Skip navigation
ANDY GIBB FANS}’s portrait

ANDY GIBB FANS

Welcome one and all, I hope you enjoy this page and feel free to leave any pictures or video's you might have. Thanks Tina
See All Threads »

Recent discussion

Topic Replies Author Last Post
Such a shame 1 Tina Oct 03, 2008 williamkatt81 Sep 26, 2011
See All Tributes »

Linked Tributes

Online Tribute andygibbfan4life

andygibbfan4life

Added Sep 29, 2008

This page is so that people out there like me that are th...

Created by Tina

More »

About

ANDY'S BIOGRAPHY




   Andy's Biography

 

On March 5, 1958, a boy named Andrew Roy Gibb, arrived
at Stretford Memorial Hospital, Manchester. Andy's middle name was
given in honor of his uncle, Roy Gibb, Hugh's youngest brother.

At the age of 4, Andy was already considering his own career
options. He wanted to be either a doctor or a Bee Gee.
Hugh and Barbara expressed their preference that he should pursue
the latter option. "He sings in perfect pitch with the boys when they're
practicing." enthused Barbara, "and we'd like him, one day,
to join the group."

For nine-year-old Andy, he didn't allow his brothers' success to affect him.
"It didn't change my life that much. I knew they were in the business and
I had always known they were in the business. Not being anything extra special
to me, and at (that age) you don't think about show business, you don't think glitter,
you don't think that your have 400 to 500 kids outside the front door because your
brothers are big stars. I just walk in after school, pass the 500 kids at the front door,
go in the back door, my brothers would all be sitting, watching television with
the curtains drawn, girls banging on the windows and that was their whole
life, you know."

Andy's take on his brothers break-up:

Andy, 11 years old at the time , said, "It was a very shaky thing, a bit of a
sore point as far as our family went because my brothers weren't talking to
each other, and they all wanted to because they're so close. They can't get by a
week without talking to each other. They wanted to call, but no one wanted to
swallow their pride and do it. So I knew the family was going through a real tight
moment because if affected my parents and everything...For families to split up,
it's a really strange thing. I knew they were going to get back together again,
and our family knew. There was no doubt in that, but it's hard for the public
to know that."

Andy's Education:

Andy was an indifferent student at best and said that he felt singled out in school
when he was in England because of his famous brothers. "I have never had a good day
at school ever in my life." he said. "I mean there were kids there that I would do
anything to get on normally with...If I would do something outstanding in the fame
or sport, it was, 'You think you're great, don't you?' 'Because you're the Bee Gees
brother, you think you can do that fabulously.' To have that for quite a few years
thrown at you, I mean, it just got to me so bad in the end, I just couldn't handle it
anymore. I had to leave it. Everyone said that most people in that position would
say,  'God, my brothers are responsible for all this, damn them'...but not for   one second
did I ever think that. I always decided to take everything myself and not consider
it as their faulty.  Naturally,  I was always going to be related to them in any
conversation or anything, so that has never bugged me really."

Andy became involved with a rougher crowd and acquired a less than desirable
circle of new friends. "I was moving about with my own gang, the skinheads, wearing
steel-toed army boots and kicking in shop windows,"  he admitted.   "With the skinheads,
the main thing was football matches. You take a hammer into  the stadium and
throw it as high as you can into a capacity crowd of 30,000. And wherever it lands,
it lands. We were really very nasty."

Andy said, "As far back as I can remember, we always moved. We never even stayed
in a house more than eight or nine months. We never last a year at any one house,
I don't know what it was, we would have to get up and move somewhere else...I
didn't have permanent friends in many places for long. All my friends were older
than me, I never had friends my own age. I left school at 13, so I've always been
surrounded by people in the business."

When Hugh and Barbara moved to Ibiza, a Spanish island, Andy said in 1977,
"I never got round to going back to school because I knew I wanted to be a singer.
My brothers left school when they were thirteen, and they were doing all right.
Everybody said that I would regret leaving school but I haven't so far and
I don't think I ever will now"

A nudge towards a musical career:

In March 1970, for Andy's 12th birthday, Barry presented him with his first
guitar. Up to this point Andy had shown little interest in music, most of his
attention having been lavished on sport and horses. Barry also gave his
youngest brother his first horse, which Andy name Gala.

"Andy was a little devil," Barbara said fondly. "A little monster. I'd send him
off to school but he'd sneak off to the stable and sleep with his two horses all day.
"He'd wander back home around lunchtime smelling of horse manure, yet he'd
swear he had been at school. Oh, he was a little monkey!"

Armed with his new guitar, the small, freckled-faced boy began to emulate
his hero, his big brother Barry.  Despite more than a decade's difference in their ages,
the youngest and eldest of the Gibb brothers had formed a strong bond.   "I think
he's my favorite brother," Andy said. "He's so kind and generous, and when
he comes to visit us, he plays with me. I've only got to ask for something, and
he'll buy it for me. I think he's too soft-hearted, people can talk him into things,
and he hates hurting anyone. I see him about twice a week.  He takes me out for
rides in his Bentley, but he doesn't let me have a go at driving it, though!   I
go up to his flat sometimes, and we play together. He's very kind and generous,
and when I grow up, I hope I'm like him." 

