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Álbums chronology

Lonely and Blue
Lonely and Blue
0/1/1961

Lonely and Blue

Roy Orbison

1961 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: Enero 1961 · Fecha Grabación: 18 Septiembre 1959 - 17
    Discográfica: Monument · Estudio de grabación: RCA Studio B, Nashville · Productor: Fred Foster
    1
    Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel)
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:26
  • 2
    Bye-Bye Love
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:13
  • 3
    Cry
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:42
  • 4
    Blue Avenue
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:19
  • 5
    I Can’t Stop Loving You
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:43
  • 6
    Come Back to Me
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:27
  • 7
    Blue Angel
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:51
  • 8
    Raindrops
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    1:53
  • 9
    (I’d Be) A Legend in My Time
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    3:08
  • 10
    I’m Hurtin’
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:43
  • 11
    Twenty-Two Days
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    3:07
  • 12
    I’ll Say It’s My Fault
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1961
    2:21
  • Singles


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    Singles

    Lonely and Blue
    Lonely and Blue
    0/1/1961
    Sings Lonely and Blue
    Studio album by
    ReleasedJanuary 1961
    RecordedSeptember 18, 1959 – September 17, 1960
    StudioRCA Studio B, Nashville
    GenreRock
    Length28:33
    LabelMonument
    ProducerFred Foster
    Roy Orbison chronology
    Sings Lonely and Blue
    (1961)
    Roy Orbison at the Rock House
    (1961)

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    This article is about the album by Roy Orbison. For the album by Etta Jones, see Lonely and Blue (Etta Jones album).

    1961 studio album by Roy Orbison

    Lonely and Blue is the debut studio album by Roy Orbison,[1] released on Monument Records in January 1961.[2]

    The track entitled "Come Back to Me (My Love)" features an almost identical intro to "Only the Lonely" because this is where the vocal figure of "Only the Lonely" came from.[3]

    it entered the UK album chart two years later, on June 30, 1963 and reached number 14 over the course of eight weeks.[4]

    The album was released on compact disc for the first time by Monument Records in 1993 as tracks 1 through 12 on a pairing of two albums on one CD with tracks 13 through 24 consisting of being Orbison 2nd Studio Album from January 1962, Crying.[5]

    History

    After a two-year stint at Sun Records, Roy Orbison signed up with RCA Records in 1958, but left after two singles. In early 1959 Orbison`s manager Wesley Rose asked producer and owner Fred Foster if he was interested in signing him for Monument Records. Foster said yes. The album was recorded at RCA Studio B using two- and three-track tape machines.

    Reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[7]

    Bruce Eder of AllMusic said that the album "packed with great moments and different permutations of that sound: the powerful lead vocal and the Boots Randolph sax break on "I`ll Say It`s My Fault"; the haunting Orbison-Melson "Come Back to Me (My Love)," a vest-pocket romantic melodrama sung with operatic depth and played to a light rock & roll beat; Don Gibson`s "I`d Be a Legend in My Time", and "I Can`t Stop Loving You".[6]

    Billboard magazine gave a postive results, described the album as "a Spinnable Album"[8]

    Cashbox appreciated the effort. "Good material and a striking delivery add up to strong merchandise."[9]

    Track listing

    All tracks recorded 15–17 September 1960, except where indicated.

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Only the Lonely" (March 25, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:26
    2."Bye Bye Love"Felice & Boudleaux Bryant2:14
    3."Cry"Churchill Kohlman2:41
    4."Blue Avenue" (March 25, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:20
    5."I Can`t Stop Loving You"Don Gibson2:43
    6."Come Back to Me (My Love)"Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:27

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Blue Angel" (August 8, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:51
    2."Raindrops" (September 18, 1959)Joe Melson1:53
    3."(I`d Be) A Legend in My Time"Don Gibson3:08
    4."I`m Hurtin`"Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:43
    5."Twenty-Two Days"Gene Pitney3:07
    6."I`ll Say It`s My Fault"Roy Orbison, Fred Foster2:21

    2006 bonus tracks
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    13."Up Town" (1959 single)Orbison, Melson2:07
    14."Pretty One" (B-side to "Up Town")Orbison2:18
    15."Here Comes That Song Again" (B-side to "Only the Lonely")D. Flood2:44
    16."Today`s Teardrops" (B-side to "Blue Angel")Pitney, A. Schroeder2:12

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    This article is about the album by Roy Orbison. For the album by Etta Jones, see Lonely and Blue (Etta Jones album).

    1961 studio album by Roy Orbison

    Lonely and Blue is the debut studio album by Roy Orbison,[1] released on Monument Records in January 1961.[2]

    The track entitled "Come Back to Me (My Love)" features an almost identical intro to "Only the Lonely" because this is where the vocal figure of "Only the Lonely" came from.[3]

    it entered the UK album chart two years later, on June 30, 1963 and reached number 14 over the course of eight weeks.[4]

    The album was released on compact disc for the first time by Monument Records in 1993 as tracks 1 through 12 on a pairing of two albums on one CD with tracks 13 through 24 consisting of being Orbison 2nd Studio Album from January 1962, Crying.[5]

    History

    After a two-year stint at Sun Records, Roy Orbison signed up with RCA Records in 1958, but left after two singles. In early 1959 Orbison`s manager Wesley Rose asked producer and owner Fred Foster if he was interested in signing him for Monument Records. Foster said yes. The album was recorded at RCA Studio B using two- and three-track tape machines.

    Reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[7]

    Bruce Eder of AllMusic said that the album "packed with great moments and different permutations of that sound: the powerful lead vocal and the Boots Randolph sax break on "I`ll Say It`s My Fault"; the haunting Orbison-Melson "Come Back to Me (My Love)," a vest-pocket romantic melodrama sung with operatic depth and played to a light rock & roll beat; Don Gibson`s "I`d Be a Legend in My Time", and "I Can`t Stop Loving You".[6]

    Billboard magazine gave a postive results, described the album as "a Spinnable Album"[8]

    Cashbox appreciated the effort. "Good material and a striking delivery add up to strong merchandise."[9]

    Track listing

    All tracks recorded 15–17 September 1960, except where indicated.

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Only the Lonely" (March 25, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:26
    2."Bye Bye Love"Felice & Boudleaux Bryant2:14
    3."Cry"Churchill Kohlman2:41
    4."Blue Avenue" (March 25, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:20
    5."I Can`t Stop Loving You"Don Gibson2:43
    6."Come Back to Me (My Love)"Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:27

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Blue Angel" (August 8, 1960)Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:51
    2."Raindrops" (September 18, 1959)Joe Melson1:53
    3."(I`d Be) A Legend in My Time"Don Gibson3:08
    4."I`m Hurtin`"Roy Orbison, Joe Melson2:43
    5."Twenty-Two Days"Gene Pitney3:07
    6."I`ll Say It`s My Fault"Roy Orbison, Fred Foster2:21

    2006 bonus tracks
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    13."Up Town" (1959 single)Orbison, Melson2:07
    14."Pretty One" (B-side to "Up Town")Orbison2:18
    15."Here Comes That Song Again" (B-side to "Only the Lonely")D. Flood2:44
    16."Today`s Teardrops" (B-side to "Blue Angel")Pitney, A. Schroeder2:12

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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