ROY ORBISON

The remarkable canon of work recorded by Roy Orbison is tied not to any one decade but virtually to the entire lifespan of rock 'n roll. He began his career in the '50's, a friend and contemporary of Elvis Presley; he shared billings in Britain with The Beatles in the '60's; saw his work covered by the likes of Linda Ronstadt in the '70's; watched as his classic In Dreams became a keystone of David Lynch's film Blue Velvet. His posthumous album Mystery Girl - became the biggest selling album of his illustrious career.

Roy Orbison remains as one of rock's truly legendary figures: a consistent talent whose influence grows with each passing year. His is a combination of voice and songs that, harnessed together, unleash a rare power which grabs listeners by the heart and holds them forever enthralled.

Orbison's was a special talent no better acknowledged than by Bruce Springsteen when inducting Roy into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame in 1987.

"In 1975, when I went in to the studio to make Born To Run, I wanted to make a record with words like Bob Dylan that sounded like Phil Spector. But, most of all, I wanted to sing like Roy Orbison."

Born Roy Kelton Orbison on April 23rd 1936, he grew up in the heart of the Texas oil fields. He began playing and singing with local bands - his first was with The Wink Westerners.Roy moved on to The Teen Kings who - at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico - recorded a single which was only released locally. Acting on Johnny Cash's advice, Roy sent a copy of the song - Ooby Dooby - to Sun Records' founder Sam Phillips. Phillips liked what he heard, Roy drove to Memphis, and by June 1956 Sun had released its first Roy Orbison hit single.

Roy's time at Sun was not, however, particularly happy. Only his debut single - the recut version of Ooby Dooby - made any kind of chart impression. Other Sun cuts - Sweet and Easy To Love, Chicken Hearted and Rock House - were upbeat and went against the grain. Years later, Orbison recalled his earliest meetings with Sam Phillips who had played him some previously recorded Sun singles.

"He wasn't talking my language. I wasn't sophisticated but I was university educated. And, when he brought out the first record (Arthur Crudup's That's Alright) and the second (Mystery Train) he said, 'now sing like that.' If he'd have said 'sing with the same emotion, the same feeling in everything that you do that this man is doing' then I would have said 'I understand exactly what you mean.' But, I didn't understand what he meant, I didn't know what he was getting at. I couldn't sing like that. I had already been in the business a good while and I was patterned in my own way."

Roy left Sun in 1957 and signed to music publishers Acuff-Rose, convinced his true calling was as a songwriter. Indeed, his song Claudette - written while at Sun - was a Top Thirty hit for the Everly Brothers in 1958. A brief stint with RCA followed but neither of the Chet Atkins produced singles he recorded met with much success. Nonetheless, Roy's star was soon to be in the ascendant following a conversation between his manager Wesley Rose and a former Mercury promotion man, Fred Foster. Foster had heard a record by Warren Smith on Sun - Rock and Roll Ruby.

"Fred thought I'd recorded that and so he signed me, thinking I was someone else!" said Roy.

Orbison, nonetheless, found his niche with Foster's newly formed label - Monument, beginning with the 1960 hit Up Town - one of the very first Nashville sessions to incorporate strings as opposed to fiddles.

"Foster was smart enough to get out of the way at the right time. He didn't say 'sound like this' or 'play it this way.' He just knew what sounded good to him. Which is the best producer you can have. Whatever sounds beautiful to the producer is fantastic," Roy remembered.

On a songwriting level, Orbison began collaborating with fellow Texan Joe Melson. Beginning with Up Town, the pair had a long and extremely productive writing partnership. Of Roy's first 15 top 40 hits, six were penned by the Orbison/Melson team. They included the breakthrough record, Only The Lonely (Know How I Feel); a pure gold fusion of R&B and country which narrowly missed out on hitting number one in America.

In Britain, however, it didn't just top the charts but remained in the Top 40 for nearly 6 months. Only The Lonely is, of course, the song regarded by many as the starting point of Roy's classic ballad sound. Most of the hits that would follow - such as Running Scared, Crying, Dream Baby, In Dreams and It's Over - contained a vivid combination of hurtful romantic longing combined with near-operatic vocals that established Roy as a truly unique talent. But, as Orbison would stress repeatedly, his hits were by no means a catalogue of sad songs or romantic tragedy.

"On balance, I'd say it was at least fifty-fifty. Dream Baby, Mean Woman Blues, Running Scared, even Pretty Woman has a happy ending!"

Eight top ten hits in the four years between 1960 and 1964 paved the way for the biggest selling record of his career, Oh, Pretty Woman. Estimated to have sold over 7 million copies in 1964 alone, it topped the American charts for three weeks, holding at bay the British invasion by bands such as The Animals and Manfred Mann. In Britain, it gave Roy his second straight Number One (It's Over had dominated the UK charts in the spring of '64) and, like its predecessor, remained on the chart for over four months.

While he was the only American vocalist to ride out the British invasion, Orbison also toured Britain regularly, initially sharing a bill with The Beatles (who, at that time, were by and large unknowns in America). "I messed up the first day I got there. I walked out in this little theatre and they had Beatles placards everywhere, life-size ones. And I said, 'what's all this? What is a Beatle anyway?' and John Lennon said, 'I'm one'. He was standing right behind me."

The Beatles, of course, were hugely influenced by Orbison and their slow-tempo version of Please Please Me was very much a tribute to him.

In 1965, Orbison signed to MGM, lured by a lucrative deal that also offered the potential of Presley-level movie stardom. Indeed, he did star in 1968's The Fastest Guitar Alive but MGM were getting in to financial trouble and Orbison's rich vein of hits began to dry up. To compound this, Roy's private life was marred when - in the midst of reconciliation with his ex-wife, Claudette, she was killed in a motor-cycle accident. Two years later in 1968, two of Roy's sons were killed in a housefire.

Reduced to touring clubs, Roy returned to his country roots and recorded for Mercury and Asylum in the '70's. His reputation as an influential master, however, began to soar once again via covers of his earlier work. Linda Ronstadt set the ball rolling with Blue Bayou (1977) and three years later, Roy won a Grammy for his duet with Emmylou Harris (That Loving You Feeling Again.) A year later, Don McLean scored with Crying, but real success came Roy's way again when his re-recording of the 1963 hit In Dreams became a pivotal element of David Lynch's 1986 movie, Blue Velvet.

Signing to Virgin, and with all of his old original recordings embroiled in bankruptcy proceedings, Orbison set about re-recording his songs "just so's they would be available" and released a double-set - In Dreams.

In 1987, Roy was inducted in to the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame and within twelve months had become a member of the Traveling Wilburys alongside Tom Petty, Bob Dylan and George Harrison. With his career rejuvenated, Orbison fronted the extraordinary TV special recorded at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles - Roy Orbison and Friends: Black and White Night. Roy's friends, who became his backing band, were indeed stellar - Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits, kd lang, Elvis Costello, T-Bone Burnett, Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, J.D. Souther, Jennifer Warnes and more.

In December 1988, Roy died, suddenly, from a heart attack. Among the multitude of artists he had influenced paying tribute, U2's Bono summed up many feelings when he said, "Writing for him was like writing for Elvis, who was the only comparable vocal talent. His great gift was to turn the pain and bad luck that he experienced into ground breaking songs."

Bono, of course, had written She's A Mystery To Me especially for Roy - released after his death, it gave Orbison his last Top 30 hit in Britain. Paul McCartney simply said,

"He was and always will be one of the greats of rock 'n roll."

Posthumously released in 1989, Roy's Mystery Girl album became the biggest selling record of his career. That success was sparked by two more top ten hits, You Got It (written by fellow Wilburys' Petty and Jeff Lynne) and I Drove All Night. In 1992, Virgin released King Of Hearts, a collection of previously unissued songs.

In 1997, Orbison Records released several significant Roy Orbison recordings. Greatest Hits - In Dreams, a special nineteen song collection was re-recorded for superior sound. The historic Cocoanut Grove performance, Black And White Night was made available on CD and VHS. And a 60's television appearance by Roy and band was captured on Combo Concert 1965 Holland.

In June, 1999, The Anthology was released, along with a companion home video documenting Roy's body of work over five decades.

Additional releases from Orbison Records, featuring rare or previously unavailable performances by Roy Orbison are planned for the future. Watch the Home and Releases pages for details. Roy Orbison's flame will continue to burn brightly for decades to come.

"Roy's songs were not so much about dreams as like dreams." Tom Waits

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