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b.
Maurice Ernest Gibb,
22 December 1949, Douglas, Isle of Man, United
Kingdom
d. 12 January 2003,
Miami, Florida, USA. |
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Maurice Gibb CBE was a British musician and
a member of the band the Bee Gees. He was born in Douglas, Isle of
Man. The twin of Robin Gibb, Maurice was the younger by 35
minutes. He grew up with his family in Chorlton-cum-Hardy,
Manchester, England. In 1958 he and his family moved to Brisbane,
Australia, settling in one of the city's poorest suburbs, Cribb
Island, which was subsequently demolished to make way for Brisbane
Airport. While still in Brisbane, he and brothers Robin and Barry
formed the Bee Gees, which would become one of the most successful
musical groups of the 1970s and 1980s.
In a career spanning five decades, the group sold over 110 million
records. Maurice Gibb played bass, guitar, and keyboard for the
group, and was generally known as "the quiet one" (generally due
to his actually being somewhat shy privately, and to his deference
to his other brothers being spokesmen for the group). He was the
only one of the three who had not been in trouble with the British
police before the family emigrated to Australia. He was famously
married to the Scottish pop star Lulu from 1969 to 1973, but they
had no children, and the pressure of their respective commitments
led to their divorce.In 1994, Maurice Gibb was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of
Fame, and in 1997 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame.His catalogue is published by BMG Music Publishing.
Maurice's reputation as a mild-mannered stabilising influence
continued into later life. When the Bee Gees walked out of their
interview with British chat show host Clive Anderson, Maurice was
last to leave, with the words "I don't do impersonations of my
brothers".
Maurice Gibb died at a Miami, Florida, hospital on January 12,
2003, of complications following cardiac arrest and subsequent
surgery for a twisted intestine. He was only 53 years old.
Together with his wife Yvonne, he had two children, Adam and
Samantha.
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