Roy Orbison
Roy Orbison (1936-1988) is considered by his peers to have been the most powerful voice to ever sing Rock and Roll. Before The Beatles, he was also one of its most innovative composers.
Roy was born and grew up in Texas. He got a guitar for his sixth birthday, and within a year, he was commited to a life of music. He grew up a fan of Lefty Frizzell, Hank Williams, and Jimmie Rodgers. He also took in the various sounds of 1940s Texas: Rhythm & Blues, Tex-Mex, Zydeco, and the orchestral music of Annunzio Mantovani.
In the early 1950s, he formed a band called The Teen Kings. He met Johnny Cash in 1955, and Cash recommended producer Sam Phillips. The Teen Kings sent the soon-to-be-legendary Sun Records producer a recording of a rockabilly song called "Ooby Dooby", which impressed Phillips enough to sign them. Under Phillips' direction, they re-recorded "Ooby Dooby", and it became their first hit. More rockabilly songs and much touring followed, but the Teen Kings broke up at the end of 1956 over royalty disputes. Roy stayed at Sun as a solo act and songwriter. His song "Claudette" (about his girlfriend and soon to be wife) became the B-side of The Everly Brothers' big hit "All I Have To Do Is Dream", earning Roy his first real money. But Roy found Sun Records frustrating, and left for country music song publisher Acuff-Rose.
Roy met Joe Melson in 1958 and the two became a songwriting team. Roy recorded his material for RCA Victor, but when his contract ran out in 1959, his agent Wesley Rose found a better place for him, Monument Records in Nashville.
All the pieces needed for success were now in place. Roy and Joe hit their stride as songwriters, beginning with "Uptown", Roy's first hit since "Ooby Dooby". Monument Records provided top-notch session musicians, and allowed Roy to experiment, bringing in strings at his request. And in 1960, Roy finally found the power of his voice, with "Only The Lonely", which went to #2 and made Roy a star. After "Only The Lonely", Roy began to experiment with song structure. He introduced the Bolero Effect to American pop with "Running Scared", his first #1, in 1961.
For the next four years, Roy was one of the biggest names in American music, filling a void left behind by the rock and roll pioneers of The Fifties who were now either drafted, dead, in jail or playing gospel music. A string of hits from 1961 to '64 showcased his Opera singer-like voice and broke new ground in songwriting and production, including "Crying", "Dream Baby", "In Dreams", "It's Over", and "Oh, Pretty Woman". Following the pattern of "Running Scared", these songs were two and a half minute operas of heartbreak, loneliness, and hope for new love, with plenty of Plot Twists, Manly Tears, and in the uptempo numbers, manly swagger. He also created an onstage persona of a mysterious Man In Black, singing while standing perfectly still, wearing a black suit and Cool Shades. This was quite the opposite of his real personality however, and was more about helping him deal with stage fright.
Roy went on a UK tour in the spring of 1963 with The Beatles, who were just achieving fame in their home country. The Beatles were huge Orbison fans, and Roy became friends with John Lennon and especially George Harrison. Further tours took him around the world, and wherever he went, huge crowds came to see him.
"Oh, Pretty Woman" turned out to be the peak of his career, however. After 1964, The Beatles changed the direction of rock music, and Roy was left behind. His writing parter Joe Melson left to pursue solo success. His agent Wesley Rose took him to Metro Goldwyn Mayer so that he could follow Elvis Presley into film. Wesley also took over as Roy's music producer. Without the Nashville session musicians, Roy didn't have the same sound, and record sales plummeted.
Tragedy struck in 1966 when his wife Claudette was killed in a motorcycle accident. Roy's movie career ended after one movie, The Fastest Guitar Alive. He recorded Cover Albums of Hank Williams and Don Gibson songs, which didn't sell. Tragedy struck again in 1968 when his house burned down while he was on tour, killing two of his children. Orbison remarried in 1969, to Barbara Jakobs.
Throughout the '70s, Roy remained popular outside of the U.S., especially in Britain and Australia. He continued recording, but he had disappeared from American pop music. Meanwhile, a new generation of rock, pop, and country musicians began putting Cover Versions of his songs on the charts. Sonny James had a country #1 with "Only The Lonely", Linda Ronstadt covered "Blue Bayou", Don McLean did "Crying", and Van Halen did "Oh, Pretty Woman".
Roy won his first Grammy Award in 1980, for a duet with Emmylou Harris on "That Lovin' You Feelin' Again". But what really started Roy's comeback was the use of "In Dreams" in David Lynch's 1986 noir film Blue Velvet. More movies used his songs the next year, one of which, Hiding Out, won him another Grammy for a remake of "Crying" as a duet with k. d. lang. Roy had become a star again. He was inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. He starred in a television special, Roy Orbison and Friends, A Black and White Night, playing his songs with an all-star band that included Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Jackson Browne, Tom Waits, Bonnie Raitt, Elvis Presley's final band (guitairst James Burton, pianist Glen D. Hardin, bassist Jerry Scheff, and drummer Ronnie Tutt) and musical director T-Bone Burnett.
