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In 1985, Diana Ross released her sixteenth solo album, 'Eaten Alive'. The next instalment in the run of albums that the Gibbs wrote and produced for their chosen artists, 'Eaten Alive' allowed the Bee Gees the opportunity to pay homage to Motown, delve into mid-80s dance, and produce a set of ballad standards, all fit for Diana Ross. Stuart and Cristiano explore the album and and its development with the available demos, and reflect on its reputation forty years later.
Find us on social medias @wordsbeegeespodcast. Email us: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5
2525 ratings
In 1985, Diana Ross released her sixteenth solo album, 'Eaten Alive'. The next instalment in the run of albums that the Gibbs wrote and produced for their chosen artists, 'Eaten Alive' allowed the Bee Gees the opportunity to pay homage to Motown, delve into mid-80s dance, and produce a set of ballad standards, all fit for Diana Ross. Stuart and Cristiano explore the album and and its development with the available demos, and reflect on its reputation forty years later.
Find us on social medias @wordsbeegeespodcast. Email us: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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