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Ordinary Lives
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Singles chronology

Ordinary Lives
Ordinary Lives
27/3/1989
One
One
0/6/1989

Ordinary Lives

The Bee Gees

1989 Single
  • Released: 27 March 1989 · Fecha Grabación: April 1988 -
    Label: Warner Bros. · · Productor: Barry Gibb , Robin Gibb , Maurice Gibb , Brian Tench
    1
    Ordinary Lives
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry and Robin • 1989 /03 /27
    4:05
  • 2
    Wing and a Prayer
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /03 /27
    3:54
  • Album


    One

    One

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 17 April 1989 · Fecha Grabación: March 1989 -
    Discográfica: Warner Bros. Records, Warner Music · Estudio de Grabación: Middle Ear Studios (Miami Beach, Florida); Mayfair Studios (London, UK) · Productor: Barry Gibb, Maurice Gibb and Robin Gibb , Brian Tench
    1
    Ordinary lives
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry and Robin • 1989 /04 /17
    4:05
  • 2
    One
    The Bee GeesThe Bee Gees • w: Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    4:54
  • 3
    Bodyguard
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Robin and Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    5:22
  • 4
    It's my neighborhood
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    4:20
  • 5
    Tears
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    5:18
  • 6
    Tokyo nights
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Robin • 1989 /04 /17
    3:58
  • 7
    Flesh and blood
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Robin • 1989 /04 /17
    4:42
  • 8
    Wish you were here
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry and Robin • 1989 /04 /17
    4:47
  • 9
    House of shame
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Maurice and Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    4:52
  • 10
    Will you ever let me
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    5:59
  • 11
    Wing and a prayer
    The Bee GeesBee Gees • w: Barry, Robin , Maurice Gibb • v: Barry • 1989 /04 /17
    3:54
  • Album

    Ordinary Lives
    Ordinary Lives
    27/3/1989
    One
    One
    0/6/1989
    "Ordinary Lives"
    Single by Bee Gees
    from the album One
    B-side"Wing and a Prayer"
    Released27 March 1989
    RecordedApril 1988
    GenrePop
    Length4:01
    LabelWarner Bros.
    Songwriter(s)Barry, Robin & Maurice Gibb
    Producer(s)Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, Maurice Gibb, Brian Tench
    Bee Gees singles chronology
    "E.S.P."
    (1987)
    "Ordinary Lives"
    (1989)
    "One"
    (1989)

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    For the social history series of the same name, see Clive Murphy.

    1989 single by Bee Gees

    "Ordinary Lives" is a song by the Bee Gees from their 16th studio album One, released on 27 March 1989 by Warner Records as the album`s first single. It was written by the group and they produced it with Brian Tench. Following the premature death of their younger brother Andy Gibb in 1988, the Bee Gees dedicated this song and their new album to him. Originally the song was titled "Cruel World" but was later changed to "Ordinary Lives". The song reached the top 10 in Switzerland (number 9) and Germany (number 8), and hit the top 40 in some European countries except France and the UK, where it peaked at number 49 and 54 respectively.[1]

    Composition and inspiration

    Scott Glasel recalled that "Ordinary Lives" was started before Andy died, but as completed it seems to be a philosophical comment on life and death. For a time it was called "Cruel World", a phrase heard at the start of the second verse as complete. The rhythm has some similarity to "You Win Again" and may have been a deliberate attempt to follow it up, but it has many new features, including the brief spoken word parts and the existential musings of the lyrics, something often associated with Robin but clearly here coming from Barry. The finished recording probably has added dubs by the musicians who worked on the album One.[2]

    Barry Gibb performed this song in the 2013 Mythology Tour, accompanied by his son Stephen Gibb and Maurice`s daughter Samantha "Sammy" Gibb. He still used the backing vocal effect from the last part of the original record.[citation needed]

    Music video

    The music video for the song was filmed in Los Angeles, California and received heavy airplay from 1989 to 1990. It shows the Bee Gees and their backing band consisting of Alan Kendall (guitar), with guests Nathan East (bass), and Alex Acuña (drums) in a dark studio performing the song, intersped with scenes of everyday life and an archival footage of the 1929 Wall Street crash.

    Personnel

    Bee Gees

    • Barry Gibb – lead, harmony and backing vocals; rhythm guitar
    • Robin Gibb – lead, harmony and backing vocals
    • Maurice Gibb – harmony and backing vocals, keyboards (played bass on TV show performances of this song)

    Additional musicians

    • Peter-John Vettese – keyboards, synthesizer
    • Tim Cansfield – lead guitar
    • Alan Kendall – lead guitar
    • Nathan East – bass
    • Steve Ferrone – drums

    Charts

    Chart performance for "Ordinary Lives"

    Chart (1989)

    Peak
    position

    Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[3]

    19

    Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[4]

    22

    France (SNEP)[5]

    49

    Germany (GfK)[6]

    8

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[7]

    23

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[8]

    27

    Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[9]

    9

    UK Singles (OCC)[10]

    54

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    For the social history series of the same name, see Clive Murphy.

    1989 single by Bee Gees

    "Ordinary Lives" is a song by the Bee Gees from their 16th studio album One, released on 27 March 1989 by Warner Records as the album`s first single. It was written by the group and they produced it with Brian Tench. Following the premature death of their younger brother Andy Gibb in 1988, the Bee Gees dedicated this song and their new album to him. Originally the song was titled "Cruel World" but was later changed to "Ordinary Lives". The song reached the top 10 in Switzerland (number 9) and Germany (number 8), and hit the top 40 in some European countries except France and the UK, where it peaked at number 49 and 54 respectively.[1]

    Composition and inspiration

    Scott Glasel recalled that "Ordinary Lives" was started before Andy died, but as completed it seems to be a philosophical comment on life and death. For a time it was called "Cruel World", a phrase heard at the start of the second verse as complete. The rhythm has some similarity to "You Win Again" and may have been a deliberate attempt to follow it up, but it has many new features, including the brief spoken word parts and the existential musings of the lyrics, something often associated with Robin but clearly here coming from Barry. The finished recording probably has added dubs by the musicians who worked on the album One.[2]

    Barry Gibb performed this song in the 2013 Mythology Tour, accompanied by his son Stephen Gibb and Maurice`s daughter Samantha "Sammy" Gibb. He still used the backing vocal effect from the last part of the original record.[citation needed]

    Music video

    The music video for the song was filmed in Los Angeles, California and received heavy airplay from 1989 to 1990. It shows the Bee Gees and their backing band consisting of Alan Kendall (guitar), with guests Nathan East (bass), and Alex Acuña (drums) in a dark studio performing the song, intersped with scenes of everyday life and an archival footage of the 1929 Wall Street crash.

    Personnel

    Bee Gees

    • Barry Gibb – lead, harmony and backing vocals; rhythm guitar
    • Robin Gibb – lead, harmony and backing vocals
    • Maurice Gibb – harmony and backing vocals, keyboards (played bass on TV show performances of this song)

    Additional musicians

    • Peter-John Vettese – keyboards, synthesizer
    • Tim Cansfield – lead guitar
    • Alan Kendall – lead guitar
    • Nathan East – bass
    • Steve Ferrone – drums

    Charts

    Chart performance for "Ordinary Lives"

    Chart (1989)

    Peak
    position

    Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[3]

    19

    Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[4]

    22

    France (SNEP)[5]

    49

    Germany (GfK)[6]

    8

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[7]

    23

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[8]

    27

    Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[9]

    9

    UK Singles (OCC)[10]

    54

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