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STUDIO SESSION FOR ROY ORBISON & THE TEEN KINGS AT THE MEMPHIS RECORDING SERVICE FOR SUN RECORDS 1956 SUN RECORDING STUDIO 706 UNION AVENUE, MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE SUN SESSION: TUESDAY MARCH 27, 1956 SESSION HOURS: UNKNOWN PRODUCER AND RECORDING ENGINEER - SAM C. PHILLIPS AND JACK CLEMENT "TRYIN' TO GET TO YOU" Composer: - Margie C. Singleton-Rose Marie McCoy Publisher: - B.M.I. - Motion Music Company Matrix number: - None - Take 2 - Not Originally Issued (2:38) Recorded: - March 27, 1956 Released: - June 1988 First appearance: - Zu-Zazz Records (CD) 500/200rpm Z 2006 mono PROBLEM CHILD Some additional undubbed and unissued Sun masters. Reissued: - 2001 Bear Family Records (CD) 500/200rpm BCD 16423 GL-2-4 mono ROY ORBISON - ORBISON 1955 - 1966 Even stranger was the fact that Roy Orbison had recorded "Tryin' To Get To You" for Je-Wel Records. Never a real lover rhythm and blues, Orbison had latched on to an obscure song by the Eagles and recorded it at roughly the same time that Elvis Presley recorded a version for Sun Records (that remained unissued until 1956). The most likely scenario is that Elvis Presley sang the tune on one of his forays through Texas and that Roy Orbison learned it from Elvis Presley. Orbison used Presley's shuffle rhythm and makes the same minor lyrical change that Elvis Presley made. An additional wrinkle was added to the story when Orbison's Je-Well record was leased to Imperial for a B-side to a Weldon Rogers single in 1956. At the suggestion of Johnny Cash, Orbison approached Sam Phillips at Sun Records, but Phillips rebuffed him saying "Johnny Cash doesn't run my record company". However, Orbison had a stronger ally in Cecil Holifield who operated the Record Shops in Midland and Odessa and had booked Elvis Presley into the area. Holifield sent a copy of the Je-Well record to Sam Phillips who heard something unique in the strangely fragile voice and invited the group to Memphis. Roy Orbison and the Teen Kings returned to West Texas immediately after the session and heard nothing until Sam Phillips called them one day in early May and told them that the record was breaking in Memphis and other markets. Sam Phillips placed the Teen Kings with Bob Neal's booking agency, Stars Incorporated, located at 1916 Sterick Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee. Dropping out of school just weeks before final exams, the Teen Kings hit the road as part of a package show with Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, and Warren Smith. ''We played trying to make stage shows out of one hit record, which is very difficult, so we jumped around on stage like a bunch of idiots''. Warren Smith's drummer Jimmie Lott, remembered that Roy wouldn't wear his glasses and was led to the microphone like a blind blues singer. ''We started in West Virginia or North Carolina'', Roy remembered, ''then wound up in Memphis''. Elvis made a surprise appearance at the Memphis show, held at Overton Park Shell on June 1, 1956. Name (Or. No. Of Instruments) Roy Orbison - Vocals and Guitar Johnny ''Peanuts'' Wilson - Guitar James Morrow - Electric Mandolin Jack Kennelly - Bass Billy Pat Ellis - Drums © - 706 UNION AVENUE SESSIONS - ©