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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 02:10 pm
Dylan claimed he was thinking about throwing in the towel when he wrote Restless Farewell. I never believed for an instant he truly wanted to quit.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 02:21 pm
edgar, you may not remember twyvel who used to do a lot of philosophizing, but his motto was: Don't look back.

So, for our missing Moss Man.

THEM Don't Look Back Lyrics

Don't look back
To the days of yester-year
You cannot live on in the past
Don't look back

An' I've known so many people
They're still tryin' to live on in the past
Don't look back, whoa no-oh

If I could call back
All those days of yester-year
I would never grow old
And I'd never be poor
But darlin', those days are gone
Oh yeah

Stop dreaming
And live on in the future
But darlin', a-don't look back
Whoa, no-no
Don't look back
FADES-
Whoa-whoa
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 02:23 pm
Decided to have my hair cut today. Here is a photo of it.

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/183/468850463_6f067de2a4.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 02:51 pm
Very fetching, edgar. I could have played a barbershop quartet for you, Texas, or Frank Zappa's "Cut the Grass", but decided on this one by the Monkees.

Pleasant Valley Sunday

The local rock group down the street
Is trying hard to learn their song
Seranade the weekend squire, who just came out to mow his lawn

Another Pleasant Valley Sunday
Charcoal burning everywhere
Rows of houses that are all the same
And no one seems to care

See Mrs. Gray she's proud today because her roses are in bloom
Mr. Green he's so serene, He's got a t.v. in every room

Another Pleasant Valley Sunday
Here in status symbol land
Mothers complain about how hard life is
And the kids just don't understand

Creature comfort goals
They only numb my soul and make it hard for me to see
My thoughts all seem to stray, to places far away
I need a change of scenery

Ta Ta Ta...

Another Pleasant Valley Sunday
Charcoal burning everywhere
Another Pleasant Valley Sunday
Here in status symbol land

Another Pleasant Valley Sunday...
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 05:37 pm
Buddy Holly did this cover of a Little Richard song.

Buddy Holly
Slippin' and Slidin'

Slippin' & a-slidin' - peepin' and a-hidin'
been told a long time ago
slippin' & a-slidin' - peepin' and a-hidin'
been told a long time ago
I've been told baby you've been bold
I won't be you're fool no more

Oh my Linda, she's a solid sender
know you better surrender
oh my Linda, she's a solid sender
know you better surrender
slippin' & a-slidin' - peepin' & a-hidin'
I won't be you're fool no more

Oh big conniver - nothin' but a child
I done got hip to your jive
oh big conniver - nothin' but a child
I done got hip to your jive
slippin' & a-slidin' - peepin' & a-hidin'
I won't be you're fool no more
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 05:48 pm
Ain't nuttin new under the sun, is there, Texas. I do like slippin and slidin, though.

I was thinking sonnets today, folks, and decided to remember Rupert Brooke.

A Memory (From A Sonnet- Sequence)

Somewhile before the dawn I rose, and stept
Softly along the dim way to your room,
And found you sleeping in the quiet gloom,
And holiness about you as you slept.
I knelt there; till your waking fingers crept
About my head, and held it. I had rest
Unhoped this side of Heaven, beneath your breast.
I knelt a long time, still; nor even wept.

It was great wrong you did me; and for gain
Of that poor moment's kindliness, and ease,
And sleepy mother-comfort!
Child, you know
How easily love leaps out to dreams like these,
Who has seen them true. And love that's wakened so
Takes all too long to lay asleep again.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 06:10 pm
Short People got no reason
Short People got no reason
Short People got no reason
To live

They got little hands
And little eyes
And they walk around
Tellin' great big lies
They got little noses
And tiny little teeth
They wear platform shoes
On their nasty little feet

Well, I don't want no Short People
Don't want no Short People
Don't want no Short People
Round here

Short People are just the same
As you and I
(A Fool Such As I)
All men are brothers
Until the day they die
(It's A Wonderful World)

Short People got nobody
Short People got nobody
Short People got nobody
To love

They got little baby legs
And they stand so low
You got to pick 'em up
Just to say hello
They got little cars
That got beep, beep, beep
They got little voices
Goin' peep, peep, peep
They got grubby little fingers
And dirty little minds
They're gonna get you every time
Well, I don't want no Short People
Don't want no Short People
Don't want no Short People
'Round here
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 06:20 pm
Well, dj. Height is not important in considering a person's worth, right?

