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- From: garc@compuserve.com (David Garcia)
- Newsgroups: alt.music.bee-gees,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Bee Gees Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), Part 1/4
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- Reply-To: garc@compuserve.com (David Garcia)
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
- Questions (and their answers) about the Bee Gees. It
- should be read by anyone who wishes to post to the
- alt.music.bee-gees newsgroup.
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
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- Archive-name: music/beegees-faq/part1
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- Last-modified: 1998/08/25
- Maintainer: David Garcia <garc@compuserve.com>
-
- Bee Gees
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Part One of Four
- August 25, 1998
-
- Table of Contents:
-
- Part One:
- 1-01. Who are the Bee Gees?
-
- Part Two:
- 2-01. What LPs, CDs or videos am I missing from my
- collection?
-
- Part Three:
- 3-01. What Bee Gees on-line resources are available?
-
- Part Four:
- 4-01. What is a FAQ?
- 4-02. Whatever happened to...?
- 4-03. Will the Bee Gees ever perform live again?
- 4-04. Will "Still Waters" be their last album?
- 4-05. What is the Bee Gees e-mail address?
- 4-06. Who is Renee Schreiber?
- 4-07. What is this rumor about missing lyrics to the song
- "Rings Around the Moon"?
- 4-08. When will the Bee Gees make a Christmas album (and/or
- country album, "unplugged" album, etc.)?
- 4-09. Who decides whether rarities are released? Any chance
- that some unreleased tracks will be made available?
- 4-10. What kind of tuning does Barry use on his guitar?
- 4-11. How tall are the Bee Gees?
- 4-12. Are any of the Gibb brothers left-handed?
- 4-13. When are their families' birthdays and anniversaries?
- 4-14. Who is older, Robin or Maurice?
- 4-15. What's on the list of forthcoming events?
- 4-16. Where can I find the lyrics to...?
- 4-17. Have any books been written about the Bee Gees or Andy
- Gibb?
- 4-18. Where can I order a CD of...?
- 4-19. Any fan get togethers planned for the near future?
- 4-20. What interviews have appeared in newspapers or
- magazines lately?
- 4-21. Where can I find Maurice Gibb lunchboxes and other Bee
- Gees memoribilia?
- 4-22. Save me, save me! The Bee Gees are just another one of
- my obsessions, but she says it's tearing my world apart, and if I
- only had my mind on something else, I could dedicate my life to
- something new. Where do I stand? I look like a happy man, but
- how hopelessly I'm lost! I have just myself to blame, it seems.
- Where do I go from here?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- 1-01. Who are the Bee Gees?
- A. David Garcia writes...
- The Bee Gees are three brothers: Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, and
- Maurice Gibb. From 1967 to 1969, they were joined by Vince
- Melouney and Colin Petersen. In 1970, while Robin pursued a solo
- career, the album "Cucumber Castle" was released with just Barry
- and Maurice as the Bee Gees.
- Contrary to popular belief, younger brother Andy Gibb was
- never a member of the Bee Gees as such, although his brothers
- lent assistance in songwriting, producing and backing vocals on
- his three solo albums.
- The brothers Gibb were born in the Isle of Man, an island
- located between Great Britain and Ireland. Barry was born on
- September 1st, 1946. Robin and Maurice, twins, were born on
- December 22nd, 1949. The family later moved to Manchester,
- England, where Andy was born on March 5, 1958.
- According to a 1979 TV Bio, as children the three boys used
- to perform in Manchester theaters. They called their singing
- trio "The Rattlesnakes", and later "Wee Johnny Hays and the Blue
- Cats." Their harmonies were so natural that, one day at home,
- their mother mistook their singing as a radio on in the next
- room.
- In 1958 the Gibb family, with infant Andy, sailed to
- Australia. It was there that the brothers started pursuing
- professional careers as singers and songwriters. Their father,
- Hugh Gibb, and been a professional drummer and bandleader in his
- youth. The brothers' talent caught the attention of a local DJ,
- and soon they were performing at racetracks, beach resorts, and
- on local radio and TV broadcasts. Around this time they named
- themselves the BG's, and later, the Bee Gees.
- In 1963, Festival Records signed the Bee Gees to their first
- record contract. Though hits as a group were slow in coming,
- Barry put his songwriting talents to good use writing for other
- singers and groups.
