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View Full Version : NASHVILLE SKYLINE: Roy Orbison Finally Gets His Fitting Musical Tribute


Refugee
09-26-2008, 01:54 AM
http://www.cmt.com/sitewide/assets/img/news/skyline.logo.280x210.jpg Nashville Skyline

(NASHVILLE SKYLINE is a column by CMT/CMT.com Editorial Director Chet Flippo.)

At last, there's a boxed set to match the considerable musical prowess and achievements of the late Roy Orbison (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/orbison_roy/artist.jhtml). Many misfires in the way of music anthologies have been attempted over the years, ever since the true American original that was Orbison died too soon of a heart attack in Nashville in 1988.

But the new Roy Orbison: The Soul of Rock and Roll, to be released Tuesday (Sept. 30), is a comprehensive four-CD set that displays considerable attention to detail. It was put together by his widow, Barbara Orbison, and their son, Roy Kelton Orbison Jr., and that's obviously why so much care went into this project.

And the attention shows throughout. For the first time, Orbison's entire musical career is presented on disc, from his hard-scrabble West Texas rock 'n' roll beginnings to his final glory days as international rock superstar in the 1980s. It spans his work from his first recording of "Ooby Dooby" with his Teen Kings in 1956 in Odessa, Texas, to his last live cut of "It's Over" on Dec. 4, 1988, just two days before his death. In addition to the 107 music cuts, of which a dozen have never been released, the box includes rare photos and remembrances and notes from a wide range of Orbison's contemporaries. One important essay is by his influential producer Fred Foster, who writes about the heady Monument Records days and delivers a frank account of how those days came to an end.

I'm not sure Orbison's importance and significance to the body of American popular music has yet been fully realized. His career and life intersected with a significant cross-section of key rock and country music figures, including Buddy Holly, Johnny Cash (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/cash_johnny/artist.jhtml), Elvis Presley (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/presley_elvis/artist.jhtml), Bob Dylan (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/dylan_bob/artist.jhtml), George Harrison, Tom Petty (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/petty_tom/artist.jhtml), Bruce Springsteen (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/springsteen_bruce/artist.jhtml) and others. He and Hank Williams were both managed by Acuff-Rose (when that music publishing firm still managed artists) and were both on the MGM record label. Both he and Cash were produced by Rick Rubin at the end of their careers (in Orbison's case, the song "Life Fades Away" from the movie Less Than Zero).

Orbison, like Cash, had his huge chart hits early in his career but achieved his most personally satisfying recordings late in life. Early on, Orbison, like Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/lewis_jerry_lee/artist.jhtml) and Carl Perkins and Charlie Rich (http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/rich_charlie/artist.jhtml) and many other rock luminaries, were graduates of Sam Phillips' Sun Records in Memphis. They were drawing the road map for rock 'n' roll and for rockabilly and for country rock because none of that had been done before.

Orbison's overall influence has yet to be fully determined, I think, because it can't be measured in dollars and cents or in chart figures or quantifiable in any other way on paper. Just in the lingering impact that his music has. His presence is never far away.

A big difference in Orbison's music, which differentiates it from so many others, is a great intangible factor. And that factor is a mystical one. Namely, it is the almost spiritual impact much of his music had and continues to have over audiences and artists alike. Tom Waits said Orbison's voice "sounds like the wind forming words ... being sent to you from across time. ... There is something so tender, so private about his voice, it confides feelings you keep mostly to yourself." Springsteen rightly said that Orbison sounds like "he'd dropped in from another planet, and yet [could] get the stuff that was right to the heart of what you were livin' in today." That's why a song like "Crying," for example, or "Only the Lonely" can't be adequately described and dissected on paper. Its impact is completely visceral and spiritual. It must be heard to be fully experienced. The impact is purely personal. Then, as the great Nashville DJ Eddie Stubbs says about monumental recordings, the final word is, "Are there any questions?" No, sir.

All of this came from a man with a very low-wattage public persona. Early on, he was mocked for his looks. The voice stilled critics then and always by its power. But in many ways, Roy Orbison was able to remain a private person, to the point that casual fans still wonder about his "lost years," when he seemingly disappeared between his "Oh Pretty Woman" golden era at Monument to his re-emergence with the Traveling Wilburys in the 1980s. Musically, this collection answers that question. Personally, he was, as much as he could possibly be, a father and husband to his family and still making records during those years. Especially when his career took a serious commercial dive after the Monument years, I have always sensed that he would have been supremely content staying at home, writing songs and crafting and flying model airplanes with his sons and adding to his huge collection of cars and just living the life he had built. Completely oblivious to stardom and fandom.

Perhaps not too surprisingly, I myself still occasionally run into a new Orbison fan who asks if Orbison was blind, because of his ever-present sunglasses. Blinded by the light, I guess.

View photos from Roy Orbison: The Soul of Rock and Roll. (http://www.cmt.com/pictures/roy-orbison-the-soul-of-rock-and-roll/1595006/3184516/photo.jhtml)

Echosoftom
09-26-2008, 02:50 AM
I'm not sure Orbison's importance and significance to the body of American popular music has yet been fully realized.
So true. Hopefully someday it will. I'm looking forward to picking this up on Tuesady. Such an amazing voice.

Yer so bad
09-26-2008, 04:17 AM
What a voice, oh my God! I love Roy!!!
Thanks for the article Ref!

Succatash
09-26-2008, 01:00 PM
I read Johnny Cash's autobiography "Cash" awhile back and enjoyed the stories he told about Roy who was a long-time friend from their Sun Record days. And in Traveling Wilbury accounts the guys always speak with such respect about Roy, I always liked that.

But Roy's voice, good heavens it was so clear and true and full of expression... 'Only the Lonely' and 'Cryin'' are true classics! That video concert where he's got Springsteen and Jackson Browne in his band and Bonnie Raitt & KD Lang as backup singers is one of my all-time favorites...

Beamish
09-26-2008, 08:54 PM
Add this to my Yule wish-list !

nurktwin
09-27-2008, 08:59 AM
i'll definitely be buying this set. as tom said in a wilbury interview, roy probably has the best voice of all time, and roy answered "yeah".....lol. i think in that same interview tom told about how george would experiment on recordings, george would have roy sing the song and on the next take, george would say, ok tom you try singing it!! tom said after roy sang and then it was his turn that "that was pretty damn intimidating"....lol. i have a 45 rpm single of roy on monument records, i would image it's rare, but i know just the place for it to be!!!! as far as roy becoming a wilbury, i guess we all have to thank jeff for that. jeff followed roy around for 3 years trying to produce an album for him and then it finally happened. jeff and roy were having dinner and george walked in to ask jeff if he would help him record a song for the "C" side of an ep for the german market the next day. jeff agreed and roy said he wasn't doing anything the next day and would like to join in. that night george went to toms house to pick up his guitar and told tom what was going on and tom said 'i was wondering what i was going to do tomorrow' lol. well, that was 4 of them. at such a late notice george couldn't get a studio to record in and remembered bob had 1 in his garage! he called bob and bob answered the phone on the first ring (a big surprise to george, cuz bob doesn't normally answer at all). they decided to get together at bobs house, when they did and all were sitting outside behind the garage, bob asked george what the song was? george had no idea, he didn't write a song yet, so he looked around and saw a box near the garage that said "handle with care" and he said the song was called handle with care. after that the lyrics flowed freely and fast from the 5 of them. when recording, george thought he's press his luck a bit and have everyone sing a portion of the song. that's when george nudged jeff and said "hey, remember the trembling wilburys (a name they came up with while recording 'cloud nine'), i think this is it! later they changed the name to the traveling wilburys. so none of the wilburys was planned, it just happened, so thank you jeff for idolizing roy and making your dream come true, without your love for roy, there might not have been any wilburys!! when tom was asked what he thought of roy, he said he loved him and asks for his autograph everyday....lol.

Ladywiz
09-27-2008, 11:46 AM
What a talent! What a VOICE!!!

nurktwin
09-27-2008, 12:27 PM
i know that barb orbison, olivia harrison with the help from tom, jeff and bob are working on something. i have no idea of what it is, maybe just reissued cd's, but i'm hoping it's the complete home video's that george recorded of the boys recording the 2 wilbury albums. guess we'll just have to wait and see.