Funny song, however, as is this one:

SKINNY MINNIE
Bill Haley & His Comets

My skinny Minnie is a crazy chick,
Six foot high and one foot thick
Do I love her
Does a boy love pie
She is the apple of my eye,
Skinny Minnie
She ain't skinny, she's tall, that's all

Tho' her shadow doesn't take much ground
What there is sure gets around
What there ain't that's what she be
'N' even that's too much for me
Skinny Minnie
She ain't skinny, she's tall, that's all

Slightly slimmer than a fishing pole
One half rock and one half roll
Dig that chick from either side
Man, you'll yell "Where did she hide"
Skinny Minnie
She ain't skinny, she's tall, that's all
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 07:19 pm
Skinnie Minnie
Teresa Brewer


[CHORUS]
Skinnie minnie, skinny minnie fishtail
Catch-a me tonight
Skinnie minnie, skinny minnie fishtail
Squeeze-a me tonight
Hey - skinnie minnie, skinny minnie fishtail
Come an' catch-a me
I'll knock knock knock upon the rock until you catch-a me
Big Manuel is a fisherman
He fish fish fish all-a time he can
He fish all night an' he fish all day
I think he's gonna fish his life away
One night so bright in his boat I hide
He row the boat on the ocean wide
An' then he stop at a great big rock
He sing this song an' he knock knock knock, hey

[CHORUS]

He knock knock knock on the rock like this
The mermaid fish, she come up to swish
She swish and sway for the fisherman
She like to catch him an' she know she can
The mermaid fish, she is oh so nice
She swish her tail an' roll her eyes
Manuel fish night an' day
He fish for skinnie minnie swish an' sway, hey

[CHORUS]

Tonight we buy all the fish we can
Tonight we fish like a fisherman
Tonight we row to the great big rock
We sing this song, an' then we knock knock knock...

[CHORUS]

Catch-a me, catch-a me, you catch-a me
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 07:25 pm
Goodnight, my friends, and goodbye to my friend Phil who died tonight.

School Boy Heart

By: Jimmy Buffett & Matt Betton
1996

I got a school boy heart, a novelist eye
Stout sailor's legs and a license to fly
I came with nomad feet and some wandering toes
That walk up my longboard and hang off the nose

I suppose
The need to focus never arose
So something like a swiss army knife
That's my life
Frankenstein had nothing on this body of mine
The villagers still flockin' to see, to see me
Breaking free, breaking free

Cause I got a school boy heart, a novelist eye
Stout sailor's legs and a license to fly
I got a bartender's ear and beachcomber's style
Piratical nerve and a Vaudevillian style

I suspect I died in some cosmic shipwreck
With all hands spread all over the deck
What the heck
Then some kind of obscene and unscrupulous mind
Began to pick up what he could find
Added ice, shook me twice, rolled the dice

From Letty with love
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 07:32 pm
Condolences, letty.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 09:06 pm
As the mist leaves no scar
On the dark green hill
So my body leaves no scar
On you and never will

Through windows in the dark
The children come, the children go
Like arrows with no target
Like shackles made of snow

Chorus
True love leaves no traces
If you and I are one
Its lost in our embraces
Like stars agains the sun

As a falling leaf may rest
A moment on the air
So your head upon my breast
So my hand upon your hair

And many nights endure
Without a moon or star
So will we endure
When one is gone and far

Chorus

True Love Leaves No Traces
Leonard Cohen
0 Replies
 
Eva
 
  1  
Reply Sun 22 Apr, 2007 10:35 pm
I'm sorry to hear you've lost a friend, Letty.
If I were there, I'd give you a big hug.
0 Replies
 
Dutchy
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 12:02 am
My sincere condolences to you Letty. A hug from me also dear friend.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 05:23 am
Good morning, all. Phil was a special person but he had been ill with a rare type bone cancer for some time. Thanks, Eva and Dutchy.

edgar, that was one special song by Cohen. "True love leaves no traces" is especially poignant.

How about one by the cat man.

Cat Stevens - Morning Has Broken Lyrics

Morning has broken, like the first morning
Blackbird has spoken, like the first bird
Praise for the singing, praise for the morning
Praise for the springing fresh from the world

Sweet the rain's new fall, sunlit from heaven
Like the first dewfall, on the first grass
Praise for the sweetness of the wet garden
Sprung in completeness where his feet pass

Mine is the sunlight, mine is the morning
Born of the one light, eden saw play
Praise with elation, praise every morning
God's recreation of the new day

Beautiful chord changes on that one.
0 Replies
 
TTH
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 07:08 am
Letty, I am sorry you lost your friend.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 07:28 am
TTH, Thank you, honey. As Diana Krall observes, "...a thousand goodbyes..."

and this describes the "goodbye" between Phil and his wife perfectly.

When I look in your eyes, I see the wisdom of the world in your eyes
I see the sadness of a thousand goodbyes
When I look in your eyes

And it is no surprise, to see the softness of the moon in your eyes
The gentle sparkle of the stars in your eyes
When I look in your eyes

In your eyes, I see the deepness of the sea
I see the deepness of the love
The love I feel you feel for me

Autumn comes, summer dies
I see the passing of the years in your eyes
And when we part there will be no tears no goodbyes
I'll just look into your eyes

Those eyes, so wise
So warm, so real
How I love the world, your eyes reveal
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 08:22 am
I'm sorry for the loss of your friend, Letty.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 08:38 am
Shirley Temple
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Birth name Shirley Jane Temple
Born April 23, 1928 (1928-04-23) (age 79)
Santa Monica, California
Other name(s) Shirley Temple Black
Spouse(s) John Agar (1945-1950)
Charles Black (1950-2005)
Official site http://www.shirleytemple.com
Academy Awards

Academy Juvenile Award (1935)

Shirley Jane Temple (born April 23, 1928) later known as Shirley Temple Black, is an Academy Award-winning former child actress. She starred in over 40 films during the 1930s. She is now a diplomat.




Career

Temple began dance classes at Meglin's Dance School in Hollywood in 1931, at the age of 3. Her film career began when a casting director from Educational Pictures visited her class. Although Temple hid behind the piano in the studio, she was chosen by the director, invited to audition, and, eventually, signed to a contract with Educational.

Temple worked at Educational from 1932 to 1933, and appeared in two series of short subjects for the studio. Her first series, Baby Burlesks, satirized recent motion pictures and politics. The series was considered controversial by some viewers because of its depiction of young children in adult situations. Her second series at Educational, Frolics of Youth, was a bit more acceptable, and cast her as a bratty younger sister in a contemporary suburban family.

While working for Educational Pictures, Temple also performed many walk-on and bit player roles in various films at other studios. She is said to have auditioned for a lead role in Hal Roach's Our Gang comedies (later known as The Little Rascals) in the early 1930s; various reasons are given for her not having been cast in the role. Roach stated that Temple and her mother were unable to make it through the red tape of the audition process, while Our Gang producer/director Robert F. McGowan recalls that the studio wanted to cast Temple, but they refused to give in to Temple's mother's demands that Temple receive special star billing. Temple, in her autobiography Child Star, denies that she ever auditioned for Our Gang at all.[1] However, Temple had some connection with Our Gang in that Temple's carpool friend, David Holt, had a small role in the 1933 Little Rascals film Forgotten Babies.

Temple was finally signed to Fox Film Corporation (which later merged with 20th Century Pictures to become 20th Century Fox) in late 1933 after appearing in Stand Up and Cheer! with James Dunn. Later, she was paired with Dunn in several films.

Temple would stay with Fox until 1940, becoming the studio's most lucrative player. Her contract was amended several times between 1933 and 1935, and she was loaned to Paramount for a pair of successful films in 1934. For four solid years, she ranked as the top-grossing box office star in America. To hold on to her babyhood, Shirley's birth certificate had been altered, and her birth year advanced from 1928 to 1929. She was not told her real age until her twelfth (actually thirteenth) birthday. [2]

Her popularity earned her both public adulation and the approval of her peers. Even at the age of five, the hallmark of her acting work was her professionalism: she always had her lines memorized and dance steps prepared when shooting began.

Temple also made pictures with Carole Lombard, Gary Cooper, Adolphe Menjou, and many others. Arthur Treacher appeared as a kindly butler in several of Temple's films.

Temple's ability as a dancer (especially a tap dancer) is well known and celebrated. Even in her earliest films she danced, and she was able to handle complex tap choreography by the age of five. She was teamed with famed dancer Bill "Bojangles" Robinson in The Little Colonel, The Littlest Rebel, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and Just Around the Corner. Robinson also coached and developed her choreography for many of her other films. Because Robinson was African-American, his scenes holding hands with Temple had to be edited out in many cities in the South.

Aside from the films, there were many Shirley Temple product tie-ins during the 1930s. Ideal's numerous Temple dolls, dressed in costumes from the movies, were top sellers. Original Shirley Temple dolls bring in hundreds of dollars on the secondary market today. Other successful Temple items included a line of girls' dresses and hairbows. Several of Temple's film songs, including "On the Good Ship Lollipop"(from 1934's Bright Eyes), "Animal Crackers in My Soup" (from 1935's Curly Top) and "Goodnight My Love" (from 1936's Stowaway) were popular radio hits. She frequently lent her likeness and talent to promoting various social causes, including the Red Cross.

Temple was the first recipient of the special Juvenile Performer Academy Award in 1935 for recognition of her outstanding contribution to screen entertainment in 1934. Seventy years later, Temple is still the youngest performer ever to receive this honor, or any Oscar. She is also the youngest actress to add foot and hand prints to the forecourt at Grauman's Chinese Theatre.

The role of Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz was originally meant for Judy Garland. However, MGM executives were concerned with Garland's box office appeal. Temple was considered for the role, however, she was unable to appear in the film when a trade between Fox and MGM fell through. She was also rumored to be the inspiration for Bonnie Blue Butler in Gone with the Wind and was one of the early contenders for the role in the motion picture, but was too old by the time the film went into production.

In 1940, Temple left Fox. She juggled classes at Westlake School for Girls with films for various other studios, including MGM and Paramount. Her most successful pictures of the time included Since You Went Away with Claudette Colbert, The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer with Cary Grant, and Fort Apache with John Wayne. She retired from motion pictures in 1949.

In the 1950s and 1960s, she made a brief return to show business with two television series. Shirley Temple's Storybook premiered on NBC on January 12, 1958 and last aired December 1, 1959. Shirley Temple Theatre -- also known as The Shirley Temple Show -- premiered on NBC on September 11, 1960 and last aired September 10, 1961. Both shows featured adaptations of fairy tales and other family oriented stories. Shirley Temple was the hostess and occasional narrator/actress in both series.


Personal life

At the age of 17, Temple was married to soldier-turned-actor John Agar (1921-2002) on September 19, 1945. They had one daughter, Linda Susan Agar (later known as Susan Black) born on January 30, 1948. Temple filed for divorce in late 1949 with the divorce becoming final on December 5, 1950. In early 1950, while vacationing in Hawaii, Shirley met and fell in love with California businessman Charles Alden Black (1919-2005) and they were married on December 16, 1950. Together, they had two children: Charles Alden Black Jr. born April 29, 1952 and Lori Black born on April 9, 1954. They remained married until his death from a bone marrow disease, myelodysplastic syndrome at age 86 on August 4, 2005.


Political and diplomatic career

Shirley Temple Black became involved in Republican Party politics, unsuccessfully entering a Congressional race in 1967 on a platform that supported the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War. She went on to hold several diplomatic posts, serving as the U.S. delegate to many international conferences and summits. She was appointed a delegate to the United Nations by President Richard M. Nixon in 1969. She was appointed United States Ambassador to Ghana (1974-76). In 1976, she became the first female Chief of Protocol of the United States which put in her charge of all State Department ceremonies, visits, gifts to foreign leaders and co-ordination of protocol issues with all U.S. embassies and consulates. She was United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia (1989-92) and witnessed the Velvet Revolution. She commented, about her Ambassadorship, "That was the best job I ever had." In 1987 she was designated the first Honorary Foreign Service Officer in U.S. history by then U.S. Secretary of State, George Schultz.

Black appeared on the cover of People magazine in 1999 with the title "Picture Perfect" and again later that year as part of their special report, "Surviving Breast Cancer". She appeared at the 70th Academy Awards and also in that same year received Kennedy Center Honors.

Black served on the board of directors of some large enterprises including The Walt Disney Company (1974-75), Del Monte, Bancal Tri-State, and Fireman's Fund Insurance. Her non-profit board appointments included the Institute for International Studies at Stanford University, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Council of American Ambassadors, the World Affairs Council, the United States Commission for UNESCO, the National Committee on US-China Relations, the United Nations Association, and the US Citizen's Space TaskForce.

She received honorary doctorates from Santa Clara University and Lehigh University, a Fellowship from College of Notre Dame, and a Chubb Fellowship from Yale University. Black now lives in Woodside, California.


Recent activity

In 2001, she served as a consultant on the ABC Television Network production of Child Star: The Shirley Temple Story, based on part one of her autobiography.

In 2004, she teamed with Legend Films to restore, colorize and release her earliest black and white films, as well as episodes of her 1960 television series, The Shirley Temple Storybook Collection.

Screen Actors Guild (SAG) announced on September 12, 2005, that she was to receive the Guild's most prestigious honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award. SAG President Melissa Gilbert said:

I can think of no one more deserving of this year's SAG Life Achievement award than Shirley Temple Black. Her contributions to the entertainment industry are without precedent; her contributions to the world are nothing short of inspirational. She has lived the most remarkable life, as the brilliant performer the world came to know when she was just a child, to the dedicated public servant who has served her country both at home and abroad for 30 years. In everything she has done and accomplished, Shirley Temple Black has demonstrated uncommon grace, talent and determination, not to mention compassion and courage. As a child, I was thrilled to dance and sing to her films and more recently as Guild president I have been proud to work alongside her, as her friend and colleague, in service to our union. She has been an indelible influence on my life. She was my idol when I was a girl and remains my idol today."[3]

Trivia



Shirley Temple Black's candidacy for public office was said to have been harmed by a skit that Johnny Carson performed on The Tonight Show. He wore a Shirley Temple-style wig and a short dress with many petticoats, and sang a parody song called, "On the Good Ship U.S.A."
Her hair style in many films is now famously known as the Shirley Temple Curls.
Shirley Temple's family was very close-knit. Her mother organized her schedule very tightly. She was given a half an hour for playtime at night while she was in production on a film. Also, in order to keep her sheltered from excessive amounts of attention, no one on set was allowed to praise her for her good work, only her mother.
Temple was paid an unprecedented amount of money for her work on Poor Little Rich Girl, shot during the Depression Era: $15,000 per/week.

References in popular culture

Shirley was also mentioned in Weird Al Yankovic's song Confessions Part III, in which the singer/comedian states that "...in private, I really like to dress up as Shirley Temple and spank myself with a hockey stick...".
She was also mentioned in a "Negrodamus" sketch on the Comedy Central series Chappelle's Show. Comedian Paul Mooney in a sketch where he played a psychic, upon being asked about the future of Arnold Schwartzenegger's marriage to Maria Shriver, answered that Schwartzenegger would divorce Maria Shriver and marry Shirley, and she would be known as "Shirley Temple Blacknegger"- a joke relying on the fact that "schwartz" is German for "black", and the "negger" part of the name sounding like a common derogatory slang for blacks.
Carol Burnett occasionally performed an impression of "On the Good Ship Lollipop", exaggerating the concentration in Temple's face to look angry or scowling.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Apr, 2007 08:51 am
Roy Orbison
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Born April 23, 1936
Vernon, Texas, USA
Died December 6, 1988 (aged 52)
Hendersonville, Tennessee, USA

Roy Kelton Orbison (April 23, 1936 - December 6, 1988), nicknamed "The Big O," was an influential American singer-songwriter and a pioneer of rock and roll whose recording career spanned more than four decades. By the mid-1960s Orbison was internationally recognized for his ballads of lost love, rhythmically advanced melodies, characteristic dark sunglasses, and his taut, powerful alto voice coupled with his occasional distinctive usage of falsetto, typified in songs such as " Ooby Dooby," "Only The Lonely," "In Dreams," "Oh, Pretty Woman," "Crying," "Running Scared," and "You Got It." In 1987 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and posthumously in 1989 into the National Academy of Popular Music/Songwriters Hall of Fame.

Two misconceptions about Orbison's appearance continue to surface: that he was an albino, and that he wore his trademark dark glasses because he was blind or nearly so. Neither is correct, though his poor vision required him to wear thick corrective lenses. From childhood he suffered from a combination of hyperopia, severe astigmatism, anisometropia, and strabismus.[citation needed] Orbison's trademark sunglasses were a fashion statement arising from an incident early in his career. Orbison had left his regular glasses in an airplane. Due to go on stage in a few minutes and unable to see without corrective lenses, his only other pair of glasses were dark prescription sunglasses and he "had to see to get on stage." He wore the sunglasses throughout his tour of England with the Beatles in 1963 and continued the practice for the remainder of his professional career. "I'll just do this and look cool." However, Orbison once said in an interview that he wore sunglasses on the plane because the sun was bright and forgot he was wearing them on stage. Shortly after he finished performing, he looked in the mirror and noticed he had not taken them off, so he laughed about it and continued to wear them for the rest of his career.[citation needed]




Biography

Early life and career

Orbison was born in Vernon, the seat of Wilbarger County in north Texas. He was the second son of Nadine and Orbie Lee. After having first moved to Fort Worth about 1943 to find work in the munitions and aircraft factories which had expanded during Second World War, the family moved to the West Texas oil town of Wink in Winkler County near the border of New Mexico, in late 1946. Music was an important part of his family life.

At the age of thirteen in 1949, Orbison organized his first band, "The Wink Westerners". When not singing with the band he played guitar and wrote 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 Odessa, the seat of Ector County, 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 guest on their show was Johnny Cash, who advised them to seek a contract with his record producer, Sam Phillips, of Sun Records. At first Phillips turned them down ("Johnny Cash doesn't run my record company!"), but he agreed to add them to Sun Records' roster after hearing a recording made at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico. The Wink Westerners were renamed "The Teen Kings", and Orbison left college in March of 1956, determined to have a career in music. He ultimately headed for Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee.

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", written by Orbison's friends from college. Named after his first wife, his song "Claudette" was recorded by the Everly Brothers as the B-side to their Number 1 hit "All I Have To Do Is Dream." The rockabilly and blues sound of Sun's artists brought Orbison little success and his career seemed over, although fans of rockabilly count his records among the best of this genre. He worked at Acuff-Rose Music in Nashville, Tennessee as a songwriter, and then was given a contract by RCA. Eventually Chet Atkins referred him to Fred Foster, the owner of Monument Records, where he moved after his contract with RCA ended in 1959.


Breakthrough

In 1957 Orbison met songwriter Joe Melson in Odessa. After hearing a song Melson had written entitled "Raindrops," which featured melodic twists and lyrical styling, Roy soon asked him to write with him. Together they created a sound unheard of in rock and roll at the time: the dramatic rock ballad. They created many hits for Monument Records. Fred Foster liked the new direction and assisted with the writing team's vision. Roy's 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 single, "Running Scared" became a US #1. Later, Roy wrote many songs with writer Bill Dees including "Oh, Pretty Woman" which may be the most well-known song of Roy's career. 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 and identifiable sound.

Orbison was a powerful influence on contemporaries such as The Rolling Stones. In 1963 he headlined a European tour with The Beatles. He became lifelong friends with the band, especially John Lennon and George Harrison. Orbison would later record with Harrison in the Traveling Wilburys. During their tour of Europe, Orbison encouraged the Beatles to come to the United States. When they toured America, they asked Orbison to manage their tour, but his schedule forced him to decline.

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 eventually sold over 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 Rolling Stones in Australia in 1965. He was successful in England, logging three No.1 hit singles and was several times voted top male vocalist of the year.

Orbison signed a contract with MGM Records in 1965, and starred in MGM Studios' western-musical motion picture The Fastest Guitar Alive in which he performed several songs from an album of the same name. Due to changes in musical taste he had no hits in the U.S. after 1967. He remained popular elsewhere, but his American popularity did not recover until the 1980s.

He had problems in his personal life, with the death of his first wife Claudette (Frady) (b. September 7, 1941) in a motorcycle accident on June 6, 1966 in Gallatin, TN. On September 14, 1968 the family home at Old Hickory Lake in Hendersonville, Tennessee, burned to the ground while Orbison was touring in England. Two of his three sons, Roy Jr. (b. 1958) and Anthony (b. June 29, 1962), died in the fire. His youngest son Wesley (b. May 23, 1965), three at the time, was saved by Orbison's parents.

Orbison met his second wife Barbara in August 1968 in Leeds, England. They were married in Nashville on May 25, 1969, and built new house one block away from where Roy's old house once stood.

Songs that had limited 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. 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 in Northern Ireland. 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.

His contract with MGM ended in 1973 and he signed with Mercury Records. He re-signed with Monument in 1976, but his career languished until the late 1980s.


Resurgence in the 1980s

In 1980 Orbison teamed 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 Nicolas Roeg film Insignificance, released on the ZTT Records label, produced by David Briggs and Will Jennings. The inclusion of "In Dreams" in the 1986 David Lynch film Blue Velvet also aided Orbison's return to popularity. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, with the induction speech made by Bruce Springsteen (who had famously referenced Orbison and "Only the Lonely" in his 1975 song "Thunder Road"). 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 HBO 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 were fans and all were volunteers who lobbied to participate. On piano was Glen Hardin, who played for Buddy Holly as well as Elvis Presley for several years. Lead guitarist James Burton had also played with Presley and Ricky Nelson. 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. Jennifer Warnes, k.d. lang and Bonnie Raitt provided female background vocals.

Shortly after this critically acclaimed performance, while 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 Tom Petty's Heartbreakers) and Jeff Lynne. It included one track by U2's Bono (who also wears trademark dark glasses and co-wrote the song "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 suburb of Hendersonville, Tennessee. [1] At the direction of his wife Barbara, Orbison was interred at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California on December 15, 1988. 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.

His new album, Mystery Girl, and the single from it, "You Got It," were posthumous hits, and are generally regarded as Orbison's best work since the 1960s. He was the posthumous winner of the 1991 Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance and in 1992 the popular "I Drove All Night" and "Heartbreak Radio" appeared on the posthumous album, King of Hearts, produced by Jeff Lynne.


Legacy

Orbison is best remembered for his ballads of lost love, and in the music community he is revered for his song writing ability. Record producer and Orbison fan Don Was, commenting on Orbison's writing skills, said: "He defied the rules of modern composition". Writer of many lyrics for Elton John, Bernie Taupin and others referred to Orbison as "far ahead of the times, creating lyrics and music in a manner that broke with all traditions". Roy Orbison's vocal range was impressive (three octaves), and his songs were melodically and rhythmically advanced and lyrically sophisticated, often incorporating the bolero form. Three songs written and recorded by Orbison, "Only The Lonely", "Oh, Pretty Woman" and "Crying" are in the Grammy Hall of Fame. In 2004, Rolling Stone named those three songs plus "In Dreams" on its list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time". In 1989 he was inducted posthumously into the National Academy of Popular Music/Songwriters Hall of Fame.

