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The Bee Gees - Tales of the Brothers Gibb.
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Stephen Holden's contemporary review in Rolling Stone commented that he felt the Bee Gees occupied "a very limited territory of pop music", dealing mainly in ballads of "momentary pathos", and that the album was "headphone mood music that makes no demands beyond a superficial emotional surrender to its perfumed atmosphere of pink frosting and glitter", and that the Gibbs vocal style had developed to the point where "they sound more like reed instruments than singers".
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Shepherd's arrangements are relatively toned down and the background vocals sometimes seem to take the place of what could have been string sections. The Bee Gees saved a non-album single, "My World", from the sessions which was released in January 1972, becoming a UK/US Top 20 hit. The album was primarily recorded between June 1971 and April 1972 (except for "We Lost the Road", recorded in January 1971 during the Trafalgar sessions). As far as I'm concerned, I think they have an unbelievable talent - I'd give anything just to have written one of the songs that they've written, especially the later stuff. On the album it's got a photograph of Chris Karan which is ridiculous really, because it wasn't Chris playing on the album, it was me!. Karan did not participate with the Bee Gees on studio as Clem Cattini recalls: The first song recorded for this album was " You Know It's For You", a song written and performed by Maurice Gibb, on which he played guitar, bass, keyboard and mellotron. The drummer on the April sessions was a veteran session player, Clem Cattini. Recording resumed in April 1972 with a Robin song called "Never Been Alone" and a song Barry did on his fan club recording from 1971 called "I Can Bring Love". He left the group before their tour of East Asia and was replaced on tour by Chris Karan. They recorded the song "Paper Mache, Cabbages and Kings" on 3 January 1972 which was the last song recorded with the Australian drummer Geoff Bridgford. After touring in 1971 to promote their previous album, Trafalgar, the Bee Gees worked quickly to complete another album.