Search - Artist/Band: The Everly Brothers

Artist Info

  • Band Name: The Everly Brothers
  • Formed: 1954
  • Originated From: KY
  • Disbanded: 1973
  • Decades Active: 1950,1960,1970,1980,1990,2000
  • Genre: Rock
  • Styles: Close Harmony, Country-Rock, Early Pop/Rock, Folk-Rock, Psychedelic, Rock & Roll, Rockabilly, AM Pop
  • Moods: Dreamy, Earnest, Gentle, Intimate, Poignant, Sentimental, Wistful, Elegant, Exuberant, Fun, Naive, Reflective, Romantic, Soft, Warm, Amiable/Good-Natured, Carefree, Cheerful, Happy, Innocent, Joyous, Laid-Back/Mellow, Lively, Melancholy, Playful, Rollicking, Smooth, Sweet

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Heartaches & Harmonies [American Legends]
  • 07/14/2009
  • The Everly Brothers [Pickwick]
  • 02/16/2009
  • Songs Our Daddy Taught Us [Hallmark]
  • 2009
  • 50 Years of Hits
  • 11/04/2008
  • Bye Bye Love [Magic France]
  • 10/14/2008
  • The Everly Brothers [Legacy]
  • 09/30/2008
  • Pass the Chicken & Listen/Stories We Could Tell WA
  • 02/12/2008
  • Works
  • 09/17/2007
  • Collector's Edition [Single Disc]
  • 08/14/2007
  • When Will I Be Loved?
  • 06/26/2007
  • Wake Up Little Susie [2007]
  • 05/21/2007
  • The Mercury Studio Recordings WA
  • 01/23/2007
  • Love Hurts [Musical Memories]
  • 11/06/2006
  • 36 Unreleased Recordings from the Late '50s and Early '60s WA
  • 10/17/2006
  • The Definitive Pop Collection WA
  • 09/12/2006
  • Wake Up Little Susie/Bye Bye Love
  • 08/08/2006
  • The Very Best Of The Everly Brothers Vol. 1
  • 07/11/2006
  • The Very Best of the Everly Brothers, Vol. 2
  • 07/11/2006
  • All Time Greatest Hits
  • 04/24/2006
  • Platinum Collection, Vol. 2
  • 03/21/2006
  • Outtakes WA
  • 02/14/2006
  • Dream: The Best of the Everly Brothers [Music Club]
  • 12/06/2005
  • Golden Years
  • 11/29/2005
  • The Solid Gold Collection: 36 Timeless Tracks
  • 11/08/2005
  • From Nashville to Hollywood
  • 10/11/2005
  • Platinum Collection
  • 10/11/2005
  • Rock 'n Soul/Beat & Soul WA
  • 10/11/2005
  • Sing Great Country Hits/Gone Gone Gone WA
  • 10/11/2005
  • Give Me a Future
  • 09/27/2005
  • Love Hurts: The Platinum Collection
  • 09/27/2005
  • Bye Bye Love [Direct Source]
  • 08/22/2005
  • Gone, Gone, Gone
  • 08/02/2005
  • Wake up Little Susie [Laserlight]
  • 07/19/2005
  • Lucille and Other Hits WA
  • 07/12/2005
  • Too Good to Be True
  • 06/14/2005
  • On the Wings of a Nightingale: The Mercury Studio Sessions WA
  • 2005
  • This Is Gold
  • 12/07/2004
  • All I Have to Do Is Dream
  • 09/10/2004
  • Country Classics
  • 04/01/2004
  • This Is Gold [CD 1]
  • 2004
  • This Is Gold [CD 2]
  • 2004
  • This Is Gold [CD 3]
  • 2004
  • 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of the Everly Brothers
  • 12/09/2003
  • Wake Up Little Susie and Other Hits
  • 10/10/2003
  • Classic American Voices
  • 08/26/2003
  • Original Gold
  • 08/05/2003
  • Hall of Fame
  • 07/08/2003
  • The Essential Cadence Singles
  • 04/15/2003
  • Classic Masters
  • 03/11/2003
  • 20 Track Collection
  • 01/01/2003
  • Very Best of the Cadence Era
  • 11/15/2002
  • The Definitive Everly Brothers WA
  • 10/08/2002
  • The Ultimate Collection
  • 09/24/2002
  • 12 Hits: Five Star Collection
  • 09/10/2002
  • Best of Millennium Collection WA
  • 07/23/2002
  • Collection [MRA]
  • 05/22/2002
  • Let It Be Me
  • 05/15/2002
  • The Essential Everly Brothers
  • 2002
  • 29 Golden Greats: Live
  • 12/11/2001
  • The Complete Cadence Recordings: 1957-1960 WA
  • 04/03/2001
  • Both Sides of an Evening/Instant Party WA
  • 2001
  • It's Everly Time/A Date with the Everly Brothers WA
  • 2001