Roy began working on a new album with Jeff Lynne of the Electric Light Orchestra. Lynne was working on George Harrison's Cloud Nine, and George invited his old friend to sing on it. They asked Bob Dylan if they could use his home studio. Harrison went to Tom Petty's house to pick up a guitar. By the end of the day, all five musicians had written a song together, "Handle With Care", and decided to form a Supergroup, The Traveling Wilburys. They pretended to be half-brothers, and took Stage Names: Roy named himself Lefty Wilbury after one of his favorite musicians, Lefty Frizzell. Their album Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1, went to #3 and stayed on the charts for over a year. Meanwhile, Roy restarted his solo project with Lynne. Roy wrote songs with Lynne and Petty, and many others contributed songs, including U2, Elvis Costello, and Roy's son Wesley. Mystery Girl was recorded in October and November of 1988, and only needed to be mixed and mastered for its release in early '89. But on December 6, Roy died of a heart attack.
Roy's death was observed around the world. Mystery Girl became the biggest album of his career, and "You Got It" went to #1 on the adult contemporary chart. A "final" album of unreleased songs, King of Hearts, was released in 1992. His widow Barbara managed his legacy, releasing best-ofs, box sets, and live performances, until her death from cancer in 2011.
Solo albums:
- Roy Orbison at the Rock House (1961, a collection of his Sun Records material)
- Lonely And Blue (1961)
- Crying (1962)
- In Dreams (1963)
- There Is Only One Roy Orbison (1965)
- Orbisongs (1965)
- The Orbison Way (1966)
- The Classic Roy Orbison (1966)
- Roy Orbison Sings Don Gibson (1967)
- The Fastest Guitar Alive Original Soundtrack (1967)
- Cry Softly Lonely One (1967)
- Roy Orbison's Many Moods (1969)
- Hank Williams The Roy Orbison Way (1970)
- The Big O (1970)
- Roy Orbison Sings (1972)
- Memphis (1972)
- Milestones (1973)
- I'm Still In Love With You (1974)
- Regeneration (1977)
- Laminar Flow (1979)
- Mystery Girl (1989)
- King of Hearts (1992)
Collaborations:
- Class of '55 (1985, with Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Carl Perkins)
- Roy Orbison and Friends, A Black and White Night (1988 all-star TV special)
- Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 (1988, with Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Tom Petty, and Jeff Lynne)
- Aborted Arc: His movie career (he wasn't a good actor) and his 1980s comeback (Author Existence Failure).
- Album Filler: Roy was a singles artist, so his albums from the '60s and '70s tend to be singles and filler (including a lot of covers). Spectacularly averted on Mystery Girl.
- Album Title Drop: Mystery Girl, "She's A Mystery To Me"
- Award Bait Song: "Crying", remade as a duet with k. d. lang for the movie Hiding Out. Won a Grammy.
- Blind Without Them: Those Cool Shades? They were corrective lenses prescripted by his doctor. He could barely see without them.
- Bolero Effect: The Trope Maker for bolero in rock and pop, with "Running Scared".
- Break Up Song
- Christmas Song: "Pretty Paper"
- Cool Shades
- Cover Album: Two. One for Hank Williams and one for Don Gibson.
- Cover Version: He did lots of covers, and beginning in the '70s, lots of other musicians covered him.
- Dance Sensation: "Ooby Dooby"
- Doo Wop Progression: "Lana"
- Echoing Acoustics
- Greatest Hits Album: Several. Roy even re-recorded his greatest hits for the 1987 compilation In Dreams: The Greatest Hits.
- Melismatic Vocals: A part of his style. "Crying" turns the title word into a five-note melody.
- Neoclassical Punk Zydeco Rockabilly: Rockabilly and doo-wop meet classical and opera.
- One-Woman Song: "Claudette", "Lana", "Leah"
- Performance Anxiety
- Pop
- Refrain From Assuming: "She's A Mystery To Me". What sounds like a Title-Only Chorus is actually an Album Title Drop; the song's title is the last line of each verse.
- Revival by Commercialization: His '80s comeback began with the use of "In Dreams" in Blue Velvet.
- Scatting: Many songs had backing vocals singing doo-wop phrases.
- Scary Musician, Harmless Music: Just looking at his black hair, shades, and black suit, you'd think he sang Murder Ballads or was another Johnny Cash. But no, he sang love songs.
- Silly Love Songs
- The Sixties: Specifically the early '60s.
- Subdued Section: Beginning with "Only The Lonely", this became a part of his style.
- Supergroup: The Traveling Wilburys.
- Also, in his live concert video, "A Black and White Night", he was backed by Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Jackson Browne, k.d. lang (who joined Roy in a duet of "Crying"), Tom Waits, Jennifer Warnes and Bonnie Raitt.
- Title-Only Chorus: "Ooby Dooby", "Leah"
- Twist Ending: "Running Scared"