More albums from Roy Orbison
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Oh, Pretty Woman (Live From Australia, 1972)
Roy Orbison
I Drove All Night
Roy Orbison
Only the Lonely (Black & White Night 30)
Roy Orbison
California Blue
Roy Orbison
You Got It
Roy Orbison
Oh, Pretty Woman (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, October 11, 1964)
Roy Orbison
Only the Lonely (Black & White Night Live)
Roy Orbison
Sweet Caroline (Live From Australia, 1972)
Roy Orbison
Bridge Over Troubled Water (Live From Australia, 1972)
Roy Orbison
Oh, Pretty Woman (Black & White Night Live) [Alternate Version]
Roy Orbison
About Roy Orbison
Artist Biography
Between his panoramic vocal delivery and operatic build-ups—not to mention those signature dark glasses—Roy Orbison still cuts a singular figure in the rock ‘n’ roll landscape. Born in Vernon, Texas in 1936, he devoted himself to playing and singing country music from a young age, forming rockabilly bands as a teen before ending up at Sun Records. From there, he migrated to Nashville, eventually finding his long-sought niche with 1960’s “Only the Lonely”, an aching reverie elevated by melodramatic strings, backing vocals and Orbison’s haunting licks of falsetto. “Running Scared” and “Crying” followed suit, offering a darker, more adult alternative to the quaint teen-idol ballads of the day. Quivering with feeling, his voice made delicate leaps close to the microphone while escalating to resounding emotional payoffs. That romantic intensity earned Orbison his biggest hit with 1964’s “Oh, Pretty Woman”, which balances its instantly familiar hook and snappy drumbeat with more idiosyncratic touches like his coy aside of “mercy” and the parting swath of ominous vocal echo. The previous year’s “In Dreams” revelled in similarly unusual choices, eschewing pop’s favoured verse/chorus structure entirely. Orbison’s commercial appeal slipped in the late ’60s and ’70s, before covers of his songs (or songs he popularized) by Nazareth, Linda Ronstadt, Don McLean and even Van Halen recast him as eternally cool, while his outsized passion made him a pop-culture touchstone in Blue Velvet and continues to inspire persona-driven retro fetishists like Lana Del Rey and Orville Peck. By the late ’80s he was collaborating with Glenn Danzig and k.d. lang, and founding the Traveling Wilburys with Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne. Sadly, he died in late 1988 of a heart attack at age 52, though his posthumous album Mystery Girl—and its ubiquitous anthem “You Got It”—gave him the proper comeback he’d earned.
Hometown
Vernon, TX, United States
Genre
Rock
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