  • Greatest Hits [Delta] WA
  • 06/22/2000
  • 24 Greatest Hits WA
  • 05/16/2000
  • Live [BCI]
  • 04/06/2000
  • Collector's Edition [Two Disc]
  • 02/29/2000
  • Devoted to You: Love Songs
  • 02/08/2000
  • 20 Great Love Songs
  • 01/04/2000
  • Story [EMI Plus]
  • 2000
  • All-Time Original Hits
  • 11/02/1999
  • Dream: The Best of the Everly Brothers [Delta]
  • 04/28/1998
  • Wake Up Little Susie: The Best of the Everly Brothers WA
  • 04/28/1998
  • Brothers in Rhythm
  • 04/07/1998
  • Hits
  • 03/17/1998
  • The Very Best of the Everly Brothers [Crimson]
  • 02/03/1998
  • Wings of a Nightingale WA
  • 1998
  • EP Collection
  • 10/07/1997
  • This Is the Everly Brothers: 16 of Their Greatest Hits
  • 09/16/1997
  • Greatest Love Songs
  • 07/15/1997
  • Greatest Love Songs, Vol. 2
  • 07/15/1997
  • Golden Classics: 20 Original Cadence Recordings
  • 08/06/1996
  • Essential Collection [Delta]
  • 07/03/1996
  • Original British Singles
  • 1995
  • The Best of the Everly Brothers 1957-1960
  • 1995
  • All I Have to Do is Dream [Delta]
  • 08/30/1994
  • Golden Hits [Hollywood]
  • 08/16/1994
  • Fabulous Everly Brothers
  • 12/20/1993
  • Walk Right Back: The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros. WA
  • 09/14/1993
  • The Mercury Years WA
  • 07/20/1993
  • Greatest
  • 03/14/1992
  • 24 Greatest Songs
  • 07/01/1991
  • Best of the Everly Brothers: Rare Solo Classics WA
  • 1991
  • All-Time Greatest Hits
  • 05/15/1990
  • From the Original Master Tapes
  • 1990
  • Some Hearts WA
  • 1989
  • Greatest Hits [Neon]
  • 1988
  • Bye Bye Love [Entertainers]
  • 1987
  • The Rock 'n' Roll Era: The Everly Brothers - 1957-1962 WA
  • 1987
  • 20 Golden Love Songs
  • 1986
  • 20 Greatest Hits WA
  • 1986
  • Cadence Classics: Their 20 Greatest Hits WA
  • 1986
  • Greatest Recordings WA
  • 1986
  • The Collection
  • 1986
  • All They Had to Do Was Dream WA
  • 1985
  • Bye Bye Love [VFM]
  • 1985
  • EB 84 WA
  • 1984
  • Reunion Album
  • 1984
  • The Everly Brothers [Phonogram] WA
  • 1984
  • The New Album: Previously Unreleased Songs from the Early Sixties WA
  • 10/1977
  • Living Legends WA
  • 1977
  • Pass the Chicken & Listen
  • 1973
  • The Everly Brothers Story
  • 1973
  • Stories We Could Tell
  • 1972
  • Roots WA
  • 1968
  • The Everly Brothers Sing WA
  • 1967
  • The Hit Sound of the Everly Brothers
  • 1967
  • In Our Image
  • 1966
  • Two Yanks in England WA
  • 1966
  • Beat & Soul WA
  • 08/1965
  • Rock 'n Soul
  • 03/1965
  • The Very Best of the Everly Brothers [Warner Bros.]
  • 08/1964
  • Sing Great Country Hits
  • 10/1963
  • The Golden Hits of the Everly Brothers
  • 1962
  • A Date with the Everly Brothers WA
  • 1961
  • Both Sides of an Evening
  • 1961
  • It's Everly Time
  • 1960
  • The Fabulous Style of the Everly Brothers
  • 1960
  • Songs Our Daddy Taught Us WA
  • 1958
  • The Everly Brothers [Cadence]
  • 1958
  • 24 Original Classics WA
  • Greatest Hits [Woodford]
  • Wake Up, Little Susie [Delta]
  • Group Bio

    The Everly Brothers were not only among the most important and best early rock & roll stars, but also among the most influential rockers of any era. They set unmatched standards for close, two-part harmonies and infused early rock & roll with some of the best elements of country and pop music. Their legacy was and is felt enormously in all rock acts that employ harmonies as prime features, from the Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, and legions of country-rockers to modern-day roots rockers like Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe (who once recorded an EP of Everlys songs together).

