Everly Brothers I Dont Think Ill Ever Get on a Train Again

American rock duo

The Everly Brothers

Phil (left) and Don Everly 1965 publicity photo.

Phil (left) and Don Everly 1965 publicity photo.

Background information
Born (1937-02-01)February 1, 1937 (Don)
(1939-01-19)January 19, 1939 (Phil)
Origin Muhlenberg County, Kentucky
Shenandoah, Iowa
Died January 3, 2014(2014-01-03) (aged 74) (Phil)
August 21, 2021(2021-08-21) (aged 84) (Don)
Genres
  • Country rock[ane] [2] [3] [iv]
  • stone and roll[1] [5]
  • country[1]
Instruments Vocals and guitars
Years active 1951–1973, 1983–2005 (as a duo); 1951–2018 (Don); 1951–2007 (Phil)
Labels Cadency, London, Heliodor, Warner Bros., RCA Victor, Razor & Tie, Mercury
By members Don Everly
Phil Everly

The Everly Brothers were an American stone duo, known for steel-string acoustic guitar playing and close harmony singing. Consisting of Isaac Donald "Don" Everly (February 1, 1937 – Baronial 21, 2021) and Phillip "Phil" Everly (Jan 19, 1939 – January 3, 2014), the duo combined elements of rock and roll, country and pop,[5] becoming pioneers of land stone.[1] [three]

The duo was raised in a musical family unit, starting time actualization on radio singing forth with their begetter Ike Everly and mother Margaret Everly as "The Everly Family" in the 1940s. When the brothers were still in loftier schoolhouse, they gained the attention of prominent Nashville musicians like Chet Atkins, who began to promote them for national attention.

They began writing and recording their own music in 1956, and their first hitting vocal came in 1957, with "Bye Bye Dearest", written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant. The song hit No. 1 in the spring of 1957, and additional hits would follow through 1958, many of them written by the Bryants, including "Wake Up Footling Susie", "All I Have to Do Is Dream", and "Problems". In 1960, they signed with the major label Warner Bros. Records and recorded "Cathy'southward Clown", written past the brothers themselves, which was their biggest selling single. The brothers enlisted in the U.s. Marine Corps Reserve in 1961, and their output dropped off, though additional hit singles continued through 1962, with "That's Old Fashioned (That'southward the Way Love Should Be)" beingness their concluding elevation-10 hitting.

Long-simmering disputes with Wesley Rose, the CEO of Acuff-Rose Music, which managed the group, and a growing drug usage in the 1960s, likewise as changing tastes in popular music, led to the group'southward decline in popularity in its native U.Southward., though the brothers continued to release hitting singles in the U.K. and Canada and had many highly successful tours throughout the 1960s. In the early 1970s, the brothers began releasing solo recordings, and in 1973 they officially broke up. Starting in 1983, the brothers got back together and connected to perform periodically until Phil'south death in 2014. Don died seven years later.

The grouping was highly influential with the music of the generation that followed it. Many of the height acts of the 1960s were heavily influenced by the shut-harmony singing and audio-visual guitar playing of the Everly Brothers, including the Beatles, the Beach Boys, the Bee Gees, and Simon & Garfunkel. In 2015, Rolling Rock ranked the Everly Brothers No. one on its list of the 20 Greatest Duos of All Time.[vi] They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as office of the inaugural class of 1986, and into the State Music Hall of Fame in 2001. Don was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2019, earning the organisation'south first Iconic Riff Award for his distinctive rhythm guitar intro to the Everlys' massive 1957 hitting "Wake Up Little Susie".[7]

History [edit]

Family and education [edit]

Don was born in Credibility, Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, on February 1, 1937, and Phil in Chicago, Illinois, on Jan 19, 1939. Their parents were Isaac Milford "Ike" Everly, Jr. (1908–1975), a guitar player, and Margaret Embry Everly (1919-2021).[8] [ix] [10] [11] Thespian James Best (built-in Gem Guy), likewise from Muhlenberg County, was the son of Ike'south sister.

Margaret was 15 when she married Ike, who was 26. Ike worked in coal mines from age 14, but his begetter encouraged him to pursue his beloved of music and Ike and Margaret began singing together.[12] The Everly brothers spent virtually of their babyhood in Shenandoah, Iowa.[13] They attended Longfellow Simple School in Waterloo, Iowa, for a year,[14] only then moved to Shenandoah in 1944, where they remained through early high school.

