The International Club  located on Rose Luxembourg Street, which is now called Bunin Street, back in  the Soviet times used to be the only place where foreign language students from  Odessa National University could actually talk to a living foreigner. There they  could practise their English, German, French – every language they put a lot of  effort into studying at the Deparment of Germanic and Romance Studies. It is  needless to say that most foreign language students were female – male language  students could, of course, practise their language skills at the Club as well;  but it is common knowledge one does not really see a lot of male language  students around. 
                  One could meet people  of very different calibers from around the world at the Club, to be more  precise, there were all sorts of foreigners there, but these people of varied  ethnic backgrounds and employment records could really feel at ease at the Club,  almost as if they were at home. Everyone spoke their language there, and what’s  more, they could get a drink at the bar paying for it with dollars, pounds and  marks. All of this was a luxury to the Soviet people. The other Club members mostly  included local seamen, natatorials,  as they were called in Odessa. The very idea behind creating the International  Club was to provide a space that would serve as a place where seamen could  spend their free time on the shore while the vessels they were working on were  being loaded. The main point was to keep them off the streets and gather them  in a place where well-off seafarers didn't have any chances of making a lasting  impression on average Soviet citizens. Of course, ordinary tourists stopped by  the International Club once in a while as well, since the simple task of getting  by both in Odessa and in the Soviet reality overall was quite tricky back then.  Frankly speaking, even nowadays we don't really have any English signs out  there in the streets, let alone the past times, but at least the percentage of  English-speaking people you can talk to in the streets is much higher than it  used to be in the 60s. 
                  The female language students  came to the InterClub in gaggles or in pairs, but never alone. That was easy to  understand. First of all, young women coming to the club for a chance to meet  men there might seem like a rather ambiguous situation. I was about to write «it  was their own initiative» but soon found myself having second thoughts – this  initiative came from the university staff. That is, young ladies were kindly requested  to visit the Interclub, with these visits becoming their regular routine, not  less than twice a week. The club, of course, could not serve as a place to get  international contacts, or, God forbid, as a place to search for a foreign  husband. The main purpose of this was, as I had already said, language  practice. In order to be able to visit the InterClub these young women had to  take two exams – a language exam and a political exam, which tested their  knowledge of the current political situation. They were supposed to be worthy  representatives of the Soviet Homeland when communicating with capitalist  sharks, or better, dolphins. Or bullheads. The carps of capitalism. 
                  There were many seamen  who had previously visited Odessa during their journeys. But sometimes there  were newcomers who were visiting our city for the first time. Everything seemed  new and interesting to them. 
                  It was precisely two of  this kind, non-catatonic foreign tourists that my mother met in June 1968,  having successfully completed her academic year at the university. One warm  summer evening  my Mum and her friend  dropped in the familiar place in the Rose Luxembourg Street. Taking a left turn  under the arch of the Philharmonic building, which was once built by an  outstanding Italian architect Bernardazzi and was originally meant to become a  stock exchange building – taking a left turn one could find a beautiful wooden  door. Upon entering, a Soviet  citizen  could find himself in the world completely different from the usual Soviet  reality. Wide marble stairs led to the first floor, to a huge ballroom with  high ceilings decorated by timber beams. Special tables were allocated for the  arrival of foreign guests; these tables were tapped and  the person listening to all this chatter in  the quiet of his office was no other but the director of the InterClub. He was,  of course, a KGB agent and had a very exotic surname for a Soviet citizen. His  surname was Mariosabia. Clearly, my mother and her friend had no idea about any  of this so their mood couldn't have been better when they entered the  InterClub. The huge ballroom revealed an enormous bar counter of the latest  fashions where one could buy luxuries which were otherwise completely out of  reach for the Soviets. These luxuries were foreign cigarettes and alcohol. The  room next to the ballroom was a library where one could not only find rare  books in English but also hide from prying eyes– unfortunately however, one  couldn’t hide not from prying ears there. 
                  Meetings with foreign  guests were organized as evenings of friendship. When a German vessel called at  the port – the evening of Soviet-German friendship was held. When it was an  Indian vessel, and this happened quite a lot – the evening of Soviet-Indian  friendship followed. This time, however, it was the evening of Soviet-British  friendship because a big British passenger liner had been moored to the pier of  Odessa Port. 
                  The students were the  main “cheerleaders” of the friendship evenings. These young ladies were the  best at their studies, sports and the Komsomol. My mother was one of them. The  young females, though sometimes there were males as well, were usually putting  on a small show where they were singing, dancing and acting all with the single  purpose of making new foreign friends. After this warm-up all the people in the  Club split up into groups and went on chatting at their tables. 
                  That evening the club  was loud and crowded. After saying hello to some people she knew, my mother  looked around the ballroom. Two very young men drew her attention – they looked  exotic even for foreigners. More than exotic – they looked provocative and  eccentric at the same time. Both had long bushy hair, side whiskers and small  beards. One of them was wearing a blue pinstriped jacket that was paired with a  white turtleneck and brown flare leg velvets. The other one was flaunting a  yellow jacket, a blue shirt with a turndown collar and flare leg jeans. Of  course my mother knew what rock stars looked like – the Beatles photos were  worshipped by all foreign language students, and their songs were an absolute  must for everyone to listen to – and my mother had already been listening to  the Beatles tape reels since 1964. But these two looked too eccentric even for  rock stars. My mother's thought process was interrupted by Nolik – a komsomol  cheerleader  acting as the creative  manager of the friendship evenings.  In  Odessa Nolik was a common short name for Arnold, Nyuma meant Naum, Dodik meant  David. These were the great times when even komsorgs* in Odessa were Jewish.
                  – Sveta, it's time to  get ready for your performance. 
                  That evening my mother  was performing her signature song – «Strangers in the night» by Frank Sinatra.  Her song was the last number of the warm-up. Her bun hairstyle a la Babette,  her short blue dress – my mother had all eyes fixed on her. Suddenly, one of  the two eccentric men came up to her and started to sing together with her in  the microphone. She was stunned. His voice was so rich and strong that it was  not clear who was the main singer. The audience burst into ecstatic applause  and everyone was asking for an encore performance. 
                  – Let's sing Love Letters in the Sand by Pat Boone? –  my mother asked.
                  – With pleasure! – the  young man replied. 
                  And again there was a  round of mad applause. 
                  After singing the last song  the young man took several bows, then took my mother's hand and led her to his  table. My mother was at a loss for some time, but managed to hide it and threw  a glance at Lyuba asking her to join them. The other young man was standing at  the table and looking at my mum with a smile. Both Englishmen looked  surprisingly alike – to be completely honest, however, the latter seemed to be  older and more imposing. 
                  – Svetlana, – my mother  said stretching out her hand. Back in those days only really decisive and  emancipated young women had the courage to stretch out their hands for a  handshake. 
                  – Barry, – answered the  young man.– And this is my brother Robin – he said pointing at my mother's admirer,  who proved to be such a wonderful singer a minute ago. Robin shook my mother's  hand and looked her in the eyes. 
                  My mother blushed a bit  and pointed at her friend conveniently making her way to the table: 
                  – And this is my friend  Lyuba.
                  Then it was Lyuba's  turn to blush. 
                  – Would you like some  coffee? – my mother suggested.
                  – We'd love to, – the  brothers replied in unison. Several minutes later Robin brought everyone  coffee, took a seat next to my mother and looked her in the eyes again smiling. 
                  – You look quite eccentric  for an Englishman, – my mother said. 
                  – We are not real  Englishmen. We were born on the island of Man, then our family went to  Australia. Came back to England only one and a half year ago, – Barry said.  Came back to kick start our music career. 
                  And then something  incredible happened. Barry and Robin announced that they were not ordinary  musicians, they were musicians famous all over the world. They are recording  their new album now, their sixth album, and they want to name it Masterpeace as  a pun bearing two meanings a masterpiece and peace. They are constantly having  musical arguments since each of them believes to be the boss, and their  different musical tastes cause frequent confrontations. Their producer keeps demanding new songs and they  record a new album every six months. To top it all, they have been singing  since childhood when they started together with their dad and now find  themselves quite exhausted and ready for a break after a decade of singing. So  therefore they have decided to go on a cruise in the Mediterranean and Black  Seas to unwind and find new ideas. And here they were – in Odessa, stuck on  board of their cruise liner for whole three days. 
                  My mother has of course  met quite different foreigners in the International Club – captains, businessmen,  possibly even millionaires. But meeting somebody capable of such profound lies–  this happened for the first time. Lyuba and she smiled at each other and gave  each other gentle pushes under the table when they heard of yet another twist  of fortune or recent music awards. 
                  – How old are you really, world-renowned musicians?– my mother asked. 
                  – I am almost twenty two, I am the elder brother, – Barry said. – Robin  is three years younger than me. And Robin has a twin brother Maurice. He was  born thirty five minutes later than Robin. He is also a member of our band. 
                  – And what’s your  band’s name?–  my mother asked giggling. 
                  – «Bee Gees». We are  Gibb brothers. Therefore the name. 
                  – Never heard of you! –  my mother and Lyuba spluttered with laughter. – We listen to the Beatles, the Rolling  Stones, but Bee Gees – never even heard the name. 
                  It was pretty obvious. The guys have decided to master their pick-up  skills with gullible Soviet girls counting on the Iron Curtain and the fact  that there is absolutely no information from the West and therefore no chance  to check if their stories are really true. 
                  The reality, however, proved to be different. My Mom was the daughter of  an officer, a colonel, who was about to become a general. Moreover, she passed  her political exam with flying colours. That's why she firmly refused the young  men's rather persistant attempts to walk them home. But then she took pity on  them and agreed to show them around Odessa the following day. 
                  Back at those times it was prohibited for Soviet citizens to walk around  the city with foreigners. But nothing is impossible for an intelligent person.  A good brain is known to help in both cases – when one needs to solve problems  and foresee them as well. When my mother was in her second year of college, she  took a course in tour guiding in Intourist, which back then was located in the famous Krasnaya hotel. Now she was able to walk around the city centre with foreigners all she  wanted. 
                  The following day they met near the statue of Duke. My mother and Lyuba  even had to skip some classes to make it to the meeting. Robin and Barry were  looking even more exotic, obviously having decided to completely win the hearts  of the two young women. Barry was wearing an anti-flash white suit with a pink  shirt and a burgundy tie, and Robin – a white and dark blue striped suit with a  yellow shirt and a beige neck scarf. Every passer-by couldn't help staring at  this unusual four, which really stood out against the plain background of quiet  every day Soviet fashion. 
                  – Would you like me to tell you about our city? – my mother suggested  enthusiastically. 
                  – We have been waiting for this tour since morning! – Robin smiled and  took my mother's arm. 
                  – So let's start right here – the Primorsky Boulevard, my mother said  and turned to the building of Duma, which then hosted the City Council. 
                  At those times the Primorsky Boulevard was called the Captain's Bridge –  retired captains and officers came to the building of the Palace of Seamen and  afterwards spent hours sitting on the nearby benches telling each other and  everybody else stories about their voyages, stories that were sometimes true  and sometimes not so much… My mother together with Lyuba and the guys passed  one of such groups on a bench where a fit grey-haired captain in a beautiful  uniform was telling his story in a loud voice: «It happened when we were going  from Norway to Finland…»  
                  – I don't know why but I've always wanted to visit Finland – my mother  said to Robin. 
                  – It's difficult to understand this dream – Robin answered. That's a  cold boring country. 
                  – So what! – my mother tossed her head. – I want to go there!
                  Robin blushed. My mother blushed too. 
                  – Well, let me tell you about Odessa – my mother said breaking the  awkward silence, which was getting too long. The Londonskaya Hotel to the right  of us boasts such guests as Wladimir Mayakovsky, Isedora Duncan, George  Simenon, Louis Aragon, Anton Chekhov, and Robert Lewis Stevenson… 
                  My Mum was rambling on enthusiastically, the brothers were watching her  with admiration, and all around them the air was full of that special kind of  Odessa weather, which can only be possible in June and at the beginning of  September, when it is «a bit hot and unbelievably pleasant». Then they counted  the Potemkin Stairs together, going down to the City Port, which didn’t use to  have that ugly hotel back then, with a steamship waiting at the pier, the same  steamship, which had had the brothers onboard on their way to Odessa… They took the escalator upstairs, made a turn  towards the Vorontsov Palace, and then did the «Golden  Triangle » tour – made it through the Krasnoflotsky Lane to the Potemkin Square  and then via Carl Marx Street and Lastochkin Street to the Opera House. My  mother told the brothers about the great history of Odessa, about its famous mayors…  When the story came to Vorontsov, the brothers lightened up – their address in  London was not far from the street named after the father of our general  governor, Semen Romanovich. Overall, my mother boasted both erudition and  excellent English skills. It must have been her love for Odessa that later on  led her to her future job in the Local Heritage Museum…When they arrived to the  building of the Opera House, Barry and Robin suddenly invited them to join them  for the evening at the theatre and rushed to the box office without waiting for  their answers.  
                  Lyuba and my Mom hurried to catch up with them in order to help  communicate with a box office assistant. It seemed embarrassing, simply  impossible to say no. So the evening ended up with my mum watching the Swanlake once again, with Barry and  Robin watching her…Later that evening, after the young people had a walk along  Pushkinskaya and Deribasovskaya, they got tired and sat down on a bench in the  City Garden for a short rest, it was then when all of the sudden Barry and  Robin started to sing. It was much later, many years later, that my mother  found out that they were singing their famous song «Words», but back then,  Lyuba and she got really scared and asked the brothers to sing not so loudly – they  were surrounded with Soviet people, militia, the KGB, which never sleeps –  their all-seeing agents were everywhere, and my mother had no intention of  explaining what they were doing there in the company of suspicious foreigners.  The brothers were surprised and even looked offended by this, but stopped  singing nonetheless. They invited the girls to visit their steamship, to look  at their cabin – in order to get some rest before the Opera House. My Mom  almost choked when she heard the brothers being so cheeky and was determined to  head for the trolley-bus stop together with Lyuba, but Robin dropped to his  knees, said he was sorry, smiled and kissed her hand. And then he suggested  going back to the Duke and waiting for a bit while his brother and he go down  to their ship and bring the girls their records. Curiosity beat common sense  and there they were – near the Duke, waiting for the brothers to bring them two  records – generosity unheard of at the time, two records, one for each of them!  My mother got the album «Bee Gees' 1st», Lyuba– «Horizontal».  Having seen Barry and Robin's photos on the cover of the records, the girls got  excited. They didn't let it show, obviously, but the very thought of walking  around Odessa with rock stars from abroad made their hearts beat faster. But  they had to keep the standard flying. And in order to do that, they needed a  snack. 
                  It  is a thankless job to compare restaurants and cafes in Odessa back then and  now. These days we have gastronomic tours specializing in Odessa cuisine, and  back then…Fortunately, some time before our events happened, a cafe named Crimson Sails had been opened at the  corner of Deribasovkaya and Karl Marx streets. It immediately got the  reputation of being a place for young people and students thought it was  hypercool to take a walk along “Deriba” followed by a visit to the Sails and Lakomka opposite, which had brand new shining shopping windows – a  novelty unheard of at the time. 
                  It wasn’t so easy to find a table. It was obvious that the party  attracted a lot of attention – Barry and Robin’s faces and clothes were too  untypical for Soviets. My Mum didn't feel like paying any attention to the  staring looks of people nearby, and she started to tell the guys about the new  book she was reading – a Herman Melville novel Moby Dick, which they have been recently studying at her World  Literature class. My mother told the brothers about a crazy captain Ahab and  his evil dusky phantoms led by a Parsee Fedallah; about a poor mad boy Pip, who  jumped overboard and had to spend the night in the sea holding on to a floating  barrel; about the captain of Rachel ship, who lost his son hunting for Moby  Dick; and Ishmael who miraculously survived, because he was able to float  thanks to a coffin, which had been made in advance by his friend, a harpooner  Queequeg…
                  The time flew by. It was getting  darker. It was time to go to the theatre. For quite a long time Barry and Robin were sincerely admiring our  Opera House, the creation of talented multi-tasking Vienna-based architects Fellner  and Helmer, who ended up creating an entire concern specializing in building  opera houses in Europe. During  the interval they had coffee with cakes, talked about trifles and then my  mother asked about the new album's release date. 
                  – We recently left New York where we recorded several songs, said Barry.  It seems like our album will be  a double  one. We will finish recording it at home, in London. We need to hurry up –  Stigwood is getting nervous, as always. Our producer. 
                  After the Swan Lake Barry and  Robin decided to walk the girls to the trolley-bus stop. Number 10, whose final  stop was then at the Martinovskogo Square, came quite quickly. Everybody felt  sorry to say goodbye to each other after such an interesting day, but tomorrow  meant exams and home meant parents. The brothers asked to walk the girls home  again. 
                  – How are you going to get back to your ship? What if you get lost?  Trolley-bus drivers do not speak English, my mother said. Plus bus stops are  not far from our homes now. I remember earlier, before my dad got this  apartment, we had been renting two rooms in a house; its owners had a giant German  Shepherd that they unleashed for the night. It was then that I was terribly  afraid of returning home late at night. Finally this dog jumped over the fence  once and ran away never to be found again. Now I remember it as a real  nightmare. 
                  – When are we going to see each other again? – Robin asked my Mum. –  Tomorrow our ship is leaving for Istanbul…
                  – We’ll try to be the first ones to take our exam tomorrow and then come  to the Duke at twelve. Deal?
                  – Deal! – Svetlana, can I kiss you?
                  – Just like that? – my mother gave him a sheepish smile.
                  – Like that! As a sign of friendship between England and the Soviet  Union! – Robin smiled and kissed my mother no longer waiting for her  permission.
                  I won't be telling about what my mother got to hear from my grandma –  the thing is that my mother couldn't exactly warn my grandma that she was going  to be home late – there was simply no such luxury as a landline telephone line in  our apartments back then. Fortunately, my granddad came to my mum's rescue – he  was the one who got to hear her elated story about the English musicians while  examining the record with their signatures in his hands and later told my mother  to go to bed without uttering a word about the possible consequences of his  daughter hanging out with foreigners in case this information reached the Artillery  college where he worked as a lecturer. 
                  It was only my mum who showed up at the Duke's monument the following  day – Lyuba had to stay at the university. Barry came alone with a huge packet  in his hands. He was noticeably nervous. My mother was nervous, too. They both  understood that this was the last time they were seeing each other. The Iron Curtain  wouldn't be over for more than twenty something years…
                  – And where is Robin? – my mother asked.
                  – We had a small argument. He didn't let me sleep the entire night. You  see… He wanted to tell you he loves you and stay here in Odessa but I am strongly  against it – he is engaged, the wedding date is set for this August, and I  promised Molly, his fiancee, to keep an eye on him during this cruise. So after  having a row I left him in our cabin. At the end of the day, I am his big  brother – Barry said with a smile. 
                  – Robin asked me to give you this – Barry got out a paper cut-out shaped  as a heart from the pocket of his jacket. This Valentive card is for you,  Svetlana. We give such Valentine cards for St. Valentine's Day. We give them to  the people we love with all our heart. And even though we are six months ahead  of February, 16, Robin still asked me to give you this card to express his  feelings. 
                  My mother blushed. 
                  – And I… I want to give you a surprise gift. Your story about Moby Dick  and the sailors of Pequod was so interesting…Just before the cruise, in  England, we bought the exact replica of a walrus tusk with an engraving – this  sort of thing was very popular with the whale hunters. You can see this writing  – “Whaling bark “Veronika”, 1837”. This is for you, Svetlana. 
                  The tusk wasn't small at all – nineteen inches, almost half a metre.  Fortunately, the brothers were cautious enough to think of wrapping it with  thick paper. 
                  It was time to say goodbye. Barry gave my mother an embarrassing kiss on  the cheek and she hugged him. 
                  – I will write to you, – Barry said.  Give me your address. 
                  My mother tore a sheet of paper from her notebook on Modern English  Literature and wrote her address. Barry folded the sheet and put it in the  pocket of his jacket.  
                  – It's time for you to go, – my mother said. The steamship will not be  waiting for you. 
                  When Barry left, she unfolded the Valentine card. «I leave, but my heart  stays in Odessa. Robin Gibb» – this is what it said. 
                  One  month later a letter from England arrived to my mother's home address.  The envelope revealed that the letter had  been opened and resealed. Another month later my grandfather was summoned to  the director of his college; he was told that he could forget all about  becoming a general, a title my grandfather had been expecting to get. The  reason for this was that a general's daughter cannot write letters to citizens  of anti-Soviet capitalistic countries. He also advised him to have a serious  talk with his daughter. 
                  My mum never told me  about what was in the letter. Very soon she met my dad, and I was born one year  later. But before that one very important event had occurred. 
                The very beginning of  the new year 1969 saw the release of a double album «Bee Gees» first in the  USA, and then in England. Many critics still consider this album to be the best  and the most underrated album of the band. The album cover was very simple – a  plain red background had big white letters that said : «BEE GEES. ODESSA». The  title song of the album was called «Odessa (city on the Black Sea)». Interesting?  It gets even more interesting. Hundreds of brothers’ Gibb fans were trying to  solve the riddle and decode the lyrics. Here is the text of the song:
                «14th of February, 1899
                  The British ship  «Veronika» was lost without a sign
                  Black sheep you haven't  any wool
                  Captain Richardson left  himself a lonely wife in Hull 
                  Cherub, I lost a ship  in the Baltic sea
                  I am on an iceberg  running free,
                  Sitting, filing this  berg to the shape of a ship;
                  Sailing my way back to  your lips.
                  One passing ship gave  word that you have moved out of your old flat 
                  You  love the Vicar more than words can say 
                  Ask him to pray that I  won't melt away 
                  And I'll see your face  again 
                Odessa, how strong am  I? 
                  Odessa, how time goes  by!
                Treasure, you know the  neighbours that live next door 
                  They haven't got their  dog anymore
                  Freezing, sailing  around in the North Atlantic 
                  Can't seem to leave the  sea anymore 
                  I just can't understand  why you just moved to Finland
                  You love that Vicar  more than words can say 
                  Ask him to pray that I  won't melt away 
                  And I'll see your face  again 
                  Odessa, how strong am  I? 
                  Odessa, how time goes  by!
                  14th of February, 1899
                  The British ship  «Veronika» was lost without a sign».
                After a great deal of  attempts to decode the lyrics of the song both critics and fans concluded that  the text, as well as the entire album, is psychodelic, and therefore has no  meaning. There were only several people in England and in Odessa who knew the  story behind the song. It was Robin who first insisted on the name Masterpeace and later came up with the  name ODESSA for this album, and even  more than that, he was also singing the title song. The main part of the text  and the talking words of the refrain: «Odessa,  how strong am I? Odessa, how time goes by! » were actually written by Robin. His  fight with himself ended up the way it was supposed to end up– he married Molly  Hullis, with whom he had two children; they separated eleven years later, in  1980. The words about the English captain of «Veronica» ship who lost his ship  and was on the iceberg with a broken heart now become absolutely clear. As well  as the words about the neighbours who no longer have the dog; the words about  Finland… The date itself, the fourteenth of February, which is both at the  beginning and at the end of the song, doesn’t leave any questions. 
                  In fact, the names of other songs in this album were also «talking»: «You'll  never see my face again», «Sound of love», «Never say never  again». Should it be mentioned that already in March a parcel from London arrived  in Odessa, a parcel that contained this album with a deluxe velour cover and a  new letter, this time from Barry? In the letter he confessed that the argument  they had had with Robin in Odessa had far-reaching consequences – Robin left  the band and even started a solo career. Barry and the second twin brother  Maurice decided not to give up and were also recording a new album – «Cucumber Ñastle». The other  information in the letter remains a secret as my father insisted that my mother  should tear the letter apart. Fortunately, I still have the disk, – at first we  had nothing to play it on, but my parents made an effort and bought a radiogram  «Rigonda», and then our «Accord». At the time it was «the bomb». But the bigger  bomb was the «Bee Gees» album that was so different from «Melody» records… 
                  A  famous Odessa melomaniac Alexander Pikersgil, who made a handmade stereosystem  with a radiogram and speakers, the sound quality of which was unrivalled all  over the Soviet Union at the time and who had been offered a «Volga» in  exchange for his system – an event unheard of at the time, found out through  Vitya Stadnichenko about my mother's records and begged her to lend it to him  for a couple of days. This was how the people of Odessa, who gathered at the  weekend under his windows at the corner of Schepkin and Peter the Great streets  and listened to jazz and to then popular Ray Conniff from the speakers that he  had been putting directly on the window sills, heard the music of “Bee Gees”  for the first time. 
                  Then  my mother, acting under the urging of my father, wrote a letter to the brothers  telling them about everything and asking them not to write back. Did it reach  the brothers? The question remains unanswered; letters from the Soviet Union  often got lost on the way to addressees in capitalistic countries. Well, for  better or for worse, there were no more letters from London; as for Barry, he  got married for the second time – this time his wife was «Miss Edinburgh» Linda  Grey, together with whom they had five children. 
                  My mother's friend Lyuba  immigrated to Canada in the early 70s as part of the first wave of Jewish  immigration; there she was able to listen to any records of any performers –  we, on the contrary, went on to living in the same country which had the most  readers in the world and where there was no sex as it turned out… Fortunately,  not for everyone.
                  My  mother had a lot on her plate in the following years so she couldn’t pay much  attention to music– first it was my birth, then one year later – cholera outbreak  in Odessa, she took me and flew to Severomorsk, located behind the Arctic  circle, where my father served in the navy after graduating from the  Polytechnic University. There she worked at the radio and had a chance to play  “Bee Gees” during lunch breaks among other performers. To do this she used the  reels brought from home; at the same time the Gibb brothers made up under the  pressure from their producer Robert Stigwood and remained together ever since. The  singles «Lonely Days» and «How Can You Mend A Broken Heart» released in 1971, became  bestsellers and were sold in millions. Four years later «Bee Gees» changed  their style and from rock musicians turned into disco icons. And this was when  Robin  showed his best – it was his  special, a bit vibrating, falsetto that became their trademark sound. Even now,  thirty five years later, we still listen to their famous songs «Stayin' Alive»,  «How Deep Is Your Love» è «More Than  a Woman» from the film «Saturday Night Fever» with John Travolta in the leading  role. 
                  There  were many more new albums and new hits – until 2003, when the youngest band  member Maurice Gibb,who had been born thirty five minutes later than his twin  brother Robin, died. At the end of 2009 Barry and Robin announced about the  revival of the band, but they didn't record anything new. And they will never  be able to – Robin Gibb died in London in May 2012. He was only sixty two …
                  The  mysterious song «Odessa (city on the Black Sea)» was  attracting everyone’s attention, as well as the entire “Odessa” album, for  quite a long time. It was released multiple times in different countries – the  USA, Great Britain, Germany, Argentina, Italy, Canada, Japan. This album has  been released on CDs since 1983, but vinyl lovers cannot complain – not long  ago, in 2009, the album was released again on a vinyl record as a deluxe gift  edition that included a photo album. 
                  As  for me… I would be happy if I could listen now to the very same album that  Barry sent to my mother. Alas, as my parents said, it was lost during one of  our multiple moves out of one apartment and into the other at the end of the  seventies – as well as the very first record that the Gibb brothers gave to my  mom, and many others. I find comfort in the idea that I must have heard it back  during those years – my parents often had guests over and played musical  records using our “Accord”. 
                  However,  the walrus tusk, strange as it may seem, survived all our moves. As a child, I  used to regularly and thoroughly examine it. Even now it is in front of me –  one side of it has the words «THE BARK VERONICA. OUT OF NEW BEDFORD», the  carvings of two birds and an emblem with stars and arrows; the other side – a silhouette  of a beautiful young woman with the words «My Dear Kathleen», a wonderfully  carved sailship with the caption «THE VERONICA», a pot with flowers on the  table covered with a tablecloth and the date – 1849, and at the top, at the  very top of the tusk – a five-pointed star.
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                  * a komsorg – a  Komsomol leader