    Don (born February 1, 1937) and Phil (born January 19, 1939) were professionals way before their teens, schooled by their accomplished guitarist father Ike, and singing with their family on radio broadcasts in Iowa. In the mid-'50s, they made a brief stab at conventional Nashville country with Columbia. When their single flopped, they were cast adrift for quite a while until they latched onto Cadence. Don invested their first single for the label, "Bye Bye Love," with a Bo Diddley beat that helped lift the song to number two in 1957.

    "Bye Bye Love" began a phenomenal three-year string of classic hit singles for Cadence, including "Wake Up Little Susie," "All I Have to Do Is Dream," "Bird Dog," "('Til) I Kissed You," and "When Will I Be Loved." The Everlys sang of young love with a heart-rending yearning and compelling melodies. The harmonies owed audible debts to Appalachian country music, but were imbued with a keen modern pop sensibility that made them more accessible without sacrificing any power or beauty. They were not as raw as the wild rockabilly men from Sun Records, but they could rock hard when they wanted. Even their midtempo numbers and ballads were executed with a force missing in the straight country and pop tunes of the era. The duo enjoyed a top-notch support team of producer Archie Bleyer, great Nashville session players like Chet Atkins, and the brilliant songwriting team of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant. Don, and occasionally Phil, wrote excellent songs of their own as well.

    In 1960, the Everlys left Cadence for a lucrative contract with the then-young Warner Bros. label (though it's not often noted, the Everlys would do a lot to establish Warners as a major force in the record business). It's sometimes been written that the duo never recaptured the magic of their Cadence recordings, but actually Phil and Don peaked both commercially and artistically with their first Warners releases. "Cathy's Clown," their first Warners single, was one of their greatest songs and a number one hit. Their first two Warners LPs, employing a fuller and brasher production than their Cadence work, were not just among their best work, but two of the best rock albums of the early '60s. The hits kept coming for a couple of years, some great ("Walk Right Back," "Temptation"), some displaying a distressing, increasing tendency toward soft pop and maudlin sentiments ("Ebony Eyes," "That's Old Fashioned").

    Don and Phil's personal lives came under a lot of stress in the early '60s: they enlisted into the Marine Corps Reserves (together), and studied acting for six months but never made a motion picture. More seriously, Don developed an addiction to speed and almost died of an overdose in late 1962. By that time, their career as chart titans in the U.S. had ended; "That's Old Fashioned" (1962) was their last Top Ten hit. Their albums became careless, erratic affairs, which was all the more frustrating because many of their flop singles of the time were fine, even near-classic efforts that demonstrated they could still deliver the goods.

    Virtually alone among first-generation rock & roll superstars, the Everlys stuck with no-nonsense rock & roll and remained determined to keep their sound contemporary, rather than drifting toward soft pop or country like so many others. Although their mid-'60s recordings were largely ignored in America, they contained some of their finest work, including a ferocious Top 40 single in 1964 ("Gone, Gone, Gone"). They remained big stars overseas -- in 1965, "Price of Love" went to number two in the U.K. at the height of the british invasion. They incorporated jangling Beatle/Byrdesque guitars into some of their songs and recorded a fine album with the Hollies (who were probably more blatantly influenced by the Everlys than any other British band of the time). In the late '60s, they helped pioneer country-rock with the 1968 album Roots, their most sophisticated and unified full-length statement. None of this revived their career as hitmakers, though they could always command huge audiences on international tours and hosted a network TV variety show in 1970.

    The decades of enforced professional togetherness finally took their toll on the pair in the early '70s, which saw a few dispirited albums and, finally, an acrimonious breakup in 1973. They spent the next decade performing solo, which only proved -- as is so often the case in close-knit artistic partnerships -- how much each brother needed the other to sound his best. In 1983, enough water had flowed under the bridge for the two to resume performing and recording together. The tours, with a backup band led by guitarist Albert Lee, proved they could still sing well. The records (both live and studio) were fair efforts that, in the final estimation, were not in nearly the same league as their '50s and '60s classics, although Paul McCartney penned a small hit single for them ("On the Wings of a Nightingale"). One of the more successful and dignified reunions in the rock annals, the Everlys continued to perform live, although they didn't release albums together after the late '80s. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide