Roy Kelton Orbison (April 23, 1936 – December
6, 1988) was an influential American singer-songwriter and a pioneer
of rock and roll.
Early
Days
Orbison was born in Vernon,
Texas, the second son of Nadine and Orbie Lee. After moving
to Fort Worth around 1943 to find work in the munitions and aircraft
factories expanded as a result of the Second World War, the family
moved to the tiny oil town of Wink in late 1946. In 1949, at age
13, he organized his first band, "The Wink Westerners",
and when not singing with the band he spent his time playing guitar
and writing songs. The band appeared weekly on KERB radio in Kermit,
Texas. Orbison graduated from Wink High School in 1954. He attended
North Texas State College in Denton, Texas for a year, and enrolled
at Odessa Junior College in 1955 to study history and English.
The Wink Westerners had some success on local television, being
given 30 minute weekly shows on KMID and then KOSA. One of the
guests on their show was Johnny Cash, who advised them to seek
a contract with his record producer, Sam Phillips, of Sun Records.
Having renamed The Wink Westerners as "The Teen Kings",
Orbison left college in March 1956, determined to give music a
serious try, and headed for Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee.
Rise
Many of the earliest songs he recorded were produced
by Sam Phillips, who also produced Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins,
Johnny Cash, and Elvis Presley. Orbison achieved his first commercial
success in June 1956 with Ooby Dooby, a song written
by friends of Orbison from college. His song Claudette,
named after his first wife, was recorded by the Everly Brothers
as the B-side to their Number 1 hit All I Have To Do Is Dream.
However, the rockabilly and blues sounds of Sun's artists did
not bring Orbison much success and his career seemed over, although
fans of rockabilly music count his records among the best that
this kind of music has to offer. For a time, he worked at Acuff-Rose
Music in Nashville, Tennessee as a songwriter, and then was given
a contract by RCA, but eventually Chet Atkins referred him to
Fred Foster, the owner of Monument Records, where he moved after
his contract with RCA ended in 1959. At Monument, Foster encouraged
him to break from his established style. Under Foster's guidance,
he began writing his own songs alone or in collaboration with
Joe Melson and later Bill Dees, developing his signature operatic
voice, and creating a sound unheard of in rock and roll at the
time. His first record, Uptown was moderately successful.
With the release of Only The Lonely and its immediate
rise to the top of the charts (#2 in the US, #1 in the UK), he
went on to become an international rock and roll star. His follow-up
single, Running Scared became a US #1. Throughout his
stay at Monument Records, his backup band was a group of outstanding
studio musicians led by Bob Moore. The play of Orbison's voice
against the dynamic yet uncluttered sound of the band gave Orbison's
records a unique, identifiable sound.
Influence
A powerful influence on his contemporaries such
as The Rolling Stones, in 1963, Roy Orbison headlined a European
tour with The Beatles, becoming lifelong friends with the band,
in particular with John Lennon and George Harrison. Orbison would
later record with Harrison as part of the Traveling Wilburys.
During their tour of Europe, an impressed Roy Orbison encouraged
The Beatles to come to the United States. When they finally decided
to try America, they asked Orbison to manage their first tour
but his own schedule forced him to turn down what was to become
an astounding success. Unlike many artists, Orbison maintained
his success as the British Invasion swept America in 1964. His
single Oh, Pretty Woman broke the Beatles' stranglehold
on the Top 10, soaring to No. 1 on the Billboard charts. The record
sold more copies in its first ten days of release than any 45rpm
up to that time and would go on to sell more than seven million
copies. The song later became the signature tune for the film
Pretty Woman, named for his song, which brought fame
to actress Julia Roberts. He toured with The Beach Boys in 1964,
and with the The Rolling Stones in Australia in 1965. He was very
successful in England, logging three No.1 hit singles and was
several times voted top male vocalist of the year.
Decline
Due to changes in musical taste, [Orbison] suddenly
ceased to have hits in the United States after 1967, and although
he would remain popular elsewhere, his American popularity did
not recover until the 1980s. He also suffered problems in his
personal life, with the death of his first wife, Claudette (Frady),
in a motorcycle accident in 1966 after 11 years of marriage. Two
years later, the family home at Old Hickory Lake in Hendersonville,
Tennessee burned to the ground while Orbison was touring in England,
and two of his three young sons, Anthony and Roy Jr., died in
the fire. The youngest boy, Wesley, at the time only three, was
saved by Orbison's parents. He met his second wife, Barbara, in
August 1968, in Leeds, England, and they were married in Nashville
on May 25, 1969.
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I thought that I was
over you
But it’s true, so true
I love you even more than I did before
But darling, what can I do?
