The Tragic Life of Roy Orbison Roy Orbison Songs Roy Orbison the gifted songwriter and singer, that some of his critics refer to his style as being operatic and giving him the nick name of “the Caruso of Rock”. Roy Orbison made famous such classic hits as; Oh Pretty Woman, Only the Lonely, Crying, Running […]
Roy Orbison MGM Records Years
Roy Orbison MGM Records Years Get Royal Treatment With Box Set and Unreleased Album: Exclusive
Roy Orbison MGM Years – Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Roy Orbison is celebrated primarily for his years with the Sun and Monument Records labels, where he recorded such career-defining hits as “Ooby Dooby,” “Only the Lonely,” “In Dreams,” “Crying” and “Oh, Pretty Woman” in the ’50s and early ’60s. But 50 years ago, at the height of Beatlemania, the singer was the object of a fierce bidding war that led to a $1 million move to MGM Records. His eight-year, 12-album tenure there was not as commercially successful as his previous years, but with top 40 and international hits like “Ride Away” and “Breakin’ Up Is Breakin’ My Heart,” it was still creatively vital. And Orbison’s heirs are ensuring that era of his career gets its due.
In December, Roys Boys LLC — the Nashville-based company run by sons Wesley, Roy Jr. and Alex Orbison — will release a pair of projects from the MGM vaults through Universal Music Enterprises. The 153-song MGM Years will feature all of Orbison’s albums plus a rarities compilation, while One of the Lonely Ones is an unreleased 12-track album recorded in 1969 but shelved due to what Alex calls “a logjam of releases” and some financial issues with the label. A copy of that album will be included with the first 500 preordered physical copies of the box set, and with preorders of the digital version.
Alex says the two releases mark the beginning of a campaign to put the MGM catalog, much of which has been long out of print, back into circulation. Universal’s purchase of Polydor Records, which previously had taken over the MGM catalog, made the company the partner for Roys Boys and for worldwide releases of the catalog. “We have creative control and final say on everything,” adds Alex. “In essence, we’re the record company.” More: