Cyprus Today

Bee Gees had ‘no interest’ in reading Saturday Night Fever script — exec

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THE Bee Gees had “no interest” in reading the script for Saturday NightFever before they penned the famous soundtrack to the hit film, its music supervisor has said.

Bill Oakes, who won a Grammy award for the soundtrack to the 1977 film starring John Travolta, was also head of the band’s record company RSO.

He recounts his experience­s with the band, made up of brothers Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb, during their successful yet turbulent 1970s in the new documentar­y

Oakes told the PA news agency: “People say they were commission­ed to write the soundtrack but I went to show them the script in France where they were mixing a live album and they had no interest in reading the script.

“So to say they were commission­ed, it sounds much more profession­al.

“In fact all Robert Stigwood (the music entreprene­ur) and I said was we need some songs for this movie that is set in the disco and they had already done JiveTalkin’ and ShouldBeDa­ncing, so this was not their first foray into dance music.

“But what they came up with in a matter of weeks was an extraordin­ary collection of five songs, all of which I knew immediatel­y would work in the film.

“Stayin’ Alive, MoreThan AWoman, IfI Can’tHaveYou, NightFever

HowDeepIsY­ourLove, that is gold dust, that doesn’t happen very often and I can’t think of any other composers you could have asked for and had them come back with that, having not read the script!” Oakes also recalled how he navigated the various dramas and fallings out between the brothers, particular­ly the problems between Barry and Robin, who died in 2012. He said: “I dealt with them each individual­ly, I have to say if you were in a room with the three of them I stayed out, because there was that bond between brothers but they did have their difference­s and they were very, very different considerin­g two of them were twins. “They were totally unalike Robin and Maurice, Robin was always the guy who would call me on a Wednesday to see how the charts next week were looking, he was absolutely insane about chart positions, how are we doing in Japan all that.

“Maurice couldn’t care less as long as he had a drink and a cigarette and knew a good bar to go to and Barry was the quiet one who I would talk to more about the music.

“So I had different relationsh­ips with each one but when you put them together you didn’t interfere, the three of them had a special thing when they were in a room together.”

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