In 1978, Andy Gibb and his brothers, Barry, Maurice, and Robin (aka the Bee Gees), dominated the Billboard charts. While several of the Bee Gees' songs, including “Stayin’ Alive” and “Night Fever” from theSaturday Night Fever soundtrack, hit No. 1 that year, it was their youngest brother, 20-year-old Andy, who had the longest-running hit of 1978.
Andy Gibb’s song “Shadow Dancing” soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on June 17, 1978, and stayed there through the week of July 29, making the summertime hit the number one song of the year.
The song, which was released in April 1978 and appeared on Gibb’s album of the same name, was written by all four brothers together—and in record time.
In the book The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, Gibb was quoted as saying that "Shadow Dancing" was written when all of his brothers were in Los Angeles to work on the movie Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
"And one night, while we were relaxing, we sat down and we had to start getting tracks together for the album,” he shared, per author Fred Bronson. “So we literally sat down and in ten minutes, we had a group going, (singing) the chorus part. As it says underneath the song, we all wrote it, the four of us.”
Not only did the brothers have a quick group writing session, but big brother Barry sang backup vocals on the hit disco-inspired track.
Andy Gibb’s career was a whirlwind
“Shadow Dancing” wasn’t Gibb’s only hit that year—earlier in 1978, he had a No. 1 with the song “(Love is) Thicker Than Water"—but it was by far his biggest.
In a 1985 interview with Bob Durant, he said of the song, “Whoo, huge, that record was huge.”
“The album was No. 2. which was the biggest-selling album I ever had,” the singer added. “But the record itself around the world must have sold something... I don’t know, probably about 20 million worldwide, probably more, but in [the U.S.], actually, much more than that, but the album in this country sold about 6 platinum.”
Gibb was substantially younger than his older brothers and never wanted to join their trio.
“My brothers were famous a long time before I was, and they helped me get into show business, and they still produce my records for me, but I suppose I was pretty much used to the business because of my brother's success,” he once said in a TV interview.
During an appearance on The Merv Griffin Showin the late 1970s, Barry Gibb explained why his youngest brother didn’t just join the Bee Gees. “Andy's like 10 years [younger], a different thing,” he said. “It’s hard for Andy to [jump in]. He would rather be a solo artist.”
Andy Gibb recorded three albums before his death in 1988 at age 30. He was the first solo artist to have his first three singles reach number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, according to Bronson’s book.
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