~ Roy Orbison
Crying
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His contract with MGM ended in 1973, and he signed
for Mercury Records. Songs that had only reasonable success in North
America, such as Penny Arcade and Working for the Man,
would go to Number 1 on the Australian charts, and Too Soon
to Know was Number 3 in England. His popularity extended to
Germany, and he recorded his hit song Mama in German. His
records were in great demand on the "black market" behind
the Iron Curtain. In France, he was viewed as the master of the
ballad of lost love in the vein of that country's most popular singer
Édith Piaf, and a cover version of Orbison's Blue Bayou
sung in French by Mireille Mathieu went to the top of France's record
charts. Fans in the Netherlands founded his largest world-wide fan
club. He continued to perform in Ireland, despite the constant terrorist
activities. A rendition of the popular ballad Danny Boy
on the 1972 Memphis album is considered one of the best recordings
ever made of this much-recorded song. He re-signed with Monument
in 1976, but his career remained in the doldrums until the late
1980s.
Resurrection
In 1980, Orbison teamed up with Emmylou Harris
to win the 1981 Grammy Award for Best Country Performance by a Duo
or Group with Vocal for their song, That Lovin' You Feelin'
Again. In 1985, Orbison recorded Wild Hearts for the
Nic Roeg film Insignificance, released on the ZTT Records
label, produced by David Briggs and Will Jennings. He was inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, the induction speech
made by Bruce Springsteen. His pioneering contribution was also
recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. Having signed a recording
contract for the first time in 10 years, with Virgin Records, he
re-recorded his 1961 hit song, Crying, as a duet with k.d.
lang in 1987 for the soundtrack of the motion picture, Hiding
Out. The song would earn the Grammy Award for Best Country
Collaboration with Vocals. Roy Orbison and Friends, A Black
and White Night, a black and white Cinemax television special
recorded at the Coconut Grove in the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles
in 1988, brought Orbison to the attention of a younger generation.
Orbison was accompanied by a who's who supporting cast, organized
by musical director T-Bone Burnett, all fans and all volunteers
who lobbied to participate: on piano was Glen Hardin, who had played
for Buddy Holly as well as working with Elvis Presley for a number
of years; lead guitarist James Burton had also played with Presley;
male background vocals, with some also playing the guitar, came
from Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, Jackson Browne,
J.D. Souther, and Steven Soles; and k.d. lang, Jennifer Warnes,
and Bonnie Raitt provided female background vocals. Shortly after
this critically acclaimed performance, whilst working with Jeff
Lynne of Electric Light Orchestra on tracks for a new album, Orbison
joined Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Jeff Lynne and Tom Petty to form
the Traveling Wilburys, achieving substantial commercial and critical
success. He subsequently recorded a new solo album, Mystery
Girl, produced by Orbison, Mike Campbell (of the Heartbreakers),
and Jeff Lynne. It included one track by U2's Bono (who copies Orbison's
trademark dark glasses and also co-wrote the track She's A Mystery
to Me with the Edge specifically for Orbison). At an awards
ceremony in Antwerp, a few days before his death, Roy Orbison gave
his only public rendition of the hit You Got It to the
applause of a huge crowd.
Death
Orbison had triple heart bypass surgery on January
18, 1978. On December 6, 1988, at the age of 52, he suffered a fatal
heart attack while visiting his mother in the Nashville, Tennessee
suburb of Hendersonville. At the direction of his second wife, Barbara,
Roy Orbison was interred on December 15, 1988, in the Westwood Village
Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California. His two sons and
their mother, Claudette, who predeceased him, had been laid to rest
at his request in the Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Nashville,
Tennessee.
Tributes
From the stage in Las Vegas in 1976, Elvis Presley
called Orbison "the greatest singer in the world," and
Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees referred to him as the "Voice of
God." Multiple Academy Award–winning songwriter Will
Jennings (My Heart Will Go On, from the Titanic soundtrack)
called him a "poet, a songwriter, a vision," after working
with him and co-writing Wild Hearts. Bob Dylan, later a
bandmate of Orbison's in the Traveling Wilburys, wrote "Orbison
…transcended all the genres.…With Roy, you didn't know
if you were listening to mariachi or opera. He kept you on your
toes.…[He sang] his compositions in three or four octaves
that made you want to drive your car over a cliff. He sang like
a professional criminal.…His voice could jar a corpse, always
leave you muttering to yourself something like, 'Man, I don't believe
it.' His songs had songs within songs. Orbison was deadly serious;
no pollywog and no fledgling juvenile. There wasn't anything else
on the radio like him."
Tidbits
Two common misconceptions about his appearance stubbornly
continue to surface about Orbison: one, that he was an albino, and
two, that he wore his trademark dark glasses because he was blind
or nearly so. Neither is correct, although his poor vision required
him to wear thick corrective lenses (He suffered from childhood
from a combination of hyperopia, severe astigmatism, presbyopia,
anisometropia, and strabismus). Orbison's trademark sunglasses were
a fashion statement arising from an accident early in his career.
Due to go onstage in a few minutes, Orbison left his regular glasses
in an airplane. Unable to see without corrective lenses, the only
other pair of glasses he had available were darkly tinted prescription
sunglasses. "I had to see to get onstage," so he wore
the glasses throughout his tour (with the Beatles), and he carried
on with it for the rest of his professional career. "I'll just
do this and look cool."[1]
[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Orbison
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