Andy forms first group:

Andy was now back and living on the Isle of Man. It was the early seventies.
Talk of Andy joining his brothers as a member of The Bee Gees had died down.
"I almost joined the group a couple of times," he said. "Over the past few years
we've made plans for me to join them, had shows worked out and been ready to go.

"But somewhere along the line negotiations have always fallen through. The
boys are traveling so much that it's hard to pin them down long enough to finalize
anything. The only way I think I'd get to join now is if one of the group left," Andy
added wistfully. "I'm a sort of ready-made understudy. I can do any of their voices
and sound just like them particularly if I do their material."

"One night he was really crying" Barbara said. "So I said, "Look love, in the morning
we'll go out and buy some amplifiers and get some good players and we'll start our
own group.' And we did exactly that. His father came home and got him a job at
one of the local hotels for the season and that was that."

The first recruit was drummer John Stringer, formerly of Bootlegged, who joined
Andy on February 13, 1974.  A few days later, Andy and John Stringer were
joined by lead guitarist John Alderson.

The young group set up their equipment in Terry Clough's recording studio
in Duke Street in Douglas to rehearse and audition new members.  Jerry Callaghan,
a bass player, came on board.

Barbara Gibb christened the group Melody Fayre, a variation on the
Bee Gees' song title, 'Melody Fair'. Alderman and Stringer were not happy
with the name, but Barbara put her foot down and there was no further discussion.

Melody Fayre's first paid concert was held at Port St. Mary Town Hall on June 17.
Andy's friend from Ibiza, Tony Messina, had re-entered the picture as the group's
roadie.  The Clerk for the Commissioners Office granted permission for the group
to hold a "Disco Dance...and subject to good order being maintained, the event finished
at 11:30 p.m. and any necessary clearing up being carried out afterwards." It was
obvious the lads were not in it for the money - after paying for the hall and posters,
the band members and Messina each collected the princely sum of 3.56 pounds!

In 1974, Andy, John Stringer and Tony Messina, arrived in Australia.

The Bee Gees' old friends, Col Joye and his brother Kevin Jacobsen, represented
the young group, and there were plans for recording a single and album for
Col Joye's ATA label.  They shared in Andy's dreams for stardom and recognition
as a songwriter and performer in his own right, not just as "The Bee Gees' Little Brother".


Due to lack of money and lack of interest from Andy, Stringer and Alderson returned to
Isle of Man. Andy was still being managed by Col Joye and Kevin Jacobsen, who
advertised for new band members.

Jim   Towers of the Cordon Blue Agency responded to the appeal for players. He
represented a rock group called Zenta; a four man group consisting of Glen Greenhalgh,
vocals, Rick Alford, lead guitar, Paddy Lelliott, bass and Trevor Norton on drums.

Meeting Kim Reeder:

In autumn of 1975, Barbara Gibb moved to Australia to be close to Andy, while
Hugh remained at their home in the Isle of Man. She settled in Gladsville, just
down the road from Andy.

Living nearby, in Rydalmere, was a petite, pretty blonde named Kim Reeder.
Andy first met her at a dog show. The Reeder family bred Staffordshire Bull
Terriers, as did Andy's sister Lesley and her husband Keith Evans, so
Lesley introduced the teenagers. Andy seemed immediately smitten.

Kim worked in a doctor's office as a secretary in Parramatta. Andy would
pick her up and take her to work, take her to lunch and  pick her up after work
and take her home.

The couple had a simple courtship. They enjoyed going to dog shows,
taking in a film, even going fishing at 4 o'clock in the morning.

The Reeders' normal family life seemed to hold a great attraction for Andy
after years of the Gibbs' nomadic lifestyle.  Kim's father worked as a bricklayer
and her mother worked as a machinist. Kim also had a twin sister named Kerrie.

The young couple could have continued quite happily dating for several more
years., but in June, 1976, a call from his brother Barry changed those plans. Barry
believed that Andy was ready to start his career on a international level, and   Robert
Stigwood agreed. They wanted him to come to American immediately.

The wedding was held on July 1, 1976 at the Wayside Chapel in Potts Point,
a suburb of Sydney, with a reception for 60 guests following at the Chevron
Hilton Hotel in Sydney.

After the reception, the new Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Roy Gibb left for a
honeymoon in Bermuda at Robert Stigwood's lavish home there. Barry and
Robert Stigwood were there to meet them and to begin making plans for turning
"The Bee Gee' Baby Brother" into the teen idol, Andy Gibb.

While there, Andy signed a recording and management contract with RSO.

 

Andy and Kim in America:

Once in America, Andy and Kim traveled to the sunny beaches of
Miami, where they stayed at the oceanfront Key Biscayne Hotel.

Andy went into the studio to begin work with Barry, Albhy Galuten and Karl
Richardson to lay down the tracks for his first album. With his experience in the
Miami music scene, Albhy Galuten put a band together for the sessions. Harold
Cowart on bass and Ron "Tubby" Ziegler on drums were from Louisiana.   George
Terry, guitar, and Joey Murcia, guitar.