From the stage in Las Vegas in 1976, Elvis Presley called Orbison "the greatest singer in the world" [2], 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 band mate 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".

The seminal punk band The Ramones adapted some of his ballad style, as well as his style of dress.

In 1998, Orbison was honored with the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2004, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked him #37 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[3]

In 2006, Roy was remembered with a new book that fans from around the world came together and wrote with main author Chris O'Neil. The book titled Straight From Our Hearts was a hit among fans on both sides of the Atlantic and even Barbara Orbison has asked for a copy to keep at the Orbison office located in Nashville. The book was a series of stories from fans describing how Roy impacted their lives and many tributes were also contained in the book. On December 7th, it was announced that a second volume of the book would be published. It is set to be released in 2008, which will mark the 20th anniversary of Roy's passing. In addition to the book, The Essential Roy Orbison CD collection was released to huge fan praise; it contained many rare songs including "Life Fades Away", which was previously only available on the long-out-of-print soundtrack to Less Than Zero. The collection charted into the top ten in seven countries and has opened the door to upcoming releases of unheard Orbison material that fans have been longing for.

In addition to Roy's many commercial releases, there have been many bootlegged releases that have surfaced over the years. One of the most popular Orbison bootlegs is the 1981 recording of his Country Club concert, which was originally slated to be released as a made-for-TV comeback concert. The concert footage has never been officially released, but it is considered by fans to be one of the best Orbison bootlegs available.

It was also announced on March 20 2007, that the entire Traveling Wilburys sessions along with the DVD/CD set will finally be released on Rhino Records. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003560481 See link for full story.

On April 23, 2007..for one day only on Roy's 71st birthday, his official MySpace page will play an unreleased song.


Trivia

In "Oh, Pretty Woman", he says 'mercy'. Despite his wide vocal range, he had trouble reaching the required note and said 'mercy' to express his difficulty.


Toured with both Elvis Presley and the The Beatles early in their careers.
According to the Rockabilly Hall of Fame [1], at a press conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, Sam Orbison said that his brother Roy Orbison was always "saddened by the sordid treatment of Elvis Presley in the aftermath of his death in 1977."
The song Please Please Me by The Beatles was inspired by Only the Lonely as Paul and John explained it in the Anthology series.
Was good friends with k.d. Lang. Lang lent her vocals in a remake of the 1961 classic, "Crying".
The well-known Spider-Man villain Doctor Octopus is supposedly based on Orbison, especially his thick glasses and multiple vision disorders.
He was well known in the smaller world of radio controlled model aircraft as a champion modeler and flier.
His song "In Dreams" was used extensively in the David Lynch film Blue Velvet, and Lynch would later feature a bravura Spanish unaccompanied solo version of "Crying" ("Llorando") by Rebekah del Rio in his film, Mulholland Drive.
His early Sun side "Domino" was used repeatedly in Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train.
Orbison was portrayed by Johnathan Rice in the Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line.
The character Roy Koopa from Super Mario Bros. 3 was named after Roy Orbison.
In the Adam Sandler film The Waterboy, Coach Klein (Henry Winkler) has a tattoo of Orbison on his rear end.
Van Halen covered "Oh, Pretty Woman" on their Diver Down album.
Orbison performed "Oh, Pretty Woman" in the Season 3 Dukes of Hazzard episode "The Great Hazzard Hijack."
"Ooby Dooby" is featured as the favorite song of Zefram Cochrane in Star Trek: First Contact.
His posthumously-released music video for "I Drove All Night" featured Jennifer Connelly and Jason Priestley.
He owned one of the two or three interchangeable pickup guitars built by John Birch and John Diggins. One of them was featured in the John Birch catalog, the other was made for Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath. The Orbison guitar is now in possession of Greg Dorsett of Rock Stars' Guitars.
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