- In 1966 the Bee Gees had their first number one single in
- Australia, "Spicks and Specks." The following January the Gibb
- family boarded a ship back to England.
- The brothers had sent demo tapes to NEMS, the group managing
- the Beatles. One night Robert Stigwood sat down and listened to
- a few demo tapes from the pile. He liked what he heard, and
- wanted to see about signing them up.
- The 1967 album "Bee Gees First" was a tremendous debut
- success. The first single, "New York Mining Disaster 1941", was
- believed by many to be recorded by the Beatles under a different
- name. American record executives started using this as a
- technique to spark interest in the record, saying only that the
- name of this group began with a "B" and ended with an "S". With
- the follow-up success of "Holiday" and "To Love Somebody", people
- soon knew quite well who the Bee Gees were.
- Later that year, the Bee Gees -- now the three brothers and
- fellow Australians Vince Melouney and Colin Petersen -- recorded
- the album "Horizontal". The single "Massachusetts" topped the UK
- charts. In 1968, the "Idea" album soon followed with the
- classics "I Started a Joke" and "I've Gotta Get a Message To
- You".
- As was often the case with sixties pop groups, the first
- flash of success soon after brought dissension and clashes of
- egos -- what Barry calls the "First Fame" syndrome. Despite
- years of performing together as brothers, the sudden rise to fame
- soon overwhelmed the Bee Gees.
- In 1969, with the "Odessa" album, there were conflicts over
- the release of "First of May" as a single. Robin thought that
- "Lamplight" should be the a-side. Other divisions ensued, and
- eventually resulted in Robin departing to pursue a solo career.
- Around this time Vince Melouney and Colin Petersen also split
- from the band.
- Robin's solo debut, "Robin's Reign", was a modest success in
- Europe. The single "Saved By The Bell" did particularly well in
- Germany. Meanwhile, Barry and Maurice continued together as the
- Bee Gees. Their album, "Cucumber Castle", also coincided with a
- UK television special. Soon after, however, Barry and Maurice
- went their separate ways as well.
- The reconciliation was a gradual one. Barry once remarked
- that, if they hadn't been brothers, they probably never would
- have got back together. The "Two Years On" album seemed more
- like an anthology of three soloists than any sort of group
- effort. The song "Lonely Days", however, did show that they
- could still work together as a group.
- On their next album, "Trafalgar", the reconciliation process
- continued. The Bee Gees finally had their first #1 single in the
- US, "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart". The success of this
- classic showed that the brothers Gibb were far more successful as
- a group than they would ever be as soloists.
- As evidenced by the 1972 album "To Whom It May Concern", the
- Bee Gees were now drifting into a musical pattern of soft
- ballads. The songs "Run To Me" and "My World" were typical of
- the group's sound of this time. Eventually the Bee Gees decided
- to break away from the London scene and start afresh in the
- United States.
- In the US, the Bee Gees started in new directions musically.
- Unfortunately, these new directions were bereft of commercial
- success. The 1973 album, "Life in a Tin Can", saw meager sales
- of its single, "I Saw A New Morning". Finally, when "Wouldn't I
- Be Someone", the single from "A Kick In The Head Is Worth Eight
- In the Pants", failed to climb the charts, the record company
- chose not to release the album.
- Soon after this, the talents of accomplished record producer
- Arif Mardin were brought to the group's assistance. As producer
- of their next album, "Mr. Natural", he helped the Bee Gees to
- evolve their creativity, "open their ears", and explore musical
- forms quite different from the warm ballads they had grown
- accustomed to. The "Mr. Natural" album turned out not to be the
- commercial breakthrough the Bee Gees were seeking, but with
- tracks like "Heavy Breathing", "Dogs", and "Charade", it was
- obvious that the brothers were finding their way down new paths
- of songwriting.
- Around this time their personal lives also began to grow and
- change. Robin became a father, and so did Barry. In 1975,
- Maurice re-married. As the brothers were finding their way back
- to success musically, they were also starting to realize that
- there was much more to life than just putting another gold record
- on the studio wall.
- The following year, Arif Mardin's guidance paid off with the
- album "Main Course", featuring "Jive Talkin", "Nights on
- Broadway", and "Fanny (Be Tender With My Love)". This rebirth of
- the Bee Gees was far more intense than anyone had expected. The
- urban music scene was shifting to R&B Dance, and the "blue-eyed
- soul" of the Bee Gees' "Main Course" album fit right in.
- In 1976, the Bee Gees changed record labels in the US. Now
- that they were under Polydor, they no longer had Atlantic Records
- producer Arif Mardin to assist them. In this sense, the
- "Children of the World" album was a true test of their talents:
- Arif Mardin had brought them this far, now could they continue on
- their own?
- The album's first single, "You Should Be Dancing", quickly
- rose to success as the dance clubs latched onto its intense
- rhythms and falsetto harmonies. Among the trendy night clubs and
- discotheques, the song became an anthem. Other songs from the
- album, "Boogie Child" and "Love So Right", also did well.
- Work began on the next studio album. The Bee Gees relocated
- to the Chateau D'Heuroville studio in France. Sometime soon
- after, Robert Stigwood, their manager, called them to request
- some songs for a movie soundtrack. He described the film he was
- producing, some low budget dance movie set in Brooklyn. He
- persuaded the brothers to give him the songs that were already
- recorded for their next album. This project eventually became
- the film "Saturday Night Fever".
- Having thus been relieved of their entire studio album, the
- Gibb brothers now spent some time mixing the tracks for the live
- double-LP, "Here At Last... Bee Gees Live!" Soon after, though,
- Robert Stigwood called again -- this time about yet another film.
- Now Robert wanted the Bee Gees to work as supporting actors in a
- musical, a film that would weave Beatles songs into a story about
- Sgt. Pepper and a mythical place called Heartland. Peter
- Frampton would be assigned the lead role, and the Bee Gees would
- be cast as the Henderson brothers. The film would be called, of
- course, "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
- In late 1977, while the Bee Gees were filming "Sgt. Pepper",
- the film "Saturday Night Fever" was released. Three songs from
- the soundtrack -- "How Deep Is Your Love", "Stayin' Alive", and
- "Night Fever" -- instantly climbed to the top of the singles
- charts. The soundtrack album stayed at #1 for 24 weeks, becoming
- the top selling album up to that time, and remains even now the
- best selling soundtrack album in history.
- While all this took place, the brothers saw changes on the
- set of the "Sgt. Pepper" film. They had been sharing a trailer;
- now they each had a private trailer of their own. People who had
- previously ignored them were now far more deferential. With the
- astounding success of the "Saturday Night Fever" soundtrack,
- suddenly these three nameless supporting actors were central to
- the film.
- It's a wonderful feeling, of course, to be the sudden center
- of attention on a movie lot. Except, in this case, the movie was
- looking less and less promising each day. In stages, the Bee
- Gees began to realize that their movie debut, arriving at the
- pinnacle of their success as a music group, was destined to be a
- hideous waste of film. "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
- Band" was a bomb in the making, and the Bee Gees wanted out.
- On three separate occasions, the brothers literally begged
- Robert Stigwood to take them out of the film. But it was, of
- course, too late for that. So, they carried on as best they
- could and hoped the damage to their careers would be minimal.
- In the end, their musical careers emerged relatively
- unscathed. It was, however, the end of their acting careers. At
- the time, it was rumored that Barry was being considered for the
- role of Che Gueverra in Robert Stigwood's film version of
- "Evita". As it turned out, the film "Evita" ended up being
- postponed for nearly two decades, by which point the opportunity
- had passed him by. As for the film "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely
- Hearts Club Band", although the brothers' predictions of
- cinematic disaster proved correct, they did manage to pull a nice
- single out of the soundtrack: Robin's version of "Oh, Darling",
- the only Bee Gees' hit song that they didn't write themselves.
- Whatever the public thought of the film "Sgt. Pepper", the
- Bee Gees were to be more permanently linked with a movie they had
- never even appeared in: "Saturday Night Fever". Before the
- release of "Fever", disco was gaining some airplay, but merely as
- another of many forms of popular music, and disco clubs were
- something most people only read about in "New York" magazine.
- The film "Saturday Night Fever" changed all that. Now discos
- were not just for the urban trendsetters. Suddenly you had
- assistant managers of suburban tub and tile outlet stores wearing
- leisure suits and gold medallions on Saturday nights. Dance
- instruction studios were overwhelmed with requests to "teach me
- to dance like Travolta". Songs like "Disco Duck" and "Macho Man"
- crowded established rock acts off the airwaves.
- During this time the Bee Gees were a constant presence. At
- one point, Gibb compositions held all the top five slots on
- Billboard's top ten. This sort of success naturally evokes a
- wide span of reactions, ranging from blind imitation to outright
- resentment and loathing. In the midst of all the excitement,
- while Rod Stewart released his disco hit "Do You Think I'm Sexy"
- and Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones worked on his "Emotional
- Rescue" falsetto, others began to rebel, and the anti-disco
- backlash began.
- Looking back, it was both unfortunate and unfair that the
- Bee Gees were blamed for disco. Had the movie "Saturday Night
- Fever" never been made, and those same Gibb compositions made
- their way to the Bee Gees' next studio album as originally
- planned, the whole "disco fever" travesty might have been
- avoided. Ultimately, disco was as much a fashion trend as a
- music trend, and the fashion industry found "Saturday Night
- Fever" to be a convenient infomercial.
- The irony in all this was that the Bee Gees didn't dance,
- didn't wear leisure suits, and didn't even particularly like
- dance movies like "Fever". They've always characterized their
- music as "Blue-Eyed Soul", and whether people danced to it or not
- was pretty much beside the point. They took pride in their
- songwriting craft, not in the merchandising of garish disco
- lifestyles.
- With their next studio album, "Spirits Having Flown", they
- sought to provide more variety. The lead single, "Too Much
- Heaven", was a slow ballad, not a disco dance tune. The "Spirits
- Having Flown" album had a variety of musical styles, from the
- Caribbean feel of the title track to the smoky nightclub sound of
- "Stop, Think Again." Nearly all the songs were sung in falsetto
- vocals, however, and "Tragedy", the second single, was undeniably
- disco in style.
- The album sold well, and the Bee Gees easily filled football
- stadiums in their 1979 concert tour. One of the fans at Dodger
- Stadium that night was singer Barbra Streisand. She asked the
- brothers to work with her on her next album. As Barry started
- production of Barbra's "Guilty" album, Maurice produced the LP
- "Steppin' Out" for the Osmonds.
- During this time, new Bee Gees compositions went to Barbra's
- album, and also to Jimmy Ruffin's "Sunrise" album, which Robin
- was producing. Barbra's "Guilty" album netted three top singles
- in 1980, and has been the most successful album of her career.
- Now work began on the Bee Gees' next studio album. In many
- ways, the "Living Eyes" album was unlike all their other recent
- work. "Spirits Having Flown" had a falsetto lead on every track
- but "Until"; "Living Eyes" avoided falsetto leads on every song
- but "Soldiers". Not only were the pulsating rhythm sections of
- "Children of the World" gone, but the backup trio of Alan
- Kendall, Dennis Bryon and Blue Weaver were all replaced by
- session musicians halfway through the production. One song, "Be
- Who You Are", even had a long symphonic introduction with a full
- orchestra.
- Unfortunately, 1981 was not a good year for the brothers
- Gibb. The disco backlash was causing radio stations to avoid any
- new vinyl by the Bee Gees. In the meantime, punk rock and new
- wave groups were defining the sound of the 80's. Looking back on
- these days, one journalist remarked "...the Bee Gees were trying
- to be the Bee Gees at the same time that the Sex Pistols were
- being the Sex Pistols."
- In the meantime, their record label, RSO, was in turmoil.
- Changes at the top and financial chaos clouded the release of
- "Living Eyes". The pages of Rolling Stone carried, not Bee Gees
- album reviews, but news of lawsuits and audits. So it was that
- the rock press barely noticed when, in the wake of six
- consecutive number one hits, "He's A Liar" floundered on the
- singles charts.
- There might be an article or an interview somewhere that
- explains what happened next. If so, I have yet to find it. It's
- easier to say what didn't happen. The Bee Gees didn't release
- any more studio albums. They didn't go on tour. They didn't
- work with their former back-up band of Kendall, Bryon and Weaver.
- They didn't stay with RSO. Instead, for the next six years their
- efforts would be divided between writing and producing for other
- artists and working on their own occasional solo projects. To
- make an unfortunate comparison, the Bee Gees became the three
- artists formerly known as the Bee Gees.
- The lone exception to this period "in exile" was the
- soundtrack to the movie "Stayin' Alive". Sylvester Stallone was
- hired to direct this sequel to "Saturday Night Fever". Looking
- at the film, it is obvious that this was a work crafted in
- Stallone's own image. Even John Travolta ended up looking like
- Rambo in Spandex.
- In directing the film, Stallone was at least somewhat
- obligated to include Bee Gees songs in the soundtrack. But most
- of the emphasis was given to the music of Frank Stallone, the
- director's brother. In contrast, some songs the Bee Gees wrote
- were faded out abruptly in the middle of a verse. In any case,
- both the film and the soundtrack album failed to measure up to
- the original.
- In between "Living Eyes" and the "Stayin' Alive" film, Robin
- released his solo album "How Old Are You" on the Polydor label.
- This album was produced by Robin and Maurice, and all the
- compositions were by the twins, including the single "Juliet".
- The album and single did well in Germany, but were scarcely
- noticed in the US. Barry's absence from the album was easily
- explained: he had just finished producing Dionne Warwick's
- "Heartbreaker" LP, and was about to begin production of "Eyes
- That See In The Dark" for Kenny Rogers. Both of Barry's projects
- were co-produced by Karl Richardson and Albhy Galuten, and
- consisted of songs written by the Bee Gees, and occasional
- co-writing by Albhy Galuten.
- The next Bee Gees success was to come in under the radar.
- "Islands In the Stream" was a huge country hit for Kenny Rogers
- and Dolly Parton. It also crossed over and dominated mainstream
- pop radio -- one of very few country duets to ever do so. In all
- the excitement, people didn't seem to notice who wrote the song.
- The biggest country hit of 1983 was written by the same composers
- who wrote the disco anthem "Stayin' Alive" -- the Bee Gees had
- made a most remarkable transition in their songwriting, and
- hardly anyone seemed to realize it.
- As if to emphasize the point, the Bee Gees now started
- another transition. They began work on an R&B comeback album for
- Motown diva Diana Ross. "Eaten Alive" and the single "Chain
- Reaction" gave Diana Ross her first major chart success in the
- UK. In the wake of "Saturday Night Fever", the Bee Gees had
- proven their worth as songwriters and producers with both country
- music and Motown style R&B... but at the same time their own solo
- careers were going nowhere.
- Robin had a brief hit with the "Secret Agent" album's single
- "Boys Do Fall In Love", but his followup album "Walls Have Eyes"
- failed to attract listeners. EMI later blamed this on internal
- changes at the record label. At the same time, Barry's solo
- debut "Now Voyager" was unable to spark excitement with record
- buyers. While "Shine Shine" did find its way into the top 40, it
- was quickly forgotten along with the album. A second solo album,
- "Moonlight Madness", was instead diverted to the soundtrack of
- the film "Hawks", a British comedy-drama starring Timothy Dalton
- and Anthony Edwards.
- In 1987, Arif Mardin and the brothers Gibb set their sights
- on a renewal of the Bee Gees' career as recording artists. The
- "E.S.P." album brought the single "You Win Again", a #1 success
- in several countries. The USA, however, wasn't one of them.
- Following the tragic death of younger brother Andy Gibb in 1988,
- the Bee Gees started to seriously re-evaluate their careers.
- Trying to make sense of the tragedy, they also began to feel a
- need to truly dedicate themselves to what they've always done
- best: songwriting and performing. Regardless of what the radio
- stations thought about the Bee Gees, they would be heard.
- The 1989 album "One" brought the brothers success on both
- sides of the Atlantic. "Ordinary Lives" was the featured single
- in Europe, and the title track proved to be the group's
- "comeback" single in the US. For the first time in ten years,
- the Bee Gees set forth on a world tour.
- The 1991 followup album "High Civilization" was less well
- received. While the song "Secret Love" did well in Europe, "When
- He's Gone" was ignored in the US. The Bee Gees again toured
- Europe. But while touring Europe, their thoughts surely were
- directed toward the states.
- It was maddening. Songs and albums that sold well in Europe
- went unnoticed by Americans. "You Win Again" provides a perfect
- example: how can a song by a major artist be number one in
- England, yet number 75 in the US? Two years later, Warner even
- re-released "You Win Again" in the US as the second single from
- the "One" album, hoping that it would finally get airplay. It
- didn't. Why did American radio ignore the group? As one
- reviewer quipped, we were ready to forgive Nixon for Watergate,
- but were we ready to forgive the Bee Gees for disco?
- In 1993, the Bee Gees returned to the Polydor label and
- released the CD "Size Isn't Everything". Appearances on radio
- and TV brought inevitable one-liners about the meaning of the
- title, even leading shock jock Howard Stern to ask "which one is
- the 'biggest' Bee Gee?" Sadly, the "Full Size" tour planned for
- April of 1994 had to be abruptly canceled, due to Barry's health
- problems.
- During this time no less than three tribute albums to the
- Bee Gees have been released: An alternative rock version,
- "Melody Fair", joins compilations of previous cover versions on
- the rack: "Bee Gees Songbook" (a UK import), and the recently
- released "Soul of the Bee Gees", featuring a liner note "mea
- culpa" over the record company's mishandling of Robin Gibb's
- single "Toys" back in 1985.
- In September of 1996 word was received that the Bee Gees had
- been chosen as 1997 inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of
- Fame. The ceremony was held in Cleveland on May 6, 1997.
- Additional awards have included the American Music Awards'
- "International Artist" award, and special recognition in this
- year's "Brit" awards.
- The newest release, "Still Waters," debuted at #2 on the UK
- charts. The compilation album "The Very Best of the Bee Gees"
- also briefly reentered the top ten a
- s well, putting the brothers
- Gibb in the remarkable position of having two albums in the UK
- top ten at the same time -- all this thirty years after their
- international debut. The album debuted in the US at #11, their
- first top twenty album since 1979. The US release of "Still
- Waters" was been acompanied by a whilrwind of activity. The
- weekend before the album's debut, VH-1 had a "Bee Gees Weekend"
- with a Saturday afternoon marathon of videos and performances. On
- the day of the album's release, the Bee Gees appeared on the
- Oprah Winfrey show, and that evening were inducted into the Rock
- and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. The album reportedly sold
- over 2.5 million copies worldwide, making it their greatest
- success since 1979's "Spirits (Having Flown)."
- Is it over? Not yet -- the brothers Gibb, even with a four
- decade career to look back on, continue to look forward, and plan
- for the next album, the next single. As Barry puts it, "...a
- gold record on your wall is like an ornament, and it doesn't
- really mean anything. It's a memory -- you look at it and go,
- 'Well THAT was great,' but it's not part of your NOW. And it's
- now and tomorrow that are the most important..."
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Responses to FAQ: Send responses and comments to David
- Garcia at garc@compuserve.com or post to the mailing lists if you
- are a subscriber.
- Special thanks to the following for their kind assistance in
- producing this FAQ: Renee Schreiber, Joe Brennan, Chris Mathis,
- Bette Hanson, Lynn Lyda, Antonette Daniar, Jill Thompson, "Imran
- C.", Joey Spain, Ed Vlasov, Melody Ishiwata, "Kevin M.", Doug
- "Doug in MO" Shannon, Jimmy Wade, Goran Gustafsson, Juan Perea,
- Grant Walters, "Tony", "Mike", Lucas Broer, Joel K. Ashby, "Di",
- Marty Hogan, Rhonda J. Platania, Anne Simpson, Al Collum III,
- Elliott A. Jacobowitz, Sue Thompson, Kathy Gray and her friend in
- France, Ruth Burcaw, "BG Pixie" CBolitiski, Ann M. Richardson,
- Marcel Troost, Daniel Navarro, Doug "Doug in TX" Wilson, Phongsak
- Suppattarachai, "Marion from (today's climate here) Germany",
- Colin Harris, Greg Luther, Helio Takahashi, Douwe Dijkstra, Diane
- Weidenkopf, Robert Phan, Karen Liew, Ron Ramirez, Jay Siekierski,
- Alan Dail, Joan Furilla, Jan Carnell, "Amy on AOL", Udo Muellner,
- Park Duk-Hyeon, Joseph Yellin, Tom Fini, Martha Irvin and many
- others (to whom I apologize for their accidental omission)
-