The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Late Don Everly’s duo influenced many acts

Everly Brothers’ musical harmony could be heard in numerous later bands.

- By Terence Mcardle

Older half of Everly Brothers dies in Nashville at 84,

Don Everly, whose soaring harmonies and aggressive rhythm guitar work as part of the Everly Brothers duo with his younger brother, Phil, influenced generation­s of rock performers, died Saturday at his home in Nashville, Tennessee. He was 84.

Daughter Erin Everly confirmed the death but did not provide an immediate cause. His brother, Phil Everly, died in January 2014 at age 74.

The musical harmony of the Everly Brothers, rooted in a long tradition of fraternal country duos, could be heard in many acts that followed them after their popularity waned in the mid-1960s, including the Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, and the Hollies. At their peak, the brothers nearly rivaled Elvis Presley in commercial power.

Their first million-seller, “Bye Bye Love” (1957), a bouncy synthesis of country and rock buoyed by four guitars, made them one of the top acts in the country. They had 31 records in the Billboard Hot 100, with 12 in the top 10.

Don Everly wrote some of their most popular songs, among them “(’Til) I Kissed You” (1959), “Cathy’s Clown” (1960) and “So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad)” (1960).

The brothers benefited from a relationsh­ip with the Nashville husband-and-wife songwritin­g team of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, beginning with “Bye Bye Love.” The Bryants’ lyrics for songs such as “All I Have to Do Is Dream,” “Bird Dog” and “Wake Up Little Susie” captured the longing and drama of teenage love without trivializi­ng it.

The brothers recorded their early hits in Nashville with A-team session players such as pianist Floyd Cramer and guitarist Chet Atkins. Atkins, also their producer, placed their voices against an understate­d drum beat, with the brothers’ high-tuned acoustic guitars at the front of the mix. The Gibson company marketed a signature Everly Brothers folk guitar with an all-black finish.

After a six-month stint in the Marine Corps Reserve, Don and Phil found their careers slowing down. The duo charted only sporadical­ly after 1962. They quarreled with their publishing and management company, a move that restricted their access to new songs from the Bryants.

Don Everly, addicted to uppers and downers — Ritalin and vitamins to keep him awake and barbiturat­es to help him sleep — twice attempted to kill himself with an overdose during an English tour in 1962. When they returned stateside, he received electrosho­ck therapy, which he said blocked his ability to write songs for several years.

“People didn’t understand drugs that well then,” he told Rolling Stone in 1986. “They didn’t know what they were messing with.”

The brothers’ personal relationsh­ip was less harmonious than their music. They endured long periods when they sang together but wouldn’t talk to each other.

Both singers attempted solo careers, with limited success. In 1970, Don Everly toured to promote his first solo album with Lindsey Buckingham, then the Everly Brothers’ lead guitarist and later a member of Fleetwood Mac, singing harmony. After an unreceptiv­e audience demanded oldies such as “Bye Bye Love,” he canceled the tour.

Although they would reunite in the 1980s, the Everly Brothers officially broke up after a 1973 concert in Buena Vista, California. Don Everly, who had given notice to his brother, came onstage drunk. Irate, the venue’s manager stopped the duo in the middle of the show, causing Phil to smash his guitar and walk offstage. Don Everly told the crowd, “The Everly Brothers died 10 years ago.”

“It was really a funeral,” he later told Rolling Stone. “People thought that night was just some brouhaha between Phil and me. They didn’t realize we had been working our buns off for years. We had never been anywhere without working; had never known any freedom. We were just strapped together like a team of horses.”

Isaac Donald Everly was born Feb. 1, 1937, in Brownie, a town in Kentucky’s coal mining region. His father, Ike, a miner turned itinerant guitarist, sang with his wife, Margaret. The family eventually settled in Iowa, where the boys began performing on their father’s radio show, billed as “Little Donnie” and “Baby Boy Phil.”

Don Everly was a hitmaking songwriter in his teens, with “Thou Shall Not Steal” and “Here We Go Again,” recorded by Kitty Wells and Anita Carter, respective­ly. In 1955, the brothers moved to Nashville to pursue careers as country singers. Their first hit, however, came a few years later for a small New York pop label, Cadence Records. “Bye Bye Love” had reportedly had been turned down by four other performers.

With more hits to their credit, the duo signed in 1960 with Warner Bros. records for $1 million, to be paid over 10 years. At the time, it was an unpreceden­ted sum for a rock ’n’ roll act.

When Phil Everly’s 1983 duet with Cliff Richard, “She Means Nothing to Me,” topped the British charts, the duo was persuaded to do a reunion concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall. They released the album “EB 84” (1984) and, from that, had a minor hit single with “On the Wings of a Nightingal­e,” written by Paul Mccartney. Two years later, they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and scored a top20 country hit with the title track from the album “Born Yesterday.”

Both brothers sang on the title track of “Graceland” for another longtime admirer, Paul Simon.

The Everly Brothers’ honors included a lifetime achievemen­t Grammy Award in 1997 and induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001.

“I think that what Phil and I have done is something that took being brothers, growing up together and having worked together all these years,” Don Everly told the Daily Telegraph of Sydney in 1998. “We have separate lives, but when we walk out onstage, it comes back, and it amazes me that we can do it. It’s like riding a bicycle. I don’t know how it’s done, but I know it can be done.”

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Everly Brothers — Phil (left) and Don — perform in July 1964. They had 31 records in the Billboard Hot 100, with 12 in the top 10. Don Everly, 84, half of the pioneering duo whose harmonizin­g country rock hits impacted a generation of rock music, died at home in Nashville, Tennessee, on Saturday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS The Everly Brothers — Phil (left) and Don — perform in July 1964. They had 31 records in the Billboard Hot 100, with 12 in the top 10. Don Everly, 84, half of the pioneering duo whose harmonizin­g country rock hits impacted a generation of rock music, died at home in Nashville, Tennessee, on Saturday.

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