Say Something Interesting about: Roy Orbison

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I like his slick late 80s comeback stuff as much as the classix if not more.

Yeah, I'm with that. I always thought "You Got It" was striking for being on a continuum with the earlier hits that worked just fine on radio and elsewhere. Still does.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:20 (twenty years ago)

I really like how in "Crying," he says "Crah-ah-ah-ah-YING!" -- you almost never hear anyone pronounce the "ying" of crying in a song. Usually it's just "cryin'"

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:45 (twenty years ago)

Way upthread Rickey posted this:

Search: "Life Fades Away," from the 'Less Than Zero' soundtrack. He cowrote it with Danzig. Great one.

George Harrison said that Roy was deeply conversant with the work of Monty Python. I love that.

Two of my favorite things about Roy, these. ("Life Fades Away" is really great and I'm wondering if it was ever anthologized properly, as otherwise I guess it would be missed.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:48 (twenty years ago)

Anyone like Bonnie Raitt's mid-'90s cover of "You Got It"?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:51 (twenty years ago)

As far as I know, he never got into a pool-cue fight with Del Shannon. Although perhaps he should have.

Austin Still (Austin, Still), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:54 (twenty years ago)

i don't think i have ever listened to a roy orbison record. wait, that's not that interesting.

scott seward (scott seward), Sunday, 26 March 2006 15:38 (twenty years ago)

roy orbison fucking rules, scott!! i started a thread about him last week, but it was obtuse and no one really cared.

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Sunday, 26 March 2006 15:43 (twenty years ago)

was he really an albino? i don't think i knew that. so, that was just a wig. that's kinda like when i found out that mike nichols is hairless from head to toe. he has a pretty good wig though.

scott seward (scott seward), Sunday, 26 March 2006 15:48 (twenty years ago)

from wikipedia:
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."

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Sunday, 26 March 2006 15:50 (twenty years ago)

Roy's one of the musical guests on the SCTV DVD I got at Xmass. 1981 season so pre-comeback, Roy and a touring band of guys in matching leisure suits w/pompadour-mullets you know the type w/like 4 rhythm guitar players and a crisp drummer. He did "Pretty Woman" and some other rockabillyish song I can't remember, plus a comedy sketch.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Sunday, 26 March 2006 16:07 (twenty years ago)

i remember that performance. okay, so he wasn't an albino. i never thought he was blind.

scott seward (scott seward), Sunday, 26 March 2006 16:31 (twenty years ago)

mike nichols is hairless from head to toe

now that's bizarre. {insert dan perry-esque quip here}

m coleman (lovebug starski), Sunday, 26 March 2006 16:39 (twenty years ago)

Roy Orbison could produce sounds at both higher and lower frequencies than audible by the human ear, which explains his popularity with dogs and elephants.

O-Keigh (O-Keigh), Sunday, 26 March 2006 17:17 (twenty years ago)

From Roy's Wink (Texas) High School yearbook: "To lead a western band ... Is his after school wish ... And of course to marry ... A beautiful dish."

O-Keigh (O-Keigh), Sunday, 26 March 2006 17:19 (twenty years ago)

I hated, hated HATED his voice as a kid until "Mystery Girl" blew my mind in junior high school.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 26 March 2006 17:38 (twenty years ago)

"To lead a western band ... Is his after school wish ... And of course to marry ... A beautiful dish."

Same here. Still.

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Monday, 27 March 2006 08:04 (twenty years ago)

"roy orbison fucking rules, scott!! i started a thread about him last week, but it was obtuse and no one really cared."

"THE DARK ELVIS!!"

...........Chuck E. don't like him much though.

xgurggleglgllg (xgurggleglgllg), Monday, 27 March 2006 08:29 (twenty years ago)

I wrote this last week.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Monday, 27 March 2006 11:20 (twenty years ago)

The thing I find interesting is that he really wasn't all that popular in his heyday, he was rediscovered later on.

I think I'm right in saying he was much more popular in the UK than the USA? Or he had hits for a longer period in the UK?

Dadaismus sinks his soul in Mother Nature's bower (Dada), Monday, 27 March 2006 11:54 (twenty years ago)

He was one of the most succesful acts in the UK in the 60's. 25 top 40 singles, 10 Top 10 singles and 3 number ones that decade.

Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Monday, 27 March 2006 11:58 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, I was raised on the Big O, who along with Dionne Warwick and Simon and Garfunkel was what Dad used to play in the car. So they were the first musicians I learned, so to speak.

Why does the birds always shitting on me? (noodle vague), Monday, 27 March 2006 12:04 (twenty years ago)

nine months pass...
does Roy Orbison join Al Green as the artist with universal ILE acclaim?

Anyway, y'all should rent this unexpectedly terrific documentary called Roy Orbison: In Dreams, released in 2003, featuring rather good interviews with Robert Plant, Jeff Lynne, Emmylou Harris, and a surprisingly un-twat-ish Bono, among others. The last 15 minutes, as the Mystery Girl-Traveling Wilburys triumphs approach, is so wonderful and sad that I had to pause the DVD. I forgot how much great stuff he recorded before he died: the k.d. lang remake of "Crying," the Danzig collab, "You Got It."

Fuck Johnny Cash -- he was the only artist who could have made one of those Rick Rubin album-length collabs work.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 11 January 2007 00:40 (nineteen years ago)

>>I forgot how much great stuff he recorded before he died<<

Yeah, I really enjoyed the fact that half the music business seemed to be behind him, determined to give him a hit.

A Radio Picture (Rrrickey), Thursday, 11 January 2007 06:59 (nineteen years ago)

i don't think i have ever listened to a roy orbison record. wait, that's not that interesting.

