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Billy Joe Royal

1988 Georgia Music Hall of Fame Inductee

 HALL OF FAME BIO
Billy Joe Royal was appearing on his uncle’s radio show in his hometown of Valdosta, Georgia when he was just 11 years old. He had become a regular on the Georgia Jubilee by the time he was 14, working with Ray Stevens, Jerry Reed, Joe South and regular guest stars from the Grand Ole Opry.

He followed with a stint of club work in Savannah performing with some of R & B’s hottest artists and he credits this period with providing him a valuable education.

“We’d book in these big names like the Isly Brothers and Sam Cooke, and I got the chance to know these people and watch them…when somebody did something I thought was really cool… I’d take whatever I liked, whatever worked and I just stored everything.”

In the early ‘60s Royal moved to Cincinnati where he continued to perform, singing covers of everyone from Buck Owens to James Brown. Then he recorded the Joe South tune Down in the Boondocks and was soon a hot commodity and enjoying national chart success.

Royal joined Dick Clark’s Cavalcade of Stars, a grueling three month tour of one-nighters, which featured as many as 18 acts and occasionally included stars like Tom Jones, Neil Diamond and the Shirelles, all backed by the same band. “In fact,” recalled Royal, “there were only about four or five of us who made it the whole way.” His chart success continued with I Knew You When, Hush and Cherry Hill Park.

Through the ‘70s and early ‘80s Royal worked in Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe. With his best days seemingly behind him, he focused on finding a new song. Since his early influences had come from country music, Royal turned to Nashville and found Burned Like a Rocket and released it on Bill Lowery’s Southern Tracks label. The record had some regional success and led to another record deal. The re-released ‘Rocket’ made it into the Top Ten. After a well-received performance at the 1986 Country Radio Seminar’s New Faces Show (he had appeared the year before in the Old Faces Show) Royal’s career was on the move again. More hits followed including I’ll Pin A Note On Your Pillow, I Miss You Already, Old Bridges Burn Slow, Out of Sight and On My Mind, 'Till I Can't Take It Anymore and Love Has No Right among others.

Now a seasoned performer with an enviable background, Billy Joe Royal’s style reflects a natural feel for widely divergent genres. “I know exactly what George Jones feels,” he says. “But I know exactly what Ray Charles felt, too.”

In the liner notes for Royal’s Now and Then…Then and Now album, producer and fellow Georgia Music Hall of Fame Inductee Buddy Buie, said of Royal:

“He amazed me with his unique vocal style and his ability to perform daring vocal gymnastics without sounding mechanical. He was always soulful.”

Inducted into the GMHOF in 1988, Billy Joe Royal continues to please both radio listeners and concert-goers alike. His staying power is a testimony of what happens when hard work and resilience combine with natural talent.

Written By: Richard Grant, 2002

ALL MUSIC GUIDE BIO
Best known for his country-flavored rock hit "Down in the Boondocks," Billy Joe Royal had a long career that saw him become one of the first pop performers to successfully revive his commercial fortunes by turning to straight country music. Although he never had another hit as successful as "Down in the Boondocks," he racked up about 15 singles that hit the country charts over the course of the 1980s.

Royal was born into a family of musical entertainers in Valdosta, GA, and made his debut on his uncle's radio show at the age of 11. He learned to play steel guitar and joined the Georgia Jubilee in Atlanta at 14, performing with Joe South, Jerry Reed, and Ray Stevens, among several other artists. Royal had his own rock & roll band in high school and was regularly singing around Atlanta by the age of 16. He also spent time in Savannah, where he was influenced by African-American vocal styles and began to develop his distinctive vocal sound. Performing at a nightclub that also booked Sam Cooke and other African-American stars, Royal observed their vocal moves and began to practice them on his own time. In 1962, he recorded an independent single that went unnoticed. Royal and South roomed together for a time, and two or three years later South contacted him with a song he wanted Royal to sing as a demo, in the hope that Gene Pitney would record it. Royal flew from Cincinnati (where he was working at the time) to Atlanta and cut "Down in the Boondocks," whose churchy echo resulted from the use during recording of a large septic tank that had been dragged into the studio.

The demo ended up at Columbia, and the label signed Royal to a six-year deal. The song became Royal's breakthrough single, reaching number nine on the pop charts and briefly making the vocalist into a teen idol. Following its success, Royal had a string of lesser hits, including the Top 40 pop singles "I Knew You When," "I've Got to Be Somebody," and "Cherry Hill Park." By the end of the decade, Royal's star waned, and he became a regular performer in Las Vegas and around Lake Tahoe. He also did a bit of acting on television, in feature films, and in commercials. In 1978, he recorded a cover of "Under the Boardwalk" and scored a minor hit.

The wrong-side-of-the-tracks theme of "Down in the Boondocks" was a familiar one to country audiences, and during the early '80s Royal worked on establishing himself as a country artist. In 1984, he broke through when he recorded the Gary Burr composition "Burned Like a Rocket"; it was picked up by the Atlantic label, which signed Royal to a contract. The single became a hit and reached the country Top Ten in early 1986. Over the next two years he had a string of Top 40 hits, breaking into the Top Ten in late 1987 once again with "I'll Pin a Note on Your Pillow." In 1989, Royal released the album Tell It Like Is; the title cut, a remake of the venerable soul standard, became his biggest hit, peaking at number two, while the album itself stayed in the Top 15 for over a year. By 1990, Royal's style of pop-inflected country had been replaced by neo-traditional honky tonk at the top of the charts, and his popularity began to decline. He continued to have minor hits into 1992 and toured into the 2000s. Royal launched a comeback with the 1998 album Stay Close to Home on the Intersound label, following up with the independent release Now and Then, Then and Now in 2001. "I know exactly what George Jones feels. But I know exactly what Ray Charles feels, too," Royal once said, and by the beginning of the new century, a host of reissues of Royal's work testified to his status as a vocal craftsman whose success transcended genre. ~ Sandra Brennan & James Manheim, All Music Guide


:: View more Georgia country artists.

 

Main Releases

Now and Then, Then and Now (2001)

Stay Close to Home (1998)

Out of the Shadows (1990)

Burn Like a Rocket (1989)

The Royal Treatment (1987)

Looking Ahead (1987)

Billy Joe Royal [1980] (1980)

Cherry Hill Park (1969)

Down in the Boondocks (1965)

Billy Joe Royal [1965] (1965)

Singles

Hush (2006)

Tell It Like It Is (1991)

If the Jukebox Took Teardrops (1991)

Ring Where a Ring (1990)

Compilations

Country Classics (2007)

Best of Billy Joe Royal [Intersound] (2005)

Country Classics (2003)

The Very Best of Billy Joe Royal: The Columbia Years (1965-1971) (2002)

Drift Away (2001)

Super Hits (2000)

Down in the Boondocks/Cherry Hill Park (1997)

Golden Hits (1996)

The Best of Billy Joe Royal [Sony] (1995)

Greatest Hits [Prime Cuts] (1995)

Greatest Hits [Special] (1992)

20 Greatest Hits (1992)

The Best of Billy Joe Royal [Pair] (1991)

Greatest Hits [Hollywood] (1991)

Greatest Hits [Atlantic] (1991)

Greatest Hits [Columbia] (1989)

All Music Guide© 2006 All Music Guide, LLC
Content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC