This might have made up some what for how Capitol Records failed to reproduced the sound quality of these most successful recordings of one of the most iconic groups in music history. Why were these pictures excluded from this release? Could Capitol Records not have made the fore mentioned pictures into two attractive inner sleeves to house the two coloured vinyl's. The other is a centre spread discography picture of all the Bee Gees official album front covers. One is a b&w photo of the three Gibb Brothers all dressed in white. You'll notice that there are a couple of pictures missing. Soon after Cucumber Castles release, Barry Gibb announced. Both acts had hit singles, but their respective albums didnt sell particularly well. Robin in turn recorded his debut solo LP Robins Reign. But the novelty here is short lived when you compare its album sleeve to the Cd's inlay version. In March 1969, Robin Gibb quit the Bee Gees, leaving his brothers to carry on and record the album Cucumber Castle. What attracted me to buying this version was the fact that it was a limited coloured version that looked really cool and so I guess I was taken in by its novelty. The Bee Gees - Robin, Barry and Maurice Gibb - in 1970, before their biggest hits, including 'Stayin Alive.' Robin Gibb died after a long battle with cancer and intestinal surgery. I definitely had no intention of buying the vinyl copy at the time, so I can't make any comparison here with the black vinyl version that was also released back then. I did eventually cave in and got myself a Cd copy which sounded really good as it should. I had complained about this compilation back in 2017 when first released by Capitol Records as they hadn't introduced anything new on it for Bee Gees fans so I did try to resist buying a copy. Born to a musical family in northern England, Barry Gibb and his younger fraternal twin brothers, Robin. Side A starts of sounding well but it seems to deteriorate from there on after which is disappointing as surprisingly this coloured vinyl version doesn't have much surface noise on it. The Bee Gees may be associated with the shimmering disco grooves and stratospheric falsetto of Saturday Night Fever, but the band scored hits in four decades with substance and style, reinventing themselves through setbacks and comebacks marked by graceful harmonies and impeccable songcraft. It's very hard to say where they got their source from for pressing this one, but it's definitely not from the original compilation master. But yes sadly the truth is that the sound of this issue is not as it should be. I hadn't listened to my copy fully and to its end. I had to re-write this review as I was a little premature when writing it originally.