Home » Thank you, Don Everly and the Everly Brothers

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Thank you, Don Everly and the Everly Brothers — 16 Comments

  1. All I have To Do, Is Dream, is like Elvis’ I Can’t Help, Falling In Love With You. You are required to sing along, when it comes on the radio.

  2. They had sibling rivalry that became quite bitter as they aged,

    That it tended to get worse as they aged strikes me as quite retrograde. Sort of reminds me of Ann Landers and Dear Abby, who didn’t speak to each other for 10 years and were on-again, off-again for the next 35 years. The resentment extended to their daughters.

  3. Their father Ike was from Bowling Green, I believe. Anyway, Ike taught guitar to Merle Travis while the family lived in Muhlenburg County, in western Kentucky. Don was born there. This was coal mining country. Where John Prine’s Paradise lays.

  4. Hurin3 on August 23, 2021 at 7:31 pm said:

    Their father Ike was from Bowling Green, I believe. Anyway, Ike taught guitar to Merle Travis while the family lived in Muhlenburg County, in western Kentucky. Don was born there. This was coal mining country

    Hurin3 will already know this, and many here have probably seen it linked to before.

    You need only listen to about the first minute. Atkins starts off talking but Travis chimes in shortly.

    From a well-known album; the specific cut: “Nine pound hammer”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P76MmSHLSkA&list=OLAK5uy_lHPQFE9wGQeAXUjnQV4vS1ab77GLS2BAc

  5. “Beauty and purity”

    The exact words I thought of to describe the magical sound of their voices together. Everything they did was wonderful of course, but it was on the slow ballads like “Let It Be Me”, “Devoted To You” and “So Sad To Watch Good Love Go Bad” that they generated the most intense emotion.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZYpa7u28WU

    RIP Don. And Phil.

  6. My love of the Everly Brothers is similar to yours, Neo, except I had a brother to sing with. OF COURSE we emulated them as much as we could, musically, and personally glimpsed how siblings can harmonize in such an amazing way. RIP, Don & Phil.

  7. Didn’t listen to a lot of radio, growing up but others did and it was hard to get through a day without an hour’s worth of somebody else’s radio playing the popular stuff.
    I think I was in high school when I read some of the lyrics to the songs the guys were singing and thought of them as pretty good young-love-gets-sad poems. Not that I was in a position to be a good judge.Lots of those around. Weren’t improved by the singing.

  8. They stood up well over time.
    The Good Old Days.
    Not like the garbage we are constantly exposed to today.

  9. Cicero, yes, I think their recordings hold up exceptionally well and sound less dated than most of those from that era. Except perhaps in the homespun sentiments which sadly seem quaint in this cynical age.

    I suspect the producers knew what they had in those voices and simply got out of the way. Very little fluff in their records, just those beautiful harmonies.

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