Saturday, 8 February 2014
35 Hello Everly Brothers - Bye Bye Love
Chart entered : 12 July 1957
Chart peak : 6
Number of hits : 30
Another hugely influential act checked in in the summer of 1957. At the tender age of 18, the recently-deceased Phil is the youngest person we've covered at this point.
Don ( who was two years older ) and Phil were the sons of a country guitar player Ike Everly who moved his family around the mid-west. Don was born in Kentucky, Phil in Chicago. Ike had his own radio show in the 1940s and formed a family group including his wife and young boys. Chet Atkins spotted their potential and took them under his wing easing them out of "the Family" and into a duo. He got them a deal with Columbia.
They released "Keep A Lovin Me" in early 1956 but the label lost interest when it wasn't a hit. There's nothing wrong with their vocal performance ; it's the song that's weak, a tepid under-produced country waltz that doesn't go anywhere interesting.
Atkins kept faith with the duo and got them a deal as writers with music publishers Acuff-Rose. Wesley Rose then touted them to Archie Bleyer of Cadence Records.
The reward was immediate as "Bye Bye Love" the first single sold a million copies. The song was written by wife-and-husband songwriting team Felice and Boudleux Bryant beginning a long and fruitful relationship with the brothers. It's a deceptively simple song of love gone wrong with the protagonist believing his whole world has collapsed - "Hello Emptiness" - because he's seen his girl with another guy. As quickly became the pattern, Don the baritone sang the verses solo with Phil's tenor coming in on the chorus. Both brothers played the guitar well and there's little other instrumentation on the record. I'm hoping my regular commenter might tell me if he can hear a bass on the recording. It's noticeable that Don's voice is much louder in the mix than Phil's , the harbinger of sibling tension that existed throughout their career. Feuding brothers of course will feature in quite a few stories here.
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I can hear a bass, albeit very deeply in the mix. I certainly needed my headphones on to pick it out.
ReplyDeleteGreat song, great voices. It's not hard to recognise how their work has lasted so long - like with Chuck Berry, there's the seeds of a lot of the future here.
Thanks DC. I have an ear infection at the moment so wasn't likely to pick it up !
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