The Orbison WayRoy Orbison
Release Date: 09/22/2008
Original Release:
1966
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1060605_CD
UPC # 886973453520
Label: Orbison Records
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Disc: 1
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Performer: Roy Orbison
Producer: Jim Vienneau; Wesley Rose Distributor: Sony BMG Music (Canada) ( Notes: Personnel: Roy Orbison (vocals, guitar). Recording information: 10/1965-11/1965. On his second MGM album, Roy Orbison works alternately in an orchestral and a band setting (the latter with his new backing group the Candy Men), and offers two distinctly new wrinkles on his sound throughout this album, while guitarists Billy Sanford and John Rainey Adkins reveal themselves as powerful yet amazingly articulate players. The band-backed stuff has a lean texture that's a marvel of sonic conciseness, while the orchestra-accompanied sides allow Orbison to open up vocally as never before, casting him in an almost operatic setting, in terms of emotional pitch, though the material itself is pure pop/rock with some elements of country-pop. "The Loner" (co-authored by Adkins), "Maybe," "Breakin' Up Is Breakin' My Heart," "Time Changes Everything" and much of the rest here could have passed muster on any of Orbison's Monument albums, though some of the other songwriting and some of the stylistic choices are debatable. The other problem is its timing -- Orbison's second album for MGM, The Orbison Way was recorded in October and November of 1965, and issued in January of the following year -- had he released an album such as this in 1963, or even 1964, it might have achieved more respect than it did (and it still managed to chart decently, especially in England, where it was issued by London Records), but by early 1966, the bar for pop music was being raised so high by the likes of the Beatles and the Byrds that it was impossible -- especially without a compelling hit single -- to compete with a sound as basic as this on the same footing. ~ Bruce Eder
Roy Orbison, a seminal rock & roll singer who initially recorded for the legendary Sun Records, created some of the most enduring hits of the 1950s and '60s. His near-operatic voice and dark, broken-hearted songs influenced a generation of artists. His songs and arrangements, almost symphonic in scope, set the template for pop sophistication in the early-to-mid-'60s. After a late-'80s comeback that included collaborations with Bono and Elvis Costello and a stint with the rock super-group the Travelling Wilburys, Orbison died of a heart attack in 1988.
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Beatles (The) Berry, Chuck Buckley, Jeff Burgess, Sonny (Sun Rockabilly) Campbell, Glen Cash, Johnny Cochran, Eddie Costello, Elvis Eddy, Duane Everly Brothers (The) Felts, Narvel Harris, Emmylou Holly, Buddy Isaak, Chris Knox, Buddy Lee, Brenda Mavericks (The) Nilsson, Harry Perkins, Carl (Rock) Petty, Tom Pitney, Gene Presley, Elvis Rainwater, Marvin Rich, Charlie Rivers, Johnny (Pop) Robbins, Marty Ronstadt, Linda Scott, Jack Shannon, Del Souther, J. D. Spector, Phil Springsteen, Bruce Tillotson, Johnny Twitty, Conway U2 Valens, Ritchie Vincent, Gene Waits, Tom Wilson, Jackie
Influences:
Acuff, Roy Copas, Cowboy Frizzell, Lefty Horton, Johnny Presley, Elvis Turner, Big Joe Williams, Hank Wills, Bob
Similar Genres:
Rock 'N' Roll |