NYC Mayor LaGuardia’s Legendary Radio Readings
The year is 1945. The world is at war, and New York City’s newspaper delivery men are on strike. Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia solves the problem. Independent producer Ben Manilla shares […]
The Sounds of America: Flaco Jiménez’s Partners album BMPAudio
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Science of Happiness 72: How To Reconnect With Your Partner BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 71: Do You Want To Be More Patient? BMPAudio
Red, White and the Blues BMPAudio
The Science Of Happiness 70: How To Love People You Don’t Like BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 69: What’s Your “Why” In Life? BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 68: From Othering to Belonging BMPAudio
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1A Memorial Day Special BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 66: How to Connect When You Must Stay Apart BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 64: Helping Kids Think About the Good BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 63: Remembering to Breathe BMPAudio
The Sounds of America: “Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh” BMPAudio
Today marks the 20th anniversary of the death of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Roy Orbison. Appropriately, this year has seen the release of a four-disc retrospective called The Soul of Rock and Roll. And the Library of Congress has added Orbison’s song, “Oh, Pretty Woman” to the National Recording Registry.
The song was written for Orbison’s first wife, Claudette Frady. One day, she left for the store — by “walking down the street” — and by the time she returned, Orbison had written what would become his most enduring hit.
Frady died in a motorcycle accident in 1966, two years after the song hit No. 1 on the charts.
Orbison’s second wife, Barbara Orbison, says the song was “like Bruce Springsteen said: It’s the best girl-watching rock ‘n’ roll song ever.”
Independent producer Ben Manilla spoke with Barbara Orbison and Bill Dees, the co-writer of “Oh, Pretty Woman,” to tell the story behind of Roy Orbison’s most enduring hit.
“He turned to me with the guitar lick, and he said, ‘I feel like I need to say something while they’re playing [that guitar lick],'” Dees says. “I said, ‘Well, you’re always saying [the word] ‘mercy,’ why don’t you say mercy?’ You know, I said, ‘Every time you see a pretty girl you say mercy.'”
Tagged as: Barbara Orbison, Bill Dees, Roy Orbison.
BMPAudio November 20, 2008
The year is 1945. The world is at war, and New York City’s newspaper delivery men are on strike. Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia solves the problem. Independent producer Ben Manilla shares […]
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