Roy Orbison
Roy Kelton Orbison was born on 23 April 1936 in Vernon, Texas. Not
long after, his family moved to nearby Wink, and when Roy was
about six his father started teaching him how to play the guitar.
In his teens he was the leader of a group called The Wink
Westerners, who played country & western music at local
functions and even had their own program on Radio KVWC back in
Vernon.
The Wink Westerners gradually evolved into The Teen Kings
and Roy struck up a friendship with another young Texan singer,
Buddy Holly - from nearby Lubbock.
When Holly started working under the supervision of Norman
Petty at his studio in Clovis, just over the border from Texas in
New Mexico, he arranged for Roy Orbison and The Teen Kings to
audition for Petty.
By this time The Teen Kings had developed
their country & western music into country-rock, or rockabilly
as it was then known, and two of the songs they recorded with
Petty - Tryin' To Get You and Ooby Dooby were
released on the Jewel label.
Two states to the east in Memphis, Tennessee, Sam Phillips'
Sun Record Company had become the Mecca for all rockabilly singers
seeking to emulate the success of Phillips' protégé, a
local truck driver named Elvis Presley. Jerry Lee
Lewis, Carl Perkins, Conway
Twitty, Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison made the trip.
Phillips had heard Orbison's record on Jewel and had him
re-cut that and record several new songs in his studio at 706
Union Avenue. The new version of Ooby Dooby was released
as Sun 242, backed by Go, Go, Go, and it sold something
in the order of 350,000 copies - quite a fair-sized hit.
Orbison
went on to record a lot of material for Phillips, and had three
more singles released on the Sun label - You're My Baby,
Sweet and Easy and Chicken-Hearted - but
none came close to selling as many as Ooby Dooby.
A song Roy had written about his wife, Claudette, was
recorded by The Everly Brothers as the B side to All I Have To
Do Is Dream, which turned out to be a double-sided
million-seller. The Everly Brothers had been signed to the Acuff-Rose
music publishers by Wesley Rose, and he was impressed enough with Claudette
to offer Orbison a contract.
Rose also negotiated a recording
contract for Orbison with RCA Victor, who were based 200 miles
cross-state from Memphis in Nashville. At the old Victor studios
there on 17th Street and Hawkins, Orbison cut several tracks under
the supervision of Chet Atkins - who had also been in charge of
recording The Everlys.
RCA released Almost Eighteen b/w Jolie as a
single, but with little response, and turned down his next
offering, Paper Boy. Rose thought a change of labels
might do Orbison some good so took him across town to Fred
Foster's newly-formed Monument label. Orbison's first session
with Monument produced Paper Boy - the 18,000 sales,
however, seemed to reflect RCA's good judgement in rejecting it.
His second session with Monument resulted in Uptown which
sold 75,000 copies. At their next recording session, Orbison gave
Foster two songs he wanted to record. Foster suggested that the
two be combined and brought in a string section and a male vocal
backing group.
The result was Only The Lonely, a number
two hit (number one in the UK) and a million sales. Although the
strings were a bit heavy-handed, Orbison had managed in that one
record to perfect the art pioneered by Sun artists like Conway
Twitty and of course, Presley - namely, channelling rock 'n' roll
into a traditional ballad form.
Stockily built and forced to wear heavy prescription glasses,
Orbison never had the pretty-boy good looks of his contemporary
Elvis Presley, but in summer 1961, Running Scared topped
the charts and Orbison went on to accumulate the remarkable total
of 12 million sellers in four years.
Even as Beatlemania was sweeping all before it he reached the
top again with Oh Pretty Woman, also a Number One (his
third) in Britain, where he toured consistently during the
sixties.
On 7 June 1966, Orbison and his 25-year-old wife Claudette were
motorcycling home from a race meeting when her bike was involved
in a head-on collision and she was killed instantly. Orbison was
almost wiped out emotionally, but poured all of his love into his
three sons, Roy junior, Tony and Wesley. He even wrote a song
about the tragedy - It's Too Soon To Know - which made
the Top Three in Britain.
Then two years later while he was in Bournemouth on a tour of
Britain, his Tennessee home burnt down with two of his kids inside
- Roy junior, who was 13, and eight-year-old Tony.
Orbison married a German teenager named Barbara Wilhonnen
Jacobs on 25 March 1969. The couple had two sons, in 1970 and
1974. Ill-health ultimately brought his career to a
standstill (he had
suffered from duodenal ulcers since 1960 and had been a chain
smoker since adolescence). He underwent triple bypass heart
surgery but continued to smoke for the rest of his life.
He returned to the stage in 1980, just in time to see Don
McLean take Orbison's song Crying to the top of the
British charts. By 1987 his career was fully revived. His
song In Dreams featured prominently in the David Lynch
movie, Blue Velvet, he formed a group called
The
Traveling Wilburys with some very esteemed colleagues - Jeff Lynne
(ELO), Tom Petty,
George Harrison and Bob Dylan - and enjoyed
massive hits, and he released his first new album in years, Mystery
Girl (1988).
Just when it seemed that Roy Orbison had a second chance at
superstardom he died of a heart attack on 6 December 1988. He
was 52.
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