Secret Agent (Robin Gibb album) explained

Secret Agent
Type:Album
Artist:Robin Gibb
Cover:Secret_Agent_Robin_Gibb.jpg
Released: (US)
(UK)
Recorded:March – June 1984
Studio:Criteria (Miami)
Label:Mirage/Atco/Atlantic Records (US)
Polydor Records (UK)
Prev Title:How Old Are You?
Prev Year:1983
Next Title:Walls Have Eyes
Next Year:1985

Secret Agent is the third solo album by British singer Robin Gibb, released in 1984. The album enjoyed limited success, mostly in Europe and Australia. The lead single "Boys Do Fall in Love" made the Top 10 in Italy and South Africa.

Background

The album followed on from How Old Are You? the previous year with Robin's twin brother Maurice again co-writing and playing keyboards. Three songs were written by all three Bee Gees, including oldest brother Barry. The album is heavily electronic, relying mostly on multi-layered keyboards with bass and drums played on synthesizers. Recording took place at Criteria Studios as Barry Gibb was occupying the Bee Gees' own Middle Ear studio at the time, recording his solo debut Now Voyager.

Robin and Maurice continued the Bee Gees tradition of "making it up" in the recording studio. Assistant engineer Richard Achor recalled the years when Robin and Maurice would come in with only ideas for songs. Robin wrote lyrics with Maurice, and sometimes they set up drum and synthesizer grooves first, in which a song would work out from that. Maurice played synthesizer and drum machine, but played relatively little on the finished tracks in favor of Rob Kilgore's expertise. Robin had long been interested in the electronic sound and Maurice was a willing accomplice. The concept was to carry on the sound of the big freestyle hit by Shannon, her 1983 song "Let the Music Play", which is why Robin brought in the same producers, Mark Liggett and Chris Barbosa, and musicians Rob Kilgore and Jim Tunnell to work on the album.[1]

Robin asked Barbosa and Liggett to produce this album. As Barbosa explained: "Robin really wanted a dance hit, he specifically wanted to avoid a Bee Gees sound-alike record."[2] "The Gibb project was different for us in that way", Liggett added. "We're not usually working with mega budgets, and its better that way. All the money comes out of your pockets anyway."[2] Gibb said of the album, "I don't like songs of the past. I like to get ahead. These songs are very 1984, maybe even more futuristic." He further described the record as "very black and urban – it reflects street music."[3]

Bob Stanley said that Secret Agent dove deeply into "the worlds of Roland, Korg and Fairlight." He said the title track mixed Gibb's melancholy style with contemporary Latin freestyle production, and noted its mid-song "fight scene". "Robot" is a reggae song with a vocoder, while "In Your Diary" was another heavily electronic track. Cash Box called "In Your Diary" a "a pleasing piece which suffers slightly from its formula quality, but benefits strongly from the familiar strength of the Gibb’s reliable performance, production and styling."[4]

Personnel

Production

Chart positions

Chart (1984)Peak
position
Swiss Albums Chart20
US Billboard Top Pop Albums204
US Cashbox Top Albums183
West German Media Control Albums Chart31

References

  1. Web site: Gibb Songs: 1984 . Joseph Brennan .
  2. Book: Weinger, Harry . Liggett, Barbosa: Let It Play . 5 January 1985 . 11 February 2013.
  3. Book: Stanley . Bob . Bee Gees: Children of the World . 2023 . Nine Eight Books . London . 279 . 978-1-7887-0541-7 . The Bunker.
  4. Reviews. Cash Box. November 10, 1984. 2022-07-26. 9.