Ike Everly had a prove on KMA and KFNF in Shenandoah in the mid-1940s, first with his married woman and then with their sons. The brothers sang on the radio as "Picayune Donnie and Baby Boy Phil".[xv] The family unit sang every bit the Everly Family unit.[xvi]

The family moved to Knoxville, Tennessee, in 1953, where the brothers attended West High School (Knoxville, Tennessee).[17] In 1955, the family moved to Madison, Tennessee, while the brothers moved to Nashville, Tennessee. Don had graduated from loftier school in 1955, and Phil attended Peabody Sit-in School in Nashville,[18] from which he graduated in 1957.[19] Both could now focus on recording.[20]

1950s [edit]

The Everly Brothers in the late 1950s

While in Knoxville the brothers found work performing on Cas Walker'southward Subcontract and Home Hour, a regional radio and TV variety plan, before the brothers caught the attention of family friend Chet Atkins, manager of the RCA Victor studios in Nashville.[21] Soon thereafter their female parent moved the family to Nashville.[22] Despite affiliation with RCA Victor, Atkins somehow arranged for the Everly Brothers to record for Columbia Records in early 1956. Their "Keep a-Lovin' Me", which Don wrote and composed, flopped, and they were dropped from the Columbia label.[23]

Atkins introduced the Everly Brothers to Wesley Rose, of Acuff-Rose music publishers. Rose told them he would secure them a recording bargain if they signed to Acuff-Rose equally songwriters. They signed in late 1956, and in 1957 Rose introduced them to Archie Bleyer,[24] who was looking for artists for his Cadence Records. The Everlys signed and made a recording in February 1957.[22] "Bye Farewell Love" had been rejected by 30 other acts.[22] Their tape reached No. 2 on the pop charts, behind Elvis Presley'south "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear", and No. 1 on the state and No. 5 on the R&B charts.[22] The song, by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant,[25] became the Everly Brothers' first million-seller.

Working with the Bryants, they had hits in the United States and the Great britain, the biggest existence "Wake Up Little Susie", "All I Take to Do Is Dream", "Bird Canis familiaris", and "Bug". The Everlys, though they were largely interpretive artists, too succeeded as songwriters, especially with Don'southward "(Till) I Kissed You", which hit No. iv on the Usa pop charts.[26]

The brothers toured with Buddy Holly in 1957 and 1958. According to Holly's biographer Philip Norman, they were responsible for persuading Holly and the Crickets to change their outfits from Levi's and T-shirts to the Everlys' Ivy League suits. Don said Holly wrote and equanimous "Wishing" for them. "We were all from the S", Phil observed of their commonalities. "We'd started in country music."[27] Although some sources say Phil Everly was one of Holly'southward pallbearers in Feb 1959, Phil said in 1986 that he attended the funeral and sat with Holly's family, merely was not a pallbearer.[18] Don did not nourish, proverb, "I couldn't become to the funeral. I couldn't go anywhere. I just took to my bed."[27]

1960s–1970s [edit]

After 3 years on Cadence, the Everlys signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1960,[9] where they recorded for 10 years. Their first Warner Bros. hit, 1960's "Cathy's Clown", which they wrote and composed themselves, sold eight million copies and became the duo'due south biggest-selling tape.[28] "Cathy's Clown" was number WB1, the first choice Warner Bros. Records ever released in the United Kingdom.[29]

We're non M Ole Opry ... we're obviously not Perry Como ... we're just pop music. But, y'all could call united states an American skiffle group!

NME – November of 1960[30]

Other successful Warner Bros. singles followed in the U.s.a., such as "And so Sad (To Picket Good Dearest Go Bad)" (1960, pop No. 7), "Walk Correct Back" (1961, pop No. 7), "Crying in the Rain" (1962, pop No. vi), and "That's Old Fashioned" (1962, pop No. 9, their last meridian 10 hit). From 1960 to 1962, Cadence Records released Everly Brothers singles from the vaults, including "When Will I Be Loved" (popular No. eight), written and equanimous by Phil, and "Like Strangers".[31]

In the Uk, they had top 10 hits until 1965, including "Lucille"/"So Sad" (1960, No. 4), "Walk Right Back"/"Ebony Eyes" (1961, No. 1), "Temptation" (1961, No. i), "Cryin' in the Rain" (1962, No. 6) and "The Price of Honey" (1965, No. 2). They had xviii singles into the U.k. acme forty with Warner Bros. in the 1960s. Past 1962, the Everlys had reportedly earned $35 million from record sales.[32] In 1961, the brothers had a falling out with Wesley Rose during the recording of "Temptation". Rose was reportedly upset that the Everlys were recording a song which he had not published and, hence, for which he would non be paid any publishing royalties. Rose fabricated efforts to block the tape'south release. The Everlys held business firm to their position, and equally a result, in the early on 1960s, they were close off from Acuff-Rose songwriters. These included Felice and Boudleaux Bryant, who had written and composed near of their hits, as well every bit the Everlys themselves, who were still contracted to Acuff-Rose as songwriters and had written several of their own hits. From 1961 through early 1964, the Everlys recorded songs by other composers to avert paying any royalties to Acuff-Rose. They used the pseudonym "Jimmy Howard" as writer or arranger on two selections they wrote and recorded during this fourth dimension. This ruse, nevertheless, was ultimately unsuccessful, as Acuff-Rose gained legal possession of the copyrights once the deception was discovered.[33] Effectually this time, the brothers also set up their own tape label, Calliope Records, for solo projects. Using the pseudonym "Adrian Kimberly", Don recorded a big-band instrumental version of Edward Elgar'south first "Pomp and Circumstance" march, which Neal Hefti arranged and which charted in the United States elevation 40 in mid-1961. Further instrumental singles credited to Kimberly followed, but none of those charted. Phil formed the Keestone Family Singers, which featured Glen Campbell and Carole King. Their solitary single, "Melodrama", failed to nautical chart, and by the end of 1962, Calliope Records had gone out of business. The Everly Brothers' last United States meridian ten hit was 1962's "That's Old Fashioned (That's The Manner Dearest Should Exist)", a song recorded merely unreleased by The Chordettes and given to the brothers by their onetime mentor, Archie Bleyer.[31]

In succeeding years the Everly Brothers sold fewer records in the U.s.. Their enlistments in the Us Marine Corps Reserve in Oct 1961 took them out of the spotlight.[34] One of their few performances during their Marine service was on The Ed Sullivan Show, on February eighteen, 1962, when they performed "Jezebel" and "Crying in the Rain" while outfitted in their Marine Corps uniforms.[35] [36]

Following their discharges from active duty, the Everlys resumed their career, but with little success in the U.s.a.. Of their 27 singles on Warner Bros. from 1963 through 1970, simply iii made the Hot 100, and none peaked higher than No. 31. Album sales were besides down. The Everlys' first ii albums for Warners (in 1960 and 1961) peaked at No. ix US, but afterward that, of a dozen more LPs for Warner Bros., just one made the top 200 - 1965's "Beat & Soul", which peaked at No. 141.[37] [38]

The brothers' dispute with Acuff-Rose lasted until 1964, when they resumed writing and composing equally well every bit working with the Bryant spouses. Past then, however, both of the Everlys were fond to amphetamines. Don'southward condition was worse, equally he was taking Ritalin; his habit lasted three years, until he suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized to treat his addiction.[39] The mainstream media did not study that either brother was addicted. When Don complanate in England in mid-Oct 1962, reporters were told he had nutrient poisoning;[xl] when the tabloids suggested he had taken an overdose of pills, his married woman and his brother insisted he was suffering concrete and nervous exhaustion.[41] Don'south poor health ended their British tour; he returned to the Usa, leaving Phil to carry on with Joey Folio, their bass role player, taking Don's place.[42]

Though their U.South. stardom had begun to wane two years before the British Invasion in 1964, their appeal was still strong in Canada, the United Kingdom and Commonwealth of australia. The Everlys remained successful in the United Kingdom and Canada for most of the 1960s, reaching the top 40 in the United Kingdom through 1968 and the pinnacle ten in Canada equally belatedly as 1967. The 1966 album Two Yanks in England was recorded in England with The Hollies, who also wrote many of the anthology's songs. The Everlys' final U.S. peak xl striking, "Bowling Green", was released in 1967.[43]

By the terminate of the 1960s, the brothers had returned to country rock, and their 1968 album, Roots, was hailed past some critics every bit "i of the finest early country-rock albums".[44] Yet, by the cease of the 1960s, the Everly Brothers had ceased to exist hitmakers in either North America or the Great britain, and in 1970, following an unsuccessful live album (The Everly Brothers Show), their contract with Warner Bros. lapsed later ten years. They were the summer replacement hosts for Johnny Greenbacks's television receiver show in 1970; their variety programme, Johnny Greenbacks Presents the Everly Brothers, was on ABC-TV and featured Linda Ronstadt and Stevie Wonder.[45]

In 1970, Don released his unsuccessful first solo anthology. The brothers resumed performing in 1971 and issued two albums for RCA Records in 1972 and 1973. Lindsey Buckingham joined and toured with them in 1972. The Everlys announced their final performance would have place on July 14, 1973, at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, California, merely tensions betwixt the 2 surfaced and Don told a reporter he was tired of existence an Everly Brother.[46] During the show, Phil smashed his guitar and walked off, leaving Don to finish the show without him, ending their collaboration.[47] The two would non reunite musically for more than than ten years.

Solo years (1973–1983) [edit]

Phil and Don pursued solo careers from 1973 to 1983. Don establish some success on the US country charts in the mid- to late-1970s, in Nashville with his band, Dead Cowboys, and playing with Albert Lee. Don also performed solo at an annual land music festival in London in mid-1976. His appearance was well received, and he was given "thunderous applause", even though critics noted that the performance was uneven.[48]

Phil sang backup for Roy Wood'south 1975 anthology Mustard and two songs for Warren Zevon's 1976 self-titled anthology.[49] While Zevon was part of Phil Everly's back-upwardly band, Phil as well suggested the title and subject matter for Zevon's breakthrough hit single "Werewolves of London".[50]

Don recorded "Everytime You lot Leave" with Emmylou Harris on her 1979 album Bluish Kentucky Girl.[51]

Phil recorded more frequently, but with no chart success until the 1980s. He wrote "Don't Say Y'all Don't Dearest Me No More" for the 1978 Clint Eastwood one-act film Every Which Way Only Loose, in which he performed it as a duet with the pic'due south co-star Sondra Locke. Phil too wrote "I Too Many Women In Your Life" for the 1980 sequel, Any Which Way Y'all Can, and played in the ring which backed Locke.[52]

In 1983, Phil had United kingdom success every bit a soloist with the album Phil Everly, recorded mainly in London. Musicians on the LP included Dire Straits guitarist Mark Knopfler, Rockpile drummer Terry Williams, and keyboard player Pete Wingfield. The track "She Means Zippo to Me", written and composed by John David Williams and featuring Cliff Richard as co-pb vocalist, was a UK Top 10 hit, and "Louise", written and composed past Ian Gomm, reached the Summit 50 in 1983.[33] [53]

Reunion, subsequent activities (1983–2006) [edit]

The brothers' reunion concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London on September 23, 1983, which ended their 10-yr-long solo careers, was initiated by Phil and Don alongside Terry Slater, with Wingfield every bit musical manager. This concert was recorded for a live LP and video circulate on cablevision television in mid-Jan 1984.[54] The brothers returned to the studio as a duo for the beginning time in over a decade, recording the album EB '84, produced past Dave Edmunds. The lead unmarried, "On the Wings of a Nightingale", written and composed past Paul McCartney, was a success (Top 10 adult gimmicky)[55] and returned them to the US Hot 100 (for their last advent) and the United kingdom charts.

The Everly Brothers performing in New York

Their final charting single was 1986'south "Born Yesterday", from the album of the same name. They collaborated with other performers, mostly singing either backup vocals or duets, including additional vocals on the championship rails of Paul Simon'south 1986 album Graceland. In 1990, Phil recorded a duet with Dutch singer René Shuman [nl]. "On Meridian of the World" was written and composed by Phil, who appeared in the music video they recorded in Los Angeles. The selection appeared on Shuman's album Set the Clock on Rock. A 1981 live BBC recording of "All I Have to Exercise Is Dream", which featured Cliff Richard and Phil sharing vocals, was a Great britain Top 20 hit in 1994.[56]

In 1998, the brothers recorded "Cold" for Andrew Lloyd Webber's and Jim Steinman'south musical Whistle Downwardly the Air current, and the recording was used in stage versions as source music. This would be the final original recording the Everly Brothers would e'er brand equally a duo.[57]

The brothers joined Simon & Garfunkel in their "Old Friends" reunion bout of 2003 and 2004. As a tribute to the Everly Brothers, Simon & Garfunkel opened their own show and had the Everlys come out in the eye of it. The live album Onetime Friends: Live on Stage contains Simon & Garfunkel discussing the Everlys' influence on their career and features all four on "Good day Bye Love"; the subsequent DVD features two actress solo performances by the Everlys. This was not the first time Paul Simon had performed with his heroes; in 1986, the Everlys had sung background vocals on the title track of Simon'southward anthology Graceland. Simon & Garfunkel's 1981 Concert in Key Park featured their interpretation of the Everlys' "Wake Upwards, Little Susie".[58]

Phil Everly sang "Sweet Picayune Corrina" with state singer Vince Gill on his 2006 album These Days.[59] Everly had previously supplied harmony vocals on J. D. Souther's "White Rhythm and Blues" on his (Souther's) 1979 album You're Only Lonely.

