Phil Roy — This Is My Home
Album: Issues + Options
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 17
Released: 0
Length: 3:13
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 17
Length: 3:13
Plays (last 30 days): 0
(no lyrics available)
Comments (6)add comment
I'm complaining about the text usage.
tldr
okobojicat wrote:
Apparently no limit on text usage. Wow.
I'm not complaining, just commenting.
Heh. I was muttering a few choice words, myself. *grins*
reddirtgirl wrote:
was wondering who this breath of fresh air is.... a quick search yielded the following... quite a seasoned musician!
DISCOGRAPHY
PHIL ROY....
Apparently no limit on text usage. Wow.
I'm not complaining, just commenting.
"So bad I cannot tell you..."
Yup
was wondering who this breath of fresh air is.... a quick search yielded the following... quite a seasoned musician!
DISCOGRAPHY
PHIL ROY- SOLO ARTIST RECORDINGS
ISSUES + OPTIONS OR MUSIC (Release date MAY 6, 2003)
Grouchyfriendly EAR PICTURES (Release date JAN. 3, 2000)
SONGWRITING CREDITS (Albums/CD):
MAVIS STAPLES :
Songs: God Is Not Sleeping, Ain't No Better Then You
Album: Have A Little Faith
(Alligator)
WINNER: "W.C. HANDY SOUL/BLUES AWARD
ALBUM OF THE YEAR"
LOS LONELY BOYS :
Song: Tell Me Why
Album: Los Lonely Boys
(Or Music) (Double Platinum)
JOE COCKER
Song: The Simple Things
Abum: Have A Little Faith
(Epic)
(first single/Platinum)
AARON NEVILLE
Song: My Brother My Brother
Album: The Grand Tour
(A&M)
(Platinum)
RAY CHARLES
Song: My World
Album: My World
(Warner Bros.)
(title track)
POP'S STAPLES
Song: Hope In A Hopeless World
Album: Father Father
(Point Blank/Virgin)
(Grammy Winner Best Contempary Blues Album)
GUSTER
Songs: Demons, Perfect, X-Ray Eyes
Album: Gold Fly
(Sire)
WIDESPREAD PANIC
Song: Hope In A Hopeless World
Album: Bombs & Butterflies
(Capricorn) (
(first single-Top 10 R&R)
THE NEVILLE BROTHERS
Songs: It Takes More, Day By Day Thing,Let My People Go, Good Song
Album: Family Groove
(A&M)
BARRINGTON LEVY
Songs: Poor Man Cry, Things Friend
Album: Living Dangerously
"featuring Snoop Dog, Soopafly & Daz"
(Breakaway)
BARRINGTON LEVY
Songs: Vice Versa Love, Be Strong
Album: Barrington Levy
(MCA)
(first single)
PAUL YOUNG
Songs: Hope In A Hopeless World, It Will Be You
Album: The Crossing
(Sony U.K.)
(second single)
ERIC BIBB
Song: Hope In A Hopeless World
Album: Painting Signs
(Earthbeat)
SIR CLIFF RICHARD
Song: Even If It Breaks My Heart Real
Album: As I Wanna Be
(EMI)
(Album Gold UK)
TUCK & PATTI
Song: Heaven Down Here
Album: Learning To Fly
(Epic)
(first single)
ADAM COHEN
Songs: Beautiful As you, Down She Goes, Don't Mean Anything, Quarterback, Amazing, It's Alright
(Columbia)
(world wide release)
NATIVE
Songs: Sister My Sister,That's The Difference
Album: Couleurs De L'amour
(BMG France)
(Gold)
EDDIE MONEY
Song: Died A Thousand Times
Album: Love & Money
(Wolfgang)
(second single)
ERIC MARTIN
Song: Don't Count Me Out
Album: Somewhere In The Middle
(Atlantic-Japan)
CHARLES + EDDIE
Song: Best Place In The World
Album: Chocolate Milk
(Capitol)
KIM STOCKWOOD
Song: Be Where You Are
Album: Buena Vista
(EMI Canada)
ALANNAH MYLES w/ZUCHERO
Song: What Are We Waiting For
Album: Very Best Of
(Atlantic)
(collection)
MORGAN HERITAGE
Songs: Miracle, Push
Album: Miracle
(MCA)
KATEY SEGAL
Songs: Can't Hurt The Harvest (first single), I Don't Want To Know (second single), September Rain
Album: Well
(Virgin)
THE NEVILLE BROTHERS
Song: Let My People Go
Album: Live From Planet Earth
(A&M)
L.A. GUNS
Song:Never Enough
Album: Cocked & Loaded
(Polygram)
(Gold)
EIGHTH WONDER
Song: Will You Remember (Top 10 Italy &Japan)
(WTG)
APPOLLONIA
Song: Sychronize
(single)
(Warner Bros.)
Trouble Tribe Tattoo (first single)
(Chrysalis)
Ann - Marie Recipe Of Love (first Single)
(MCA)
Kindred Spirit What Are We Waiting For Kindred Spirit
(IRS)
Christopher Max Train To Bombay Christopher Max
(EMI)
If It Takes Forever Christopher Max
Presca Let's Get Real (12" single)
CO-WRITERS: (selected)
Hans Zimmer * Michael Kaman * Heitor Pereira * Bob Theile Jr.
Will Jennings * John Shanks * Shelly Peiken * Dennis Matkosky
Steven Alan Davis * Simon Clime * Gavin Greenaway * Jeff Silbar
Dillon O'Brian * Jullian Coryell * Paul Carrack * Glen Tillbrook
Roy Hay * Adam Cohen * Cathy Dennis
RECORDING ARTIST/BAND
1. World Citizens (EMI) - produced by Hawk Wolinski & David Holman
2. Carrera (Warner Bros.) produced by Ted Templeman
PRODUCER:
2. Danielle Brisebois "Everything My Heart Desires" & "My Only"
As Good As It Gets soundtrack (Columbia)
2. Phil Roy - "Under The Stars", produced with Heitor Pereira
As Good As It Gets soundtrack (Columbia)
3. As Yet - "That's The Difference"
Fame L.A. (MGM Television)
4. Domino- "Mask" soundtrack (Columbia),
5. Ray Charles - "My World (Warner Bros.), Associate Producer
with Richard Perry
6. Brenda K. Star - "Various" (Epic), produced with Roy Hay
7. Preska - "Let's Get Real" (Epic), produced with Roy Hay
FILM + TV PLACEMENTS
1. SONG: "EVERYTHING MY HEART DESIRES"
FILM "As Good As It Gets"
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
2. SONG: "MY ONLY"
FILM "As Good As It Gets"
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
3. SONG: "UNDER STARS"
FILM "As Good As It Gets"
Soundtrack only
4. SONG: "RIDICULOUS"
FILM "Leaving Las Vegas"
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
5. SONG: "DON'T MEAN ANYTHING"
FILM "I Know What You Did Last Summer
"
Film + Soundtrack
6. SONG: "HOW DO I DEAL"
FILM "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer.."
End Title (D. Foster Prod.)
7. SONG: "THIS BUSINESS OF LOVE"
FILM "The Mask"
Film + Soundtrack
8. SONG: "IT"S ALRIGHT"
FILM "Love + Sex"
Film + Soundtrack
9. SONG: "HAPPY FEELING"
"Me, Myself and Irene"
Film/20th Century Fox
10. SONG: "LOVE CHARADE # 9"
"An Everlasting Piece"
Film/Dreamworks
11. SONG: "IS IT JUST TO MUCH"
"Meteor Man"
Film + Soundtrack
12. Various Cues"
"Welcome to Hollywood"
HBO/Music Supervisor
13. SONG: "THIS BUSINESS OF LOVE"
"G Sting Diva's"
HBO/ Artist: P .Roy
14. SONG: "DAY TO DAY THING"
"Champions Forever"
Image Entertainment DVD
Phil Roy
In His Own Words
"My very first musical memory was sitting in a car in Philly as a kid, listening to the Four Tops' 'Reach Out (I'll Be There).' Wow. I just remember... connecting. Later, as an adult, I thought about me as a five-year-old in that car and all the great soul singers who've wrapped their voices around my songs, around a slice of my soul, and I connect to that moment again. I understand how human it is.
"I started working pretty early as a kid. My family has a shoe store at 16th and Columbia in North Philly, the flash point of the riots in '64. It was called Hollywood Shoes. The clientele was 100 percent black. Substitute the pizza parlor in Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing for the shoe store and that was my world, my frame of reference as a boy.
"It was a great time for music. Gamble & Huff were sewing the seeds of the Philly Sound with The Ojays and The Blue Notes. Thom Bell was working with The Delphonics and The Spinners. I started formal music studies when I was about nine. My guitar teacher played in Gamble & Huff's house band; MFSB! And I took refuge in the radio, devouring the music on soul stations like WHAT and WDAS. Then I started getting into the progressive rock movement that was happening in the U.K. It completely captured my imagination.
