Maurice Gibb
Biography
Maurice Gibb is most closely associated with the Bee Gees, the brother
act that he co-founded with his siblings Barry Gibb, three
years his senior, and Robin Gibb, a
fraternal twin born two hours older than Maurice. In contrast to Barry and Robin, who have
shared and alternated the spotlight as lead vocalists, Maurice
(pronounced "Morris" in British English) has been almost exclusively a
backing vocalist for his four-decade career, providing a key part of the
harmony singing for his brothers. In less overtly visible ways, however,
he has been essential to the group's sound from the beginning of their
recording career -- in addition to sharing arranging chores with his
brothers and playing bass on most of their recordings, and in most of
the group's live performances for much of their history, he has also
played guitar, piano, organ, and Mellotron on their recordings, and even
occasionally the drums on their demos. He is also regarded as the trio's
resident comedian, with a cunning sense of humor, and a keen
appreciation of practical jokes when they were growing up that he
reportedly hasn't entirely outgrown as an adult.
Gibb's voice is the least familiar to the public, concentrated as it
usually is on backup and harmony singing. The major exception arose
during the 1969 split between Robin Gibb and
his two brothers, when Barry and Maurice
carried on as a two-man version of the Bee Gees. Cucumber Castle,
the one album that they completed together before the two of them, in
turn, parted company, included a delightful African-flavored number
entitled "I.O.I.O.," which featured Maurice intoning the title
throughout, as far forward in the mix as Barry Gibb's
lead. Maurice Gibb did begin work on a solo LP, and released a single,
"Railroad," co-authored by Billy Lawrie, a
songwriter and singer, and also the brother of the British pop/rock
legend Lulu, who became
Maurice's wife in 1969. Gibb handled all of the vocals on the single,
covering the high harmonies and the lead in a manner that was impossible
not to compare with the Bee Gees -- he later described it as
"anticlimactic" on the album Tales from the Brothers Gibb, but he did
begin work on a solo LP to have been called "The Loner."
He worked for three months with Billy Lawrie
playing and singing, and with guitarist Les Harvey of
Stone the Crows, drummer Geoff Bridgeford,
and John Coleman and
Gerry Shurry, the
latter three members of the Australian band Tin Tin -- whose
1970 debut album Maurice Gibb had produced -- filling out what
instruments Gibb didn't wish to play himself. Good friend Ringo Starr also
participated in the sessions, with Lulu joining in
as well, which, alas, only yielded one released song, "The Loner."
Recorded by Gibb and Lawrie, it was
credited to "The Bloomfields" and appeared on the soundtrack of the
movie Bloomfield (aka The Hero), starring Richard Harris,
and was also released on the Pye Records soundtrack LP to the film.
Like the other solo albums begun by his brothers in 1970, Maurice Gibb's
LP was never released officially, though large parts of it have appeared
on bootlegs over the years. Later in the same year, he and his brothers
were able to patch up their differences and resume working together, and
there's been little serious talk of "The Loner" ever being issued since
then. Gibb was just as vital a part of the group, as a singer and
musician, in its post-1970 comeback phase as he had been in their
late-'60s era, despite such distractions as his disintegrating marriage
to Lulu and periodic
problems with alcoholism. He surrendered some of his bass playing chores
later in the '70s, but recovered from the alcoholism that afflicted him
during this period, and by 1984 was recording solo again. In addition to
the single "Hold Her in Your Hand," he wrote and recorded the score to
Philippe Mora's A Breed Apart in collaboration with arranger/conductor
Jimmie Haskell.
He later wrote a score (subsequently rejected) for The Supernaturals and
played a small role in the movie as well. Gibb's second marriage, to the
former Yvonne Spencerley, has lasted for two decades and reportedly
played an essential role in getting him through subsequent difficult
periods, including a relapse into alcoholism following the death of his
youngest brother, Andy Gibb, in
1988, and the death of his father that same year. His recovery allowed
the trio to resume their work together, including the recording of the
1989 album One, which
included their comeback American hit with the title track.
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.
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).
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 stabilizing influence with two very
ambitious brothers continued through his life.
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.
In January
2003, while receiving treatment for an intestinal blockage, Maurice Gibb
suffered cardiac arrest and died. He was 53.
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