Catching Up With Barry Gibb
You can practically feel it in the air. There’s a huge tidal wave of a Barry Gibb Renaissance coursing through pop culture these days. And deservedly so—at 67, the founder of legendary singing-sibling trio The Bee Gees is a survivor, both figuratively—he managed to outlast the disco craze his band helped create via its 1977 Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, which sold 15 million copies but stranded him creatively for years afterward—and literally, as his brothers passed away, one by one, Andy in 1988, Maurice in 2003 and Robin in 2012.
Undaunted, he ‘s launched a globe-trotting Mythology the Tour Live, featuring his son Stephen on guitar and Maurice’s daughter Samantha on vocals. He’s also overseen a great box-set reissue Bee Gees – The Warner Bros. Years 1987-1991, featuring the underappreciated efforts “E.S.P.,” “One,” “High Civilization” and “One For All Concert.” He announced the juggernaut on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon this January and harmonized on Everly Brothers chestnuts with the show’s giddy host, with whom he’d good-naturedly appeared a month before on the recurring Saturday Night Live skit “The Barry Gibb Talk Show”—wherein a shag-wigged, leisure-suited Fallon plays the singer as a volatile egotist with a halting falsetto, opposite Justin Timberlake as his conversely mousy brother Robin. In his all-analog home studio in Miami, the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer is also piecing together a new solo album, which he hopes to pepper with top-flight cameos. The project properly coalesced with “The End of the Rainbow,” an elegy he composed for Robin. Add it all up and it spells comeback.
Paste: So you’re phoning from your digs in Miami. But your mom is actually there?
Barry Gibb: Yeah! She lives nearby and she visits, like, every week or two. So she’s here today. And it’s absolutely beautiful here today.
Paste: And you’re an American citizen now, right?
Gibb: Oh yeah. I think it’s what you call a jewel situation, where you still hold on to your English passport. But my domicile is in America.
Paste: You seem to have a really good sense of humor.
Gibb: Oh, I hope so. I think you sort of have to. I don’t feel you can really survive, or last as a pop artist—or even as an actor—if you don’t see the funny side of everything. I started out with Mad magazine and Cracked magazine growing up in Australia—that’s about all I could get my hands on, plus the Saturday Evening Post. I grew up laughing at the irony of life, and I still am, I guess. I hope!
Paste: Have you ever thought about doing standup comedy?
Gibb: Well, I wouldn’t call it that. But I did a seminar at Middle Tennessee University, and it was fantastic. There were 500 people, and I just sat and played the guitar and talked about songs for two hours. And it was great fun, great fun. Because the people that like our music also have a sense of humor. And there have been soldiers who proposed to their wives over our songs, and all these examples of how our songs have affected different people’s lives. But I loved doing that performance. So I guess I’m more sit-down than standup. I’ll need a chair. Or a couch.
Paste: When and how did you hear that Saturday Night Live was spoofing you with “The Barry Gibb Talk Show”?
Gibb: I wish I had a talk show! It’d be great! But we’ll work on that. But I first noticed them doing it a few years back, and I didn’t know what to think when I saw it for the first time. I thought “Well, hang on! I don’t behave like that!” And Robin was the opposite of Justin’s portrayal, the absolute opposite. So I eventually thought “Yeah, that’s okay. That’s funny.” My own daughter thought it was hysterical, and I was like “Hey—support me here!” But then it started becoming something I wanted to see every time it was on. You’ve gotta laugh at yourself, man. You’ve gotta laugh at yourself.