"I started playing guitar in high school groups with names like Relayer and The Wild Spaceship. We played covers by The Stones and "Frankenstein" by Edgar Winter. I was just a kid smoking weed, going to concerts, saving my ticket stubs, living my teenage life. It was that time and place in America during the mid-70s and I loved it. I started listening John Coltrane and Herbie Hancock's 'Thrust,' and Larry Coryell and Chick Corea, and suddenly becoming a guitar player really appealed to me. I've got to give my father credit, the way he encouraged me to pursue my dream. And I wound up in Boston at Berklee School of Music.
"At Berklee I found I wasn't talented enough to make it as a serious instrumentalist in the jazz world, but one of my teachers -- John Aldridge -- taught a songwriting class and I got to record my first song in the studio. That experience changed my life. I wrote and recorded a few more songs and pretty soon I was invited to Los Angeles by 2 of my Berklee friends, (London + Chris McDANIELS) and we formed a pop-rock band called Carrera. It was the classic show biz story; we were discovered on Sunset Boulevard and quickly signed with Warner Brothers. And, like so many other Hollywood stories, I wound up broke and disillusioned, working at a mall, selling shoes. The band hung in there; we changed our name and signed to EMI, who dropped us after one album.
"So the cat started chasing his tail again. I became a staff writer for several big publishers. I achieved what every songwriter craves -- recognition, acceptance, approval. Ray Charles covered 'My World,' which became the title cut from his 1993 Warner Brothers album. Joe Cocker sang 'The Simple Things' on his album, 'Have A Little Faith.' Aaron Neville cut 'My Brother, My Brother' from 'The Grand Tour,' which was his most successful solo album. And Pops Staples, Widespread Panic, Paul Young and Eric Bibb each recorded 'Hope in a Hopeless World.' I'm also very happy that Mavis Staples has just recorded two of my songs, 'God Is Not Sleeping' and 'Ain't No Better than You.'
"So why did I feel so unhappy and unfulfilled? After 20 years, living in Los Angeles had become a terrible burden. I was chasing after the unattainable. I'd been slogging away at the music game, and the goodness that made me 'me' was vanishing. I realized that my publishers were more interested in how many albums my songs sold, instead of who was singing my songs. Imagine -- the greatest singers of my generation are performing my material, and it isn't good enough. It was... confusing.
"One day, I realized that it took me 17-and-a-half years to reach number 59 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It was the highest I had ever charted in the U.S., and suddenly it occurred to me that I was writing songs to get on commercial radio when I wasn't even listening to commercial radio! I was making music for everyone but myself. And I was at the end of my rope. Personally and professionally -- spiritually -- I was done. Recording my own album was the last thing for me to do. I sold my motorcycle. I sold my car. I sold a piece of art, just to pay for studio time. I was driven, and driven to do it.
"The millennium was turning, so I cut 'grouchyfriendly' in 2000. I got some great press, some great airplay and somehow I managed to sell 8,000 copies without a distributor. The album got noticed by artists I genuinely admire, like Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits and Wim Wenders. Then I was named '2002 Independent Artist of the Year' by Musician's Atlas magazine, which was a great honor. The judges included Arturo Sandoval and Me'shell Ndegeocello, which meant even more. And that gave me the confidence to make Issues + Options.
"Making my own albums gave me a sense of renewal, as if, creatively, I was being reborn. I don't say that lightly, either -- the experience puts me in touch with a feeling of freedom that has nothing to do with music. See, chasing hit songs for so many years wore me down. You get a taste of the rewards, and you become enslaved. Suddenly you're in your 40s and you're wondering -- not, how am I gonna pay my mortgage, but -- how am I gonna pay my rent? You put your life on hold because you're waiting for something to happen, and happen... and it never does. It just never does.
The title is very straight-forward. Everyone has issues, everyone has options. Hopefully, your options outweigh your issues.
"There are some very beautiful moments on the record. I'm also proud to say that every song on the record was co-written, and that I had some great collaborators, like Glenn Tillbrook ('She Hurts') and Nicholas Cage ('Melt') and the Brazilian guitarist Heitor Pereira ('Nobody Has to Know'). Some people think it's a cop-out to co-write, but to me, it's a beautiful thing to toss an idea back and forth; it becomes a part of something greater.
"I've spent my whole life writing about the human condition, and the songs on 'Issues' come from a certain consciousness. I try to reflect on the struggle all of us have at times, the struggle with faith and hope. The struggle to believe that the outcome will be all right. I like to write about the struggle for justice. There's the struggle with money and materialism, too. And the struggle for redemption and salvation. And then there's the struggle with love. To find and receive that precious love, and the ways we struggle to keep it -- that's what 'Amazing' is about. Then there's the opposite end of the spectrum, as in 'She Hurts,' when we feel old and alone. That's my goal -- to capture those kinds of simple, truthful, heartfelt qualities in my music.
--As told to Leo Sacks
:cheesy: