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There Is Only One Roy Orbison

Roy Orbison

1965 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: Agosto 1965 · Fecha Grabación: 1965 -
    Discográfica: MGM · Estudio de grabación: RCA Studios. Nashville, Tennessee · Productor: Wesley Rose , Jim Vienneau
    1
    Ride Away
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    3:33
  • 2
    You Fool You
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:14
  • 3
    Two of a Kind
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:40
  • 4
    This Is Your Song
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:22
  • 5
    I'm in a Blue, Blue Mood
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    1:54
  • 6
    If You Can't Say Something Nice
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:23
  • 7
    Claudette
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:03
  • 8
    Afraid to Sleep
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:19
  • 9
    Sugar and Honey
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:26
  • 10
    Summer Love
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:31
  • 11
    Big as I Can Dream
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:12
  • 12
    Wondering
    Roy OrbisonRoy Orbison • 1965
    2:21
  • Singles


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    There Is Only One Roy Orbison
    Studio album by
    ReleasedAugust 1965
    RecordedJuly 2–9, 1965
    StudioRCA Studios. Nashville, Tennessee
    GenreRock
    Length28:15
    LabelMGM
    ProducerWesley Rose, Jim Vienneau
    Roy Orbison chronology
    Early Orbison
    (1964)
    There Is Only One Roy Orbison
    (1965)
    Orbisongs
    (1965)
    Singles from There Is Only One Roy Orbison
    1. "Ride Away"
      Released: 1965

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    1965 studio album by Roy Orbison

    There Is Only One Roy Orbison is the seventh album recorded by Roy Orbison, and his first for MGM Records, released in July 1965. It features his studio recording of "Claudette", an Orbison-penned song which had become a hit for The Everly Brothers in 1958. Ironically, at the time he recorded the song in 1965, he had divorced his wife Claudette, who had inspired the lyrics. Orbison later re-recorded the song for In Dreams: The Greatest Hits in 1985. (They later reconciled in 1966, before her death in a motorcycle accident in June of that year near Galatin, Tennessee.[1]) The single taken from the album was "Ride Away", which reached no. 25 in the US charts, no. 12 in Australia and no. 34 in the UK. Cash Box described "Ride Away" as a "rhythmic teen-angled ode about a somewhat ego-oriented lad who cuts-out on romance."[2]

    The album was released on compact disc for the first time by Diablo Records on October 5 2004 as tracks 1 through 12 on a pairing of two albums on one CD with tracks 13 through 24 consisting of the other album being Orbison`s Other Album from January 1966, The Orbison Way.[3] The Roy`s Boys was included in a box set entitled The MGM Years 1965-1973 - Roy Orbison, which contains 12 of his MGM studio albums, 1 compilation, and was released on Deember 4, 2015.[4]

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    Allmusic[5]
    Record Mirror[6]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[7]

    History

    In 1965, Roy Orbison was riding high with the hit single "Oh, Pretty Woman", which was No. 1 globally, when word got about that his Monument contract was due to expire in June. Orbison was interested in Hollywood and signed to MGM Records for $1 million for three albums per year from 1965-1985. Half of the money went to Decca`s London Records. He also was looking for freedom when he signed with the label. His producer for Monument Records, Fred Foster and Orbison`s manager Wesley Rose were having disagreements about whether or not to keep Orbison. This album charted at No. 10 in the UK[8] and No. 55 (No. 41 on Cash Box,[9] while reaching the Top 30 on Record World) in the US.[10] It was recorded at the RCA Studios in Nashville.

    Reception

    Richie Unterberger of AllMusic`s described the album as "unimpressive" noted "He forsakes much of the rock & roll foundation of his classic early-`60s hits for Nashville country & western on most of the LP."[5]

    Billboard described the album as "a first-rate fashion destined", saying "Ride Away" and "I`m in a Blue Mood" are standout performances"[11]

    Cashbox gave a postive results, saying [Orbison] "makes some powerful noise as he displays not only his exciting song styling"[12]

    Record Mirror described the album as "a "good LP", saying the vocal are really good, with Roy putting just about everything into it"[6]

