Stayinвђ™ Alive (serban Mix) – Free

The Serban Mix pays homage to the incredible technical improvisation of the original 1977 session.

: The mix significantly enhanced the clarity of the brothers' legendary three-part harmonies, making them more decipherable and "shining" through the mix with a new crispness. Stayin’ Alive (Serban Mix)

Rather than attempting to modernize the track with contemporary electronic beats, Serban Ghenea returned to the recorded at the Château d’Hérouville in France. His goal was to excavate details that had been buried in the master tapes for four decades. The Serban Mix pays homage to the incredible

The story of the is one of modern technical mastery meeting a timeless cultural anthem. Released on February 10, 2017 , to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, this version was crafted by the world-renowned mixing engineer Serban Ghenea . The Vision: A 40-Year Evolution His goal was to excavate details that had

: The mix serves as a high-fidelity tribute to the opening scene of Saturday Night Fever , where John Travolta’s character, Tony Manero, struts through Brooklyn—a moment that solidified the Bee Gees' global superstardom.

: During the original recording, the band's drummer had to leave suddenly. Lacking a replacement, the group and their producers took two bars of a drum track from another song, "Night Fever," and created a constant physical tape loop . They jokingly credited the drummer as "Bernard Lupe," a fictional character who became so highly sought-after in the industry that people tried to hire him before realizing he didn't exist.