Died On This Date (August 15, 2012) Rich Fitzgerald / Veteran Record Label Executive

Rich Fitzgerald
February 23, 1947 – August 15, 2011

Rich Fitzgerald was a greatly respected music industry professional who took his tireless passion for music and made a successful career out of it.  Raised in Seattle, Washington, it was the young Fitzgerald who was likely turning his classmates on to the newest records.  He went as far, it has been said, as creating his own pop charts and distributing them to his friends.  Fitzgerald began his career working for Capitol Records there in Seattle, and by the mid 1970s, he was employed by one of the hottest new labels at the time, RSO Records, where he played a role in the success of such artists as the Bee Gees, Andy Gibb, and Eric Clapton with whom he would build a lifelong business and personal relationship.  He was also directly involved with the pop culture phenomenons known as Saturday Night Fever, Grease, and Fame while at RSO.   He went on to work for Network, Geffen, Reprise, and Warner Bros.   Fitzgerald eventually rose to the position of Vice President of Promotions while at Warner Bros. where he helped such future stars as Madonna, Prince, Green Day, and the Pretenders  get their first records played on radio.  During his final years, Fitzgerald was working directly with Clapton.  Rich Fitzgerald was 64 when he died of esophageal cancer on August 15, 2011.

Thanks to Craig Rosen at Number 1 Albums for the assist.



Died On This Date (March 10, 1988) Andy Gibb / ’70s Pop Star

Andy Gibb
March 5, 1958 – March 10, 1988

Although Andy Gibb was the baby brother of Maurice Gibb, Barry Gibb and Robin Gibb, the Bee Gees, he never lived in their shadow. In fact their fame likely helped him launch his own career as he was signed by Robert Stigwood to his RSO Records label, then home to the Bee Gees as well. Brother Barry wrote for and co-produced Andy’s debut. Flowing Rivers, included three consecutive #1 singles on Billboard magazine’s Hot 100, a first for a solo male artist. As was the case with many artists from the disco era, Gibb’s career took a steady downturn throughout the eighties at about the same pace as his addiction to cocaine was growing. Although he had several guest-starring roles on television and a successful tour of Asia, he found himself in serious financial trouble, so he decided to join forces with Barry and Maurice to revive his career. But sadly, his habits caught up with him in the form of an inflammatory heart virus allegedly caused by his strong addiction to cocaine.



Died On This Date (January 12, 2003) Maurice Gibb / The Bee Gees

Maurice Gibb
December 22, 1949 – January 12, 2003

Maurice Gibb was an English singer-songwriter, musician and producer who, along with his twin brother, Robin Gibb and younger brother Barry Gibb, made up the Bee Gees.  The group went on to become one of the most popular and successful bands of all time and almost single-handedly sent disco into the stratosphere during the late ’70s.  But don’t hold that against them.  They have sold in the neighborhood of 225 million albums throughout their career.  And their younger brother, Andy Gibb, had a successful career as a pop musician as well.  While Maurice was still just a child, the Gibb family moved from the Isle of Man to Australia where the brothers Gibb, or Bee Gees, formed their band.  Maurice primarily handled the arrangements, played lead guitar and other instruments, and sang harmony vocals, which of course, the group was very famous for.  After relocating back to England in 1966, the Bee Gees began getting noticed.  Their early albums were more English folk rock and progressive than their late ’70s disco output, and their first album of significance, 1967’s Bee Gees 1st (which it wasn’t) can easily stand along any number of the great British Invasion albums of its time.  The album ultimately cracked the Top 10 in both America and the UK.  Their later pre-disco albums leaned more rock and even progressive at times.  In 1977, the soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever was released, and with several Bee Gees tunes on it, their lives changed.  The album sold over 15 million copies, and although it didn’t “invent” disco, it certainly helped bring it to the suburbs of white America.  Over the next year and a half, the Bee Gees earned six consecutive #1 singles – holding the record until  Whitney Houston came along.   After disco crashed during the ’80s, the Bee Gees took a long break during which Maurice worked on solo releases by Barry and Robin while producing other projects.  The group reunited during the ’90s and again, the 2000s to respectable success, both on record and on tour.  Their final live performance as a trio came in 2002.  In his later years, Maurice took up paint ball and even opened a paintball equipment store near his Florida home.  On January 12, 2003, Maurice Gibb died from complications of volvulus, or a twisted intestine.  He was 53.

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Bee Gees 1st (Remastered) - Bee Gees