    Track listing

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Ride Away"Roy Orbison, Bill Dees3:28
    2."You Fool You"Orbison, Joe Melson2:10
    3."Two of a Kind"Bob Montgomery, Earl Sinks2:37
    4."This Is Your Song"Dees2:18
    5."I`m in a Blue, Blue Mood"Orbison, Melson1:51
    6."If You Can`t Say Something Nice"Orbison, Melson, Ray Rush2:21

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Claudette"Orbison2:01
    2."Afraid to Sleep"Buddy Buie, John Rainey Adkins2:15
    3."Sugar and Honey"Orbison, Dees2:22
    4."Summer Love"Dees, Mathis2:29
    5."Big as I Can Dream"Bob Montgomery2:08
    6."Wondering"Orbison, Dees2:16

    Produced by Wesley Rose & Jim Vienneau

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1965 studio album by Roy Orbison

    There Is Only One Roy Orbison is the seventh album recorded by Roy Orbison, and his first for MGM Records, released in July 1965. It features his studio recording of "Claudette", an Orbison-penned song which had become a hit for The Everly Brothers in 1958. Ironically, at the time he recorded the song in 1965, he had divorced his wife Claudette, who had inspired the lyrics. Orbison later re-recorded the song for In Dreams: The Greatest Hits in 1985. (They later reconciled in 1966, before her death in a motorcycle accident in June of that year near Galatin, Tennessee.[1]) The single taken from the album was "Ride Away", which reached no. 25 in the US charts, no. 12 in Australia and no. 34 in the UK. Cash Box described "Ride Away" as a "rhythmic teen-angled ode about a somewhat ego-oriented lad who cuts-out on romance."[2]

    The album was released on compact disc for the first time by Diablo Records on October 5 2004 as tracks 1 through 12 on a pairing of two albums on one CD with tracks 13 through 24 consisting of the other album being Orbison`s Other Album from January 1966, The Orbison Way.[3] The Roy`s Boys was included in a box set entitled The MGM Years 1965-1973 - Roy Orbison, which contains 12 of his MGM studio albums, 1 compilation, and was released on Deember 4, 2015.[4]

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    Allmusic[5]
    Record Mirror[6]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[7]

    History

    In 1965, Roy Orbison was riding high with the hit single "Oh, Pretty Woman", which was No. 1 globally, when word got about that his Monument contract was due to expire in June. Orbison was interested in Hollywood and signed to MGM Records for $1 million for three albums per year from 1965-1985. Half of the money went to Decca`s London Records. He also was looking for freedom when he signed with the label. His producer for Monument Records, Fred Foster and Orbison`s manager Wesley Rose were having disagreements about whether or not to keep Orbison. This album charted at No. 10 in the UK[8] and No. 55 (No. 41 on Cash Box,[9] while reaching the Top 30 on Record World) in the US.[10] It was recorded at the RCA Studios in Nashville.

    Reception

    Richie Unterberger of AllMusic`s described the album as "unimpressive" noted "He forsakes much of the rock & roll foundation of his classic early-`60s hits for Nashville country & western on most of the LP."[5]

    Billboard described the album as "a first-rate fashion destined", saying "Ride Away" and "I`m in a Blue Mood" are standout performances"[11]

    Cashbox gave a postive results, saying [Orbison] "makes some powerful noise as he displays not only his exciting song styling"[12]

    Record Mirror described the album as "a "good LP", saying the vocal are really good, with Roy putting just about everything into it"[6]

    Track listing

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Ride Away"Roy Orbison, Bill Dees3:28
    2."You Fool You"Orbison, Joe Melson2:10
    3."Two of a Kind"Bob Montgomery, Earl Sinks2:37
    4."This Is Your Song"Dees2:18
    5."I`m in a Blue, Blue Mood"Orbison, Melson1:51
    6."If You Can`t Say Something Nice"Orbison, Melson, Ray Rush2:21

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Claudette"Orbison2:01
    2."Afraid to Sleep"Buddy Buie, John Rainey Adkins2:15
    3."Sugar and Honey"Orbison, Dees2:22
    4."Summer Love"Dees, Mathis2:29
    5."Big as I Can Dream"Bob Montgomery2:08
    6."Wondering"Orbison, Dees2:16

    Produced by Wesley Rose & Jim Vienneau

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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