-- scott seward (skotro...), March 26th, 2006. (scott seward)

That is interesting though - just by sheer odds it seems impossible.

A-ron Hubbard (Hurting), Thursday, 11 January 2007 07:06 (nineteen years ago)

(old, but great)

He's part of the best anagram ever :

The Traveling Wilburys: Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne and Roy Orbison

An angry jew, the Beatle, blond boy, sorry prat in ELO, stiff guy, in short: very boring old men

StanM (StanM), Thursday, 11 January 2007 07:13 (nineteen years ago)

OK, that is the best ever.

The Vintner's Lipogram (OleM), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 11:17 (nineteen years ago)

Come on, Traveling Wilburys is one of the greatest late-eighties acts. If those guys didn't get together, people would be sitting on this board going "I bet coupling RoyO, Dylan, Harrison (okay, maybe you would've said Lennon) would've been awsome! But I guess we'll never know, sniff"

Funny how they never managed to make a decent song after Big Roy's passing though.

Brede Trollsås (FunkDirt), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:17 (nineteen years ago)

No way! Volume 3 has some great tunes.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 14:36 (nineteen years ago)

Totally nice guy, according to people who met him. Which is impressive considering what shitty luck the guy had.

Dan Heilman (The Deacon), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 15:23 (nineteen years ago)

one year passes...

YOU GOT IT

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 17 January 2008 02:43 (eighteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

Is there any better sounding echo than on Roy Orbison's early 60s hits? I'm not familiar with music terms so I don't know if you would exactly call it "echo", but what I'm talkin about is the sound of his voice specifically on "In Dreams" when he starts singing "I close my eyes and drift away...". God I love that song.

Belldog, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 02:34 (eighteen years ago)

reverb, I imagine

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:50 (eighteen years ago)

and yeah, it's pretty much the best reverb

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 03:51 (eighteen years ago)

He wore those big sunnies 'cause he was shy.

S-, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 04:11 (eighteen years ago)

seven months pass...

album recommendations?

Local Garda, Sunday, 14 September 2008 17:26 (seventeen years ago)

The original In Dreams if you mean non-compilations.

Scowly D (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 14 September 2008 17:31 (seventeen years ago)

The two-disc comp released a few years ago collects a lot of worthwhile one-off tracks from various eighties soundtracks ("Wild Hearts Run Out of Time," "Life Fades Away"), but the track list is frustratingly out of sequence.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 14 September 2008 17:36 (seventeen years ago)

There's a new 4xCD set called The Soul of Rock and Roll. It's out next month and it's very good.

deusner, Sunday, 14 September 2008 19:24 (seventeen years ago)

does Roy Orbison join Al Green as the artist with universal ILE acclaim?

I like him a lot more than I do like Al Green. Al Green is, well, OK, but not at all up there with peers such as Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye. Roy Orbison was one of the very few great pre-Beatles acts.

Geir Hongro, Sunday, 14 September 2008 23:25 (seventeen years ago)

As for original albums, I guess "Crying" may be the most essential. The title track in particular, but also contains "Running Scared" among others.

Generally, original albums by pre-Beatles acts are not really recommended though. They were typical singles acts and should be treated as such. Also the case with Orbison.

Geir Hongro, Sunday, 14 September 2008 23:27 (seventeen years ago)

Thanks for the education.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 14 September 2008 23:28 (seventeen years ago)

Had a look at the tracklisting for the box set - no "Southbound Jericho Parkway," no "definitive" I'm afraid.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 15 September 2008 09:10 (seventeen years ago)

He was a guest on Night Network one night in the late 80s, along with the Voice of the Beehive. They were reviewing new videos and a late Smiths or early solo Morrissey song came on and Roy Orbison said how sad the singer seemed and how he felt bad for him.
― N. (nickdastoor), Sunday, 9 November 2003

the pinefox, Monday, 15 September 2008 09:20 (seventeen years ago)

two months pass...

I picked up a really shabby looking Roy Orbison best of today for a dollar and I'm mighty glad that I did. I've always been envious of people who grew up with families who listened to radio all of the time, and have long been familiar with all the old staples. But then again, sometimes it's really cool to approach this stuff as an adult for the first time. Currently I'm going fucking wild about "Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)", the way the drums get louder and louder during the final minute.

Z S, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 04:42 (seventeen years ago)

He's really somethin' else. Runnin' Scared is my jam.

ian, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 05:25 (seventeen years ago)

I was flipping through channels on Thanksgiving during post-eating and some kind of all-star concert was shown on PBS.. It was filmed in B&W, and I remember hearing "It's Over" and "Pretty Woman.."

billstevejim, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 05:36 (seventeen years ago)

wow ZS, I'm not sure if I envy you or pity you.

Dream Baby, Crying, Dream Baby, Pretty Woman: these songs are the sdtk to my life.

hard to imagine what could've replaced them, but the thought of approaching with fresh ears is appetizing

xp

billstevejim, that special is the greatest dream like music thing i've ever seen. kinda lynchian

STILL GEETIKA IN 2009 (PappaWheelie V), Tuesday, 9 December 2008 05:37 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah I loved it.. I'm pretty sure most, if not all, of my family was into it, but there were people running in and out of the room a lot, so it's hard to tell.

billstevejim, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 05:39 (seventeen years ago)

Okay, I'm reading on wikipedia that he recorded a disco album called Laminar Flow in 1979. This sounds intriguing.

billstevejim, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 05:52 (seventeen years ago)

LIFE FADES AWAY

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 14 December 2008 19:48 (seventeen years ago)


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