| |
Born in the hills of Jamaica in a shanty
with no running water or electricity, Roy Young's love for soul
music started at a very early age. When all his friends were listening
to the latest ska or the newest reggae track, Roy was listening
to groups such as The Dells, The
Drifters and The Temptations.
When he moved to England at the age of 13 he was introduced to
the likes of Otis Redding, Wilson
Pickett, Joe
Tex and Solomon
Burke.
This was the time of the great Northern
Soul movement of the
late 60's and early 70's and is when Roy was introduced to his
greatest influence, the remarkable Sam
Cooke. By the age of 15
he dropped out of school to go on the road with a nine-piece
band called The Work Shop. They toured all through England and
were regulars at the infamous Bamboo Club in Bristol, England,
which was then owned by Roy's first manager, Tony
Bullimore.
Bullimore is best known today as the yachtsman who penned the
autobiographical book entitled "Saved" depicting his
amazing rescue from the Southern Ocean during the Vendee
Globe round-the-world race in 1997.
Roy was first brought to Israel in 1969 at the age of 20 by
Haim
Saban, who at the time was a promoter/manager holding
auditions in London to bring a soul band to tour Israel. Haim
Saban's business
prowess has spread him into many different arenas outside of
touring since those early days and he is best known today as
the creator of "The
Power Rangers" and is the head of the international
media giant Saban
Capital Group. That was the beginning of a
close friendship between Haim, his brother Arieh and
Roy that has lasted over 35 years and remains strong to this
day. Roy continued to go back and forth to Israel after that first
tour and was performing all over Europe, Russia and the Middle
East. He performed at the Marquee Club in London with Long
John Baldry while he was #1 in England with "Let
the Heartache Begin," as well as Arthur
Brown while he was topping the
U.K charts with "Fire". Roy then caught the eye of
two young A&R executives working for EMI
London at the time
by the names of Dave Rose & Philip
Rowley, and they signed
Roy to EMI in 1980. They brought Roy to Abbey
Road Studios and
put together musicians and vocalists to guest on Roy's album.
Marvin
Gaye, who became another one of Roy's close friends
in the early 80's, Pat
Rizzo of the band War and
the original members of The
Four Seasons were some of the talent that performed
on Roy's album for EMI.
Roy's touring began to take off, and on
one trip back to Israel
he met his current wife Orly and decided to relocate there
on a more permanent basis. Philip Rowley ended up heading to
the
U.S. for EMI and the project lost its momentum. EMI never completed
the album. Roy and Philip,
who
is currently the Chairman
of AOL Europe, recently had a reunion in New York
City in June 06 after not seeing one another for almost 20
years! Roy continued to tour Israel and Europe with various bands and
was enjoying life in Israel. In 1997, two young Australian songwriters,
brothers Gideon and Daniel Frankel, were backpacking through
Israel and heard about a legendary Jamaican soul singer now living
in Tel Aviv. They were finally introduced to Roy after several
attempts to meet him and played some of their music for him.
He wasn't quite sure about what he heard the first time, but
when he met with them again the following week he thought that
they might be on to something.
 |
The Frankels returned home to begin writing and promised that
they would contact Roy to arrange for a recording session in
Australia. Well, Roy didn't hear from them again, and although
he wondered from time to time what happened to those two "happy" kids
from Down Under, he didn't think too much of it. Then, seven
years later, out of the blue Roy got a call. He heard a voice
on the other end of the phone shouting, "Hello, is this
Roy? We're ready!" just like it had been seven days. Daniel
and Gideon explained to Roy that they had been writing music
for him over the years. They now had forty or so songs that they
were happy with and they wanted him to come to Australia to record.
In 2003 Roy traveled to Melbourne to record with them under
the Australian independent label Shock
Records. Legendary Motown
arranger and muted trumpet player Gil
Askey came out of retirement
after hearing what he considered something original in Roy's
voice! "Just listen to the personality in his voice. Ain't
nobody like this anymore." said Askey, and at the age of
86 he wrote the horn and string arrangements for most of the
songs that were being recorded. Guitar genius Jack
Jones was
brought in on guitar during the Melbourne sessions as well.
Once they had recorded 12 songs, the Frankel Brothers went looking
for a U.S. partner where they found Rosie
Lopez, head of Marketing & International
at Tommy Boy Entertainment. She heard Roy's voice and immediately
signed him sight unseen stating "it would be a shame if
the world did not know this man and his music!" Tom
Silverman,
founder and CEO of Tommy Boy Entertainment, decided to bring
Roy to the infamous Royal Studios in Memphis to work with the
legendary Willie Mitchell in September 2005. Willie put his magical
touch on the album as the executive producer and brought in some
of the all time great Memphis musicians to work on the album
including Leroy Hodges, Charles "Skipp" Pitts, Lester
Snell, Steve Potts and Preston
Shannon. The end result is the
long overdue and deeply soulful debut album of Roy Young entitled "Memphis" due
out early 2007 which is already garnering rave reviews from some
of the great soul tastemakers of today.
With more than 25 years between recording contracts, it has
been an awe-inspiring journey that demonstrates to musicians
and fans alike what true perseverance is. More recently, Roy
has performed with the Red Star
Belgrade Symphony on a live broadcast
to the entire nation on Radio Belgrade in celebration of their
Independence Day in 2004. Roy has been honored as the first ever
local artist to be bestowed with the privilege of closing the
Eilat
Red Sea International Jazz Festival in 2005 where
the likes of Diane
Reeves, Billy
Cobham and Zap
Mama were also performing
that year. He opened for Lionel
Ritchie at a private function
in Monte Carlo in June of 2006, and also performed at the official
birthday celebration for President
Nazarbeyav of Kazakhstan in
July 2006. Roy is in preparation for his upcoming "Memphis" tour
that will be taking him through Europe, the United States & the
Caribbean. |
|