Maurice Gibb

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Maurice Gibb

Image:Bee gees maurice.jpg

Background information
Birth name Maurice Ernest Gibb
Born December 22, 1949, Douglas, Isle of Man
Died January 12, 2003, Miami Beach, Florida
Genre(s) Pop, Rock, soft rock, disco
Occupation(s) Songwriter, Singer
Instrument(s) Voice, Bass guitar, Acoustic guitar and Keyboard
Years active 1960s - 2003
Associated
acts
The Bee Gees

Maurice Ernest Gibb CBE (22 December 194912 January 2003), was a musician and singer-songwriter. He was born in Douglas, Isle of Man to English parents. The twin of Robin Gibb, Maurice was the younger by 35 minutes. (Maurice is pronounced Morris in the English manner, not Mor-EESS in the French/American manner.) He is best known as a member of the singing-songwriting trio the Bee Gees, formed with his brothers Robin and Barry. The trio had their start in Australia; their major success came when they returned to England where they had lived for several years as children.

Contents

Gibb grew up with his family in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, England. In 1958 he and his family moved to Brisbane, Australia, settling in one of the city's poorest suburbs, Cribb Island, which was subsequently demolished to make way for Brisbane Airport.

see main article the Bee Gees

While in Brisbane, he and brothers Robin and Barry formed the Bee Gees. They moved back to England and signed with Robert Stigwood, which led to their becoming one of the most successful musical groups of the 1960s, 70s and 80s. In a career spanning five decades, the group sold over 180 million records.[1]

Maurice Gibb's role in the group focused on melody and arrangements. He sang harmony and backing vocals, and played a variety of instruments. Very early on in 1965 and 1966 he played lead guitar, but as early as 1966 he was playing other keyboard and string instruments in the studio. Bee Gees records from 1967 to 1972 are dominated by Maurice playing piano and bass guitar, along with mellotron ("Every Christian Lion Hearted Man" and "Kilburn Towers"), rhythm guitar (along with Barry), and other parts. The piano on songs like "Words" and "Lonely Days" is the Maurice Gibb sound. On stage he usually played bass guitar, with an additional musician taking bass when Maurice switched to piano. Maurice was less influential in the disco Bee Gees sound of 1975 to 1979, when he played mostly bass guitar.[2] After that time for the last twenty years of his life he played primarily electronic keyboard instruments on stage and in the studio, but occasional lead guitar (like the acoustic on "This Is Where I Came In", 2001).[3] In the reunited Bee Gees from 1987 onward Maurice was the group's resident expert on all technical phases of recording, and he coordinated musicians and engineers to create much of the group's sound.

As a songwriter Maurice contributed mainly to melody, with his brothers for the most part writing the lyrics that they would sing on the finished song. It is difficult to identify his contributions because the songs were so shaped to the singer, but his brothers' continued writing collaboration with him on solo projects shows how much they relied on him. Maurice sang lead on average one song per album. He was sometimes known as "the quiet one" for his less obvious contributions to the group, but privately he was a good teller of stories who immensely enjoyed talking with fans.

His reputation as a mild-mannered stabilising influence with two very ambitious brothers continued through his life. When the Bee Gees walked out of their interview with British chat show host Clive Anderson, Maurice was last to leave, with the words "Well I'd love to [stay], but I don't do impressions." [1]

Away from the Bee Gees, Maurice recorded but did not release a solo album in 1970, and in the same year he appeared in a short-lived West End musical, Sing a Rude Song. During the Bee Gees hiatus in the 1980s he worked with both Barry and Robin on their solo projects, and did some instrumental writing and recording including the soundtrack for the film "A Breed Apart". In 1986 he produced and co-wrote an entire album for Swedish singer Carola. Of these and other projects the only disks released under his own name were two singles: "Railroad" in 1970 and "Hold Her in Your Hand" in 1984.[4]

Maurice's last great project was to produce an album's worth of songs written and sung by his daughter Samantha, which finally appeared in 2005 under the name M E G -- Maurice's initials.[2]

He was married to the Scottish pop star Lulu from 1969 to 1973; they had no children, and the pressure of their respective commitments led to their divorce.

Together with his second wife Yvonne, Gibb had two children: Adam and Samantha.

Gibb loved the sport of paintball, and had a team which he called the Royal Rat Rangers, a reference to his being named a Commander of the British Empire, and to his time at the Little River AA group, where the members referred to each other as "river rats." He promoted the sport at every opportunity, and opened a paintball equipment shop, "Commander Mo's Paintball Shop," in North Miami Beach, Florida.

Maurice Gibb died unexpectedly at a Miami Beach, Florida, hospital on 12 January 2003, of complications of a twisted intestine, including cardiac arrest.

In 1994, Maurice Gibb was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and in 1997 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His catalogue is published by BMG Music Publishing.

In 2002 Maurice was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE), along with his brothers, but the awards were not presented until 2004, after Maurice's death; his son Adam accompanied Barry and Robin to Buckingham Palace for the ceremony.

  1. ^ According to Beegees-world, as of December 2004 "The Bee Gees have sold over 120 million albums all over the world. Their total record sales (albums + singles sales) exceed 180 million. The figures would exceed 225 million if solo works and albums written and produced for other artists were added."
  2. ^ David Leaf, "Bee Gees / The Authorized Biography", 1979.
  3. ^ Album credits.
  4. ^ Album credits.
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