Dick Penner


Allen Richard "Dick" Penner is an American retired professor of English, who, while in college in 1955, co-composed, with Wade Lee Moore "Ooby Dooby," which was recorded and released by Wade Moore and Rod Barkley. The song was later given away and became a rockabilly hit for Roy Orbison. Penner also had been a singer, guitar player, and recording artist.
In 1956, Penner switched from country music to rock & roll. That same year, he and Wade Moore formed a duo and recorded for Sun Records. The duo was known as "Wade & Dick—The College Kids." Wade & Dick recorded three songs, "Wild Woman," "Don't Need Your Lovin'," and "Bop Bop Baby," which was included on the album Walk the Line, the soundtrack of the eponymous film biography of Johnny Cash. Penner recorded four on his own. All four songs exhibited a hard, youthful edge that was targeted towards the then new teen market. Penner's four singles — "Move Baby Move," "Fine Little Baby," Sun 615a, and "Cindy Lou," and "Honey Love" Sun 282 consisted of both Rockabilly and ballads. The songs did not rise to the popularity of "Ooby Dooby;" which reached a formidable level on the national charts in Orbison's hands and, eventually, became regarded as a classic of the genre. Moore was in business following his college graduation. After receiving his M.A. from North Texas State, Penner earned a Ph.D. from the University of Colorado. He was a professor of English at the University of Tennessee for thirty-two years until his retirement in 1990. Penner authored three academic books, his favorite being Fiction of the Absurd.

Compositions

By Dick Penner & Wade Moore
By Dick Penner
In 1954, Penner had enrolled at the University of North Texas where he met Wade Moore. They composed Ooby Dooby in February 1955. Penner and Wade had taken a six-pack of beer onto the flat roof of their Lambda Chi fraternity house and wrote Ooby Dooby in a matter of minutes. Wade Moore later recorded a version of Ooby Dooby with Rod Barkley. After the recording of Ooby Dooby Rod Barkley quit the music business and moved back to his hometown of Gruver, Texas.
Roy Orbison, then a student at North Texas and friend, became aware of the song and, sometime late in 1955, recorded a demo of it, together with “Hey, Miss Fannie”, with his band, the Wink Westerners, at the Jim Beck Studio in Dallas, and sent it to Columbia Records. Columbia was not interested in Orbison, but pitched the song to Sid King and the Five Strings, a band from Denton, Texas, who recorded it on March 5, 1956, in Dallas.
A second recording of "Ooby Dooby" by Orbison took place at the Norman Petty studios in Clovis, New Mexico and according to the official U.S. Roy Orbison discography by Orbison historian Marcel Riesco, this recording was Orbison's first record, released on Je-Wel 101 in March 1956.
On March 20, 1956, a Roy Orbison session was set at Sam Phillips' Sun Studio, 706 Union Avenue, Memphis and "Ooby Dooby" was released yet again on Sun 242. By June 1956, the single had climbed to 59 on Billboard's Hot 100 and soon thereafter, sold over 250,000 copies.
The song has since been covered by several other artists, including Creedence Clearwater Revival, on their album Cosmo's Factory, and was featured in the movie as the favorite song on the jukebox of Zefram Cochrane ; played by Cochrane while meeting with the Vulcans who landed on Earth after detecting his first warp flight, the song is the first element of Human culture shared with an alien race.
Penner, now retired, was a professor of English literature at the University of Tennessee.

Selected discography

Wade & Dick - The College Kids
Dick Penner
'Recordings of "Ooby-Dooby"
Penner graduated from Sunset High School in the North Oak Cliff area of Dallas, Texas. Penner earned a Bachelor of Arts in English and a master's degree in English from the University of North Texas. In 1957, while working on his undergraduate degree, Penner was inducted into Blue Key, a national honor fraternity. After earning his master's degree, Penner taught English at North Texas. In the fall of 1961, Penner began teaching English at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He earned his Doctor of Philosophy degree in English from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1965, whereupon, he became an instructor of English at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

Family

First marriage

Academic publications