The song selected to be Andy's first single outside Australia was
"I Just Want To Be Your Everything".

Andy burst onto the scene with a good collection of songs written mostly by
himself. His youthful good looks made him a popular teen idol. Innate musical
talent may have been no more than an added bonus to some people, but talent there was.

With the recording finished, Andy and Kim moved to Los Angeles, renting a
small apartment in West Hollywood in late 1976. Kim hoped moving away
from his family, Andy would revert to the devoted, protective young man she
knew in Australia. Unfortunately, he would change even more. Although it would
take more than 10 years, Barry believes that in many ways, moving to Los Angeles
was the beginning of Andy's undoing.

The "hangers-on", began invading the couple's lives. They are like piranhas
in the rock industry. They would offer stars drugs as a way of making friendships.  
The stars would become dependent on them for drugs.  Cocaine seemed to be
omnipresent, and for a young man who was trying to convince the
world -- himself -- that he was confident and self-assured, it proved
a powerful anodyne.

When Kim found out she was pregnant, Andy was thrilled and excited.
But dope and cocaine took priority over everything else.

When Kim was two months pregnant she left Andy and flew
back to Australia. Andy called and promised Kim he would return to
Australia for the birth. Unfortunately, it was a promise he wouldn't keep.

On January 6, 1981, on the John Davidson Show, Andy was a guest. As
as surprise to Andy they brought out Victoria Principal to meet him. Andy had
eagerly admitted his infatuation  with her. That meeting was the start of a love
affair shared by both stars.  On March, 1982, the relationship came to an end.  

The Illness:

In 1985, Andy checked into the Betty Ford Treatment Clinic for six weeks.
At first, the Betty Ford Clinic appeared to have worked. Andy returned
to the road in May, performing in Jackson, New Jersey. Soon, he slipped
back into addiction.

Andy would complain of unbearable pain, and insisted his mother take him
to the hospital. His cardiologist, Dr. William Shell, said Andy's pains were not
only very real, but also very serious. They were like heart attacks that destroyed
small amounts of heart muscle.

In the spring of 1987, Andy checked into another drug rehabilitation center and
became of member of Alcoholics Anonymous. Andy returned to Miami and
wanted to get back to the studio and start working again.

For two years before his death, Andy was drug free.  He was energetic and
appeared healthy.  But Andy never admitted to his family he had been treated
for heart inflammation on several occasions even though now clean, years
of substance abuse had taken their toll.

Andy fulfilled a long-time dream of taking flying lessons and soon gained
his pilot's license and flew solo around Florida several times.

In 1988, Andy left for England. He settled into the Chancery, a cottage
at Robin's Oxfordshire home. The future was shiny brightly for him. He
wanted to write more songs for his comeback album.

But Andrew Roy Gibb, the person, seemed to have disappeared in the
struggle to recapture Andy Gibb, the star. He lost his sense of self. He was
afraid of failing to make a comeback in the music business, yet terrified
that he couldn't do anything else.

Days after celebrating his thirtieth birthday on March 5, 1988, Andy checked into
John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, complaining of stomach and chest pains.

On March 10th, Andy's doctor told him he needed more tests. Andy agreed,
then slumped into unconsciousness. Moments later, at 8:45a.m., he
was pronounced dead.

A memorial service for Andy was held in a private chapel on Robin's estate
but Andy's funeral was held on March 21 in his adopted home city of Los Angeles.


He was laid to rest at Forest Lawn Cemetery, with the simple epitaph provided by one
of his hit singles, 'An Everlasting Love'.

( THERE IS A LINK AT THE BOTTOM IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SEE HIS FINAL RESTING PLACE )



During the service, Barry read a poem written by Andy in Las Vegas three years earlier.

'Andy's Song'

Am I all that I appear
when the spotlight dims and dies
or only a reflection
of the glitter etched lies

Been far from home for much too long
not sure what I should feel
and even if I feel it
could I be sure it's real

So dim the lights and set the stage
they want to see the show
all the time and effort
Lord, I hope they know

'Cause with every song a part of me
is what I give to you
and when the show is over
may the memory shine through

It's hard to form relationships
when you're on the road a lot
I've yet to find a lady
who'll forgive the things I'm not

There's a side of me that's worked so hard
for all I've come to know
a dream achieved throughout the years
I just can't let it go

So dim the lights and set the stage
they want to see the show
all the time and effort
Lord, I hope they know

'Cause with every song a part of me
is what I give to you
and when the show is over
may the memory shine through.
Copyright Andy Gibb 1985


The excerpts of the biography were taken from
The Ultimate Biography of The Bees Gees,
Tales of The Brothers Gibb.
Written by Melinda Bilyeu, Hector Cook
and Andrew Môn Hughes.


http://www.seeing-stars.com/Buried2/ForestLawnHollywood4.shtml


Let them know how much you cared

OR

Show

Widget

Find out for whom People are Tweeting their Respects

Music

Macromedia Flash Player 9 is required

Group Creator

Tina

    Virginia United States

    Subscribed Sep 30, 2008