As an author, he was involved, either as sole writer or co-writer, for most of the titles in the Illustrated Record series (mostly, though not wholly, published by Harmony). These volumes gave detailed critical commentary -- not just discographical information -- on every single and album released by a certain artist, with a lot of wit as well as description. As such, they were extremely valuable, especially in the '70s and early '80s, when such serious critical studies were fairly rare. These also had excellent pictures and capsule sidebars on the major events of the musicians' careers that did not directly relate to their recorded product. Carr worked on every title in the series -- which included installments on the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, David Bowie, and Elvis Presley -- except the one on Bob Dylan. He also co-authored Fleetwood Mac: Rumours n' Fax, which, although not part of the Illustrated Record series, used a very similar format.
Unfortunately, the Illustrated Record series stopped after the early '80s, but Carr continued to author interesting music books. The Hip: Hipsters, Jazz & the Beat Generation (for which he was co-author) was a photo-filled look at '50s-era jazz, focusing as much on the lifestyle and fashion associated with the genre as the music. He wrote a large part of A Century of Jazz, another photo-heavy volume with essays on most important jazz styles and subgenres throughout the 20th century. He was sole author of Beatles at the Movies, which dispensed history and criticism for all five of the Beatles' major motion-picture projects, in addition to detailing films that were discussed or considered as appropriate for the group, but abandoned for one reason or another. Carr was executive editor of three British music periodicals: Melody Maker, New Musical Express, and Vox (all of which were part of IPC Magazines' music line). He was also a broadcaster and record producer, and compiled and wrote liner notes for record companies such as Blue Note, Chess, Pacific Jazz, Riverside, and Savoy. Roy Carr died of a heart attack on July 1, 2018, at the age of 73. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi