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The
Everly Brothers

Formed: Kentucky, USA . . . 1955 by brothers DON and PHIL
EVERLY, the offspring of country singing parents, IKE and MARGARET. No strangers
to the music scene (the boys having appeared on numerous radio shows
alongside their folks), they went to Nashville later that year hoping that
hillbilly artists would buy their close harmony songs. The following year,
they secured a deal with 'Columbia' records, the label releasing one country-
style single, 'KEEP A LOVIN' ME', before opting out as the rock'n'roll
era began to kick in. After a short struggle in an attempt to find another
label, their father contacted old friend, star picker CHET ATKINS, who got
them signed as writers for the legendary Roy Acuff/Wesley Rose
songsmith team. ROSE subsequently became the siblings' manager, persuading
Bleyer of 'Cadence' records to take them on as recording
artists.
Adopting a new style combining their vocal harmonies
with
pop'n'roll strumming, The EVERLY BROTHERS made an immediate
impact with 'BYE BYE LOVE', a million selling single which peaked
summer. Their profile heightened by a handful of TV
appearances on things like Ed Sullivan and Perry Como,
the brothers' clean-cut looks and teen heartbreak appeal saw further singles,
'WAKE UP LITTLE SUSIE', 'ALL I HAVE TO DO IS DREAM' and 'BIRD DOG
fare equally well over the ensuing three years. In 1960, they signed to
'Warner Bros' scoring a transatlantic chart topper with their label debut, 'CATHY'S
CLOWN' a 45
that had to battle for chart supremacy against reissued 'Cadence
material'
The lads were now also relying on their own material, having left the
Felice & Boudleaux Bryant songwriting duo behind when they
switched. A further clutch of major hits, 'SO SAD (TO WATCH GOOD
LOVE GO BAD), 'WALK RIGHT BACK', 'TEMPTATION', 'CRYIN' IN THE RAIN etc,
saw them dominate the pre-BEATLES pop charts in both America and Britain,
although it would be the UK who stood by the duo when the onslaught
of the 1963-64 British Invasion took hold. In 1965, as their American profile was
on the wane, they scored considerable critical and commercial success as the
classic, THE PRICE OF LOVE' hit No.2 in Britain (criminally ignored in
their homeland). Their records continued to sell moderately throughout the
latter half of the 60's, although a dalliance with country rock in the early
70's brought little commercial reward; the increasingly estranged brothers
finally parted company on less than amicable terms during a disastrous gig
on the 14th of July '73. Over the next ten years, the brothers followed
sporadically successful solo careers (PHIL, together with CLIFF RICHARD
had a 1983 UK Top 10 hit 'SHE MEANS NOTHING TO ME'), eventually
coming together again for a reunion concert in '83; they were back on
speaking terms after attending the funeral of their father. The resulting live
album put The EVERLY BROTHERS back in the UK Top 50 as did the
following year's eponymous (PAUL McCARTNEY-produced) comeback set,
and although they maintained their
working relationship they failed
to keep up the momentum.
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