to Stayin Alive, the tepid sequel to Saturday Night Fever, but they were no longer taken seriously by the music press.

They made their first attempt at a comeback in 1987 with E.S.P., an album that got favorable reviews and sold well in every corner of the globe except the United States, yielding a number one single (outside of the U.S.) in You Win Again. A new album in 1989, One, got a good reception around the world and even generated a Top Ten U.S. single in the form of its title track. Polygram Records, which had bought out the RSO Records catalog, struggled long and hard over the release of Tales from the Brothers Gibb, a box set anthology that was really aimed more at the international market rather than the United States, although it has sold well enough to remain in print in America. High Civilization (1991) and Size Isnt Everything (1993) attracted somewhat less attention, but their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997 led to the release of Still Waters. In 1998, they issued the second live album in their history, One Night Only, cut at their first concert appearance in America in almost a decade, at the MGM Grand Hotel. In 2000, they participated in the making of the biographical video, This Is Where I Came In, which covered their whole history, and an accompanying album of the same name.

The Bee Gees remained active until the death of Maurice in January 2003. While receiving treatment for an intestinal blockage, he suffered cardiac arrest and died at the age of 53. Following his death, Robin and Barry decided to cease performing as the Bee Gees.

Bee Gees的吉他谱

How Deep is your Love(精编版)【欧美金曲】
难易度:
准确度:
(1人评价)
生产队 1919 0 2023-2-1
Massachusetts
(暂无评分)
YiningDu 1515 0 3
GTP谱 民谣吉他
2021-3-13
Too Much Heaven
(暂无评分)
YiningDu 2020 0 1
GTP谱 古典吉他
2021-3-13
How Can You Mend A Broken Heart
(暂无评分)
方程师 1515 0 1
GTP谱 民谣吉他
2019-3-2
How Deep is Your Love (arr. by Den Vichakyothin)
(暂无评分)
吃草的猪 2525 0 1
GTP谱 民谣吉他
2018-1-10
How Deep Is Your Love intro
(暂无评分)
暮下 1617 0
GTP谱
2017-2-11
How Deep Is Your Love
(暂无评分)
liqiong123 2686 0 10
GTP谱 BASS 贝司 钢琴 电吉他 古典吉他 鼓
2015-12-29
How Deep Is Your Love
(暂无评分)
liqiong123 2795 0 10
GTP谱 BASS 贝司 钢琴 电吉他 古典吉他 鼓
2015-12-29
How Deep Is Your Love
(暂无评分)
liqiong123 3224 0 10
GTP谱 bass 贝司 钢琴 电吉他 古典吉他 鼓
2015-12-29
Jive Talkin'
(暂无评分)
liqiong123 1617 0
GTP谱
2015-12-29
To Love Somebody
(暂无评分)
liqiong123 2431 0 1
GTP谱 古典吉他
2015-12-29
Blue Island
(暂无评分)
ws45551580 2074 0 5
GTP谱 民谣吉他 贝司
2015-6-30
I Started A Joke
(暂无评分)
ws45551580 2999 0 1
GTP谱 古典吉他
2015-6-30
Stayin' Alive (Acoustic Cover by DanMarc0)
(暂无评分)
ws45551580 2952 0 1
GTP谱 民谣吉他
2015-6-30
Stayin' Alive (from the movie Sherlock)
(暂无评分)
ws45551580 2732 0 3
GTP谱 电吉他 贝司 鼓
2015-6-30
How Can You Mend A Broken Heart
(暂无评分)
winight 4530 0 12
GTP谱 总谱 钢琴 贝司 民谣吉他
2014-4-12
How Deep Is Your Love
(暂无评分)
winight 9207 1 10
GTP谱 总谱 钢琴 贝司 民谣吉他 电吉他
2014-4-12
How Deep Is Your Love
(暂无评分)
winight 3685 0 9
GTP谱 总谱 钢琴 电吉他 古典吉他 贝司 鼓
2014-4-12
I Started A Joke
(暂无评分)
winight 3385 0 9
GTP谱 总谱 电吉他 民谣吉他 贝司 鼓
2014-4-12
I Started A Joke
(暂无评分)
winight 2709 0 1
GTP谱 民谣吉他
2014-4-12
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