Later developments [edit]

Don Everly attended the Annual Music Masters as the Stone and Roll Hall of Fame paid homage to the Everly Brothers on Oct 25, 2014. Don took the State Theater phase and performed the Everlys' classic hit "Bye Goodbye Beloved".[60] His concluding performance was a guest appearance with Paul Simon on Simon'due south 2022 adieu tour in Nashville. Don and Simon performed "Bye Adieu Honey", with Simon on Phil Everly'due south original tenor harmony.[61]

Don Everly publicly endorsed Hillary Clinton for the 2022 presidential election in January of that year.[62] This marked the first fourth dimension he had ever publicly supported a political candidate. Don stated that later on his brother Phil's decease, he felt free to express his views more openly, noting that the brothers' opposing views had made information technology impossible for them to lend active support to political candidates.

The Everly Brothers were among hundreds of artists whose material was destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.[63]

Deaths [edit]

Phil Everly died at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California, on January 3, 2014,[64] 16 days before his 75th birthday, of lung disease.[65] [66] [67] Phil'due south widow Patti blamed her husband's death on his smoking habit, which caused him to develop chronic obstructive pulmonary illness, and recounted Phil'due south spending his final years having to carry oxygen tanks with him wherever he went and taking 20 different types of medications per day.[68]

Don Everly claimed in a 2022 interview with the Los Angeles Times that he had given upwardly smoking in the belatedly 1960s and that Phil had stopped too, but started again during their breakdown and had continued until 2001. Don said that weak lungs ran in the family, as their father, Ike, had died of black lung affliction. He admitted that he had lived "a very hard life" with his blood brother and that he and Phil had become estranged once over again in later years, something that was mainly attributed to "their vastly different views on politics and life", with the music being the one matter they shared closely, saying, "information technology's almost like nosotros could read each other'southward minds when we sang." However, Don besides stated he had not gotten over Phil's expiry, saying, "I e'er thought about him every mean solar day, even when we were non speaking to each other. Information technology even so just shocks me that he'southward gone." Don added that he had always firmly believed he would die earlier his brother, because he was older.[69] In a 2022 interview Don said he was still coping with the loss of Phil and that he had kept some of his brother'southward ashes in his home. He added that he would pick upwards the ashes every morning time and say "adept morning", while admitting that information technology was a peculiar ritual.[70]

On August 21, 2021, Don Everly died at his home in Nashville, aged 84.[71]

Style and influences [edit]

The Everly Brothers' music fused elements of rock and roll, country and pop.[5] This style cemented the duo every bit pioneers of country stone.[1] [3] Don and Phil, both guitarists, used song harmony more often than not based on diatonic thirds. On virtually recordings, Don sang the baritone part and Phil the tenor harmony.[72] [73] One notable exception is "Since You Broke My Heart" (1958). Although Don was mainly low, and Phil was mainly loftier, their voices overlap in a very intricate and almost subtle fashion. Another notable example is "I'll See Your Lite" (1977), which is one of the few songs in which Phil consistently has the low harmony while Don is consistently loftier. Don usually sang the solo lines (for instance, the verses of "Bye Goodbye Honey"); amid the few exceptions is the 1965 single "It'south All Over", on which Phil sang the song's solo lines.[74]

In the tardily 1950s, the Everly Brothers were the rock and ringlet youth motion's addition to shut harmony vocal groups, many of which were family bands. They influenced rock groups of the 1960s. The Beatles,[75] The Beach Boys,[76] and Simon & Garfunkel[77] adult their early on styles past performing Everly songs.

Legacy [edit]

The music of the Everly Brothers influenced the Beatles, who referred to themselves as "the British Everly Brothers"[66] when Paul McCartney and John Lennon went hitchhiking southward to win a talent contest.[78] They based the song organisation of "Delight Please Me" on "Cathy's Clown".[79] McCartney besides referred to 'Phil and Don' in the lyrics to Let 'Em In from the 1976 album Wings at the Speed of Sound.

Keith Richards chosen Don Everly "one of the finest rhythm [guitar] players".[80]

Paul Simon, who worked with the pair on the song "Graceland", said on the twenty-four hours after Phil's death, "Phil and Don were the most beautiful sounding duo I ever heard. Both voices pristine and soulful. The Everlys were in that location at the crossroads of country and R&B. They witnessed and were office of the birth of rock and roll."[15]

Achievements and honors [edit]

The Everly Brothers had 35 Billboard Tiptop 100 singles, 26 in the top 40. They hold the record for the most Top 100 singles by whatever duo and trail merely Hall & Oates for the almost Summit xl singles past a duo. In the UK, they had 30 chart singles, 29 in the Summit 40, 13 Top 10, and 4 at No. 1 betwixt 1957 and 1984. They had 12 Acme twoscore albums between 1960 and 2009.[81]

The Everly Brothers were among the first ten artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986. They were introduced by Neil Young, who observed that every musical group he had always belonged to had tried, and failed, to copy the Everly Brothers' harmonies. On July 5, 1986, the Everlys returned to Shenandoah, Iowa, for a concert, parade, street dedication, grade reunion, and other activities. Concert fees were donated to the Everly Family Scholarship Fund, which gives scholarships to middle school and loftier school students in Shenandoah. The brothers were inducted into the Iowa Rock 'n' Gyre Hall of Fame in 2003.[82]

In 1997, the brothers were awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. They were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001 and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2004.[83] Their contribution to music has been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. On October ii, 1986, The Everly Brothers received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for their work in the music manufacture, located at 7000 Hollywood Blvd.[84] [85] In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked the Everly Brothers No. 33 on its list of the "100 greatest artists of all time".[86] They are also No. 43 on the list of U.k. All-time selling singles artists of all time.[87]

Tributes and interpretations past other artists [edit]

The Everlys, as noted above, wrote and composed "Till I Kissed You" (Don), "When Will I Be Loved" (Phil), "Built-in Yesterday" (Don), and "Cathy's Clown" (Don, or mayhap Don and Phil). The authorship of "Cathy's Clown" has been the subject field of a 2022 lawsuit and has been differently adjudicated by different courts, most recently in 2021.[88] "Cathy's Clown" and "When Will I Be Loved" became hits for Reba McEntire and Linda Ronstadt, respectively. "Cathy'southward Clown" was also covered by the Tarney/Spencer Band and released every bit a unmarried in 1979. Band member Alan Tarney (a former member of the Shadows) went on to be a producer for Cliff Richard and a-ha, the Norwegian band who, in turn, covered "Crying in the Rain" in 1990 for its fourth anthology, Eastward of the Sun, Due west of the Moon.[89] [ninety]

On Labor Mean solar day weekend 1988, Central City, Kentucky, began the Everly Brothers Homecoming event to raise money for a scholarship fund for Muhlenberg Canton students. Don and Phil toured the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland in the 1980s and as recently every bit 2005, and Phil appeared in 2007 on recordings with Vince Gill and Beak Medley. Also in 2007, Alison Krauss and former Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant released Raising Sand, which included a cover of the Everlys' 1964 hit "Gone, Gone, Gone", produced by T-Os Burnett.[91]

Four Everly Brothers tribute records were released in 2013: Billie Joe Armstrong's and Norah Jones' Foreverly,[92] the Chapin Sisters' A Date with the Everly Brothers,[93] Bonnie Prince Billy's and Dawn McCarthy'southward What the Brothers Sang,[94] and the Wieners' Bird Dogs.[95]

The album Marvin, Welch & Farrar (1971), by the British-Australian band of the aforementioned proper name, contains a track named later on Don's identify of birth, "Credibility Kentucky".[96]

Deerhunter's "Basement Scene" "intentionally nods to the Everly Brothers' 'All I Have To Practise Is Dream'".[97]

Discography [edit]

Come across too [edit]

  • Gibson Everly Brothers Flattop
  • List of songs recorded past the Everly Brothers

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • The Everly Brothers at AllMusic
  • The Everly Brothers discography at Discogs
  • The Everly Brothers interviewed on the Pop Chronicles (1969)

baisleycoonly.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Everly_Brothers

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