The Everly Brothers
Born
Isaac Donald Everly on February 1 1937 in Brownie, Kentucky, Don
wasn't the twin of Phil, as so many believed. Phil was in fact, born
on January 19 1939 in Chicago, Illinois.
When the two boys were living in Shenandoah, Iowa, their parents -
who were both perfumers - introduced them to listeners on their Earl
May radio show. Don was eight-years-old, Phil was six, and they were
known to listeners as Little Donnie and Baby Boy Phil. When their
radio shows ended, the family group dispersed, but Phil and Don wanted
to continue in the business.
Family friends Chet Atkins helped the brothers reach a deal with a
music publisher for a song they'd written, Thou Shall Not Steal. Kitty
Wells recorded it, and Don and Phil received $600. This
led to a recording deal with Columbia Records.
They recorded four tracks at the Old Tulane Hotel's studios in
Nashville during November 1955. Two were released on a single - Keep
A-Lovin' Me and The Sun Keeps Shining - early in 1956. The
record bombed so Columbia canned the remaining tracks and dropped the
brothers.
Every label in America turned the brothers down until, once more,
Chet Atkins came to the rescue and secured them positions as staff
writers for a publishing outfit headed by Roy Acuff and Wesley Rose.
When Cadence Records expressed interest in signing a country and
western act, Rose suggested The Everly Brothers, who duly
recorded Bye Bye Love at RCA's studio in Nashville.
The single was far removed from the country and western style.
Instead, it featured acoustic Rock & Roll against sharp harmonies
which would become The Everly Brothers' signature sound. The single
brought the duo instant success when it shot straight to Number 2 in
the American chart, with sales in excess of one million copies. It
also crossed over into both the R&B and country and western
listings, and became a UK Number 6 hit.
American television viewers began to see Phil and Don regularly on
variety programs, and their follow-up single, Wake Up Little Susie,
soon earned them their second million-seller. The single also roared
to Number 2 in Britain. By the close of 1958 The Everly Brothers had
four million-sellers. All I Have To Do Is Dream topped the US
charts for four weeks, becoming their biggest-ever selling single. It
also provided the boys' debut Number 1 in Britain, holding on to that
position for a staggering seven weeks.
After the brothers had headlined the Alan
Freed Christmas Rock
& Roll Spectacular at Loen's State Theater in New York, they
flew to London to receive the 'World's Number One Vocal Group' award
following the readers' poll in the New Musical Express. They
also appeared on the Cool For Cats music television show. The
brothers' three year deal with Cadence terminated at the close of 1959
and the major labels virtually queued up to add the duo to their
rosters. It was reported that the brothers were seeking a new contract
that would bring them one million dollars over the next 10 years - a
deal unheard of at the time. The fledgling Warner Bros label agreed to
pay $100,000 a year for the next 10 years, and The Everly Brothers
signed the first-ever $1 million record contract. Their first single
for Warners was Cathy's Clown, and by May 1960 it had topped
both the US and UK charts. For the next couple of years, the Everly's
would be rarely out of the charts thanks to releases by both Warners
and Cadence, who still marketed their back catalog. But in the wake of
Don's drug problems - which surfaced dramatically during their UK tour
in October/November 1962, forcing Phil to complete many dates on his
own - their record sales cooled. The
coming of the British Invasion in the 60s
also helped put paid to
the Everly's rise to super-stardom. They tried a number of different
styles throughout the decade, embracing beat music on Beat &
Soul and teaming up with The Hollies on Two Yanks In England.
When neither of those attempts really worked, the Everly's bass
player, Terry Slater, stepped up and gave the soft-pop sound of The
Association a country twist for a song called Bowling Green
which opened the album The Everly Brothers Sing. It was to be
their final US hit. The end came in July 1973 when Phil walked off
stage at California's Knotts Berry Farm, claiming "I'll never get
on a stage with that man again."
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