Here is an extremely rare very early vintage original autographed 8" by 10" photo from 1956 of the great Roy Orbison at the very beginning of his career, age 20, with his early band the Teen Kings, the year he signed with Sun Records, on the advice of Johnny Cash. Autographed by three members of the Teen Kings as well. From 1956 because Johnny "Peanuts" Wilson, who autographed this, only played with the Teen Kings in 1956. In March 1956, Roy Orbison recorded "Ooby Dooby" in Clovis, New Mexico, with his band The Teen Kings, including future country songwriter Johnny "Peanuts" Wilson. The song became Orbison's first single. In December 1956 Roy Orbison split with The Teen Kings during a recording session at the Sun Studio in Memphis. Also autographed by Teen Kings Billy Pat Ellis and Jack Kennelly (who later became movie actor Jackson D. Kane). And autographed on the reverse by steel guitarist Harland Powell and country music singer and songwriter Sonny James, also from 1956, the year before James recorded his 1957 hit, "Young Love." Harland Powell was a great steel player who worked with the likes of Tony Douglas and Sonny James; he was also the staff steel player on the big D jamboree. He was also according to some probably the only steel player to back Elvis Presley on a west Texas tour in late 55-56. He was Boxcar Willie's steel man until '95 up until Box passed. Creasing, corner and edge wear, minor paper loss upper corners, bend. Extremely rare. See my other listing of autographed 1957 Roy Orbison, first year as a solo artist. 

Will ship worldwide. I always combine shipping on multiple orders. 

Roy Orbison's Sun Recordings were made by Orbison at Sun Studio (The Memphis Recording Service) with producer Sam Phillips. Sun Records was established in 1952 in Memphis, Tennessee, and during an eight-year period Phillips recorded such artists as Roy Orbison, B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, Ike Turner, Rufus Thomas, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Harold Jenkins, and Charlie Rich. The musicians signed at Sun Records made music that laid the foundation of rock and roll in the 20th century. Roy Kelton Orbison was born in Vernon, Texas, on April 23, 1936, and he grew up in Wink, Texas. His parents Orbie Lee and Nadine, gave him a guitar for his sixth birthday and taught him the chords to "You Are My Sunshine". Roy Orbison grew up around country music and later stated it was a great influence to him. “I grew up with country music in Texas. The first singer I heard on the radio who really slayed me was Lefty Frizzell. He had this technique which involved sliding syllables together that really blew me away.” By the time Orbison was eight years old he was performing on local radio shows, and at thirteen years old he formed the band The Wink Westerners. The Wink Westerners obtained local notoriety and performed mainly country and pop songs. He began singing and playing guitar professionally in his teens with the band the Wink Westerners. The Wink Westerners had a weekly television show for them on KMID-TV. Roy Orbison attended North Texas University after high school, and it was there where he discovered rock and roll and began to write more pop oriented songs. Orbison stayed at North Texas for only a year stating he felt like he was in the “wrong place at the wrong time.” He left and moved to Odessa, Texas where he formed The Teen Kings. The Teen Kings consisted of Roy Orbison, James Morrow, Jack Kennelley, Billy Pat Ellis, and Johnny “Peanuts” Wilson. The Teen Kings got a job on a local television show and they recorded “Ooby Dooby” (written by two fellow North Texas State students Dick Penner and Wade Moore) for a local label. In 1956, singer/songwriter Johnny Cash appeared on the show and on his advice Orbison and the Teen Kings signed with Sun Records in Memphis. Shortly after signing a new version of "Ooby Dooby" was recorded and became a hit in 1956. "Ooby Dooby" did well nationwide, reaching #59 on the Billboards Hot 100 and sold roughly 200,000 copies. According to The Authorized Roy Orbison, the follow-up single was "Rockhouse" b/w "You're My Baby", and shortly after this release the Teen Kings disbanded, and Orbison remained under contract to Sun as a solo artist. Orbison continued recording using the Sun house musicians. Not unlike several other artists at Sun, Roy Orbison was unhappy with the direction Sam Phillips was taking. Orbison noted that he wasn't quite comfortable with rockabilly but later stated he enjoyed the freedom in the studio that came with being a Sun artist. Sun’s musical director Bill Justice gave Orbison the song “Chicken Hearted.” Released in December 1957, it was Orbison’s last shot at remaining a contracted artist for Sun. Shortly after the failure of "Chicken Hearted", Orbison moved back to Texas with his first wife Claudette Frady. Sam Phillips later stated having regret in not promoting Orbison more than he did. Orbison began to question rather or not he still wanted to be a performer and began to focus more on writing. As a writer, Orbison scored a Hot 100 hit for Warren Smith with "So Long I'm Gone" and he did even better when Jerry Lee Lewis recorded a new version of "Go!, Go!, Go!", renaming the track "Down The Line." The greatest writing success Orbison had was due to The Everly Brothers recording the song "Claudette". The success of "Claudette" gave Orbison enough money to buy himself out of his contract at Sun and he signed over all of his copyrights in exception to "Claudette". Roy Orbison played lead guitar in all of his Sun Records recordings, creating a breakthrough sound which became such a big part of rockabilly music. Orbison affiliated himself with the Everlys' music publisher, Acuff-Rose. Wesley Rose got Orbison a one-year contract with RCA, an affiliation that spawned two mediocre singles. During the last RCA session, Orbison had a conversation with bassist Bob Moore, who was buying himself a stake in Monument Records. Moore called owner Fred Foster, and said, "You know what I heard today? RCA's letting Roy Orbison go." Fred Foster signed Roy Orbison. Orbison, still in Texas began writing with Joe Melson, who led a group in Midland called the Cavaliers. Together they wrote the hit "Uptown," which sold better than any single since "Ooby Dooby". Looking for a follow-up, Melson showed Orbison a piece of a song he had been working on called "Only the Lonely". This song was the "first song that truly probed the frightening potential of Orbison's voice." In the early sixties Orbison reached his first peak period from 1961-1964. Despite the lack of commercial success Orbison looked back at his time at Sun Records as an important and historical part of his career. Into the seventies and early eighties artists such as Linda Ronstadt, Van Halen, Don McLean, had hits with Orbison's songs. In 1980 Roy Orbison released "That Lovin' You Feelin' Again" with Emmylou Harris, winning the artists a grammy. After Roy's death in 1988 he had two simultaneous posthumously-charting Top 5 albums with Mystery Girl and The Traveling Wilburys. Mystery Girl eventually went platinum and reached #5 on the US Billboard 200 and #2 on the UK Albums Chart.