Eighty years ago
today at shortly after four in the morning Gladys Presley gave birth to twin
boys at her home in Tupelo, Mississippi. The first child was stillborn but the second, who arrived about 35 minutes later, survived to become America’s most
popular singer ever, one of the most successful recording artists of all time
and a man who, though it was never his intention, changed the world for the
better.
When Elvis died, 42 years later, I heard
the news in the offices of Pete Rudge’s Sir Productions on 57th Street in New York, the whole staff gathering around the radio to listen. It
was August 16, 1977, and before I left work I called a friend who lived in
Memphis and asked him to send me five copies of that day’s Memphis Press Scimitar, the city’s daily newspaper. The memorable
headline read: A Lonely Life Ends on Elvis Presley Boulevard’. The day the
papers arrived I was walking along 57th Street carrying them when I bumped into
Ray Davies whom I knew through having interviewed him for MM. We talked about
Elvis a bit and I showed him the newspapers. He seemed very interested and
asked if he could have one, so I gave one to him. I gave away two more to
friends and still have the other two.
Elvis changed my life insofar as his
was the first music that really excited me, and that led to a career writing
about it. Elvis is generally regarded as the King of Rock’n’Roll but in reality
his work stretched across every area of popular music: ballads, country, R&B,
soul, blues, pure pop and even light opera if you consider ‘O Sole Mio’ (aka ‘It’s
Now Or Never’) which was written in 1898 and also recorded by Pavarotti. My
favourite Elvis songs are ‘Mystery Train’ and ‘Suspicious Minds’, but instead of
writing about these pretty obvious choices here’s a list of ten others, some not
so well known, that I also love.
YOU’RE A
HEARTBREAKER (1955)
Young Elvis at his
frolicsome best, a joyful blend of country and rockabilly. With a spring in his
step, he and his Sun crew create a new genre. I particularly like the way Scotty
shifts to the off-beat on the middle eight.
RIP IT UP (1956)
The best way to understand
why Elvis was light years ahead of Bill Haley & The Comets is to listen to
their respective recordings of this song by Bumps Blackwell. Elvis tears into
it like he means business, like it really is Saturday night and he feels fine,
and the ball really is jumping, while poor old Bill Haley just shuffles along
like his Saturday night will end with a whist drive and a cup of Ovaltine before the
pillow beckons. Little Richard’s original version is pretty good too, but I’ll
take Elvis every time.
ONE NIGHT (OF SIN)
(1957)
This was the
original title of ‘One Night’, as recorded by its writer Smiley Lewis, but
this was too risqué for the fifties, so Elvis toned it down to ‘One Night (With
You)’ on his recording, released in January 1957. The unadulterated version,
with Elvis as sexed up as anywhere else in his catalogue, remained in the
vaults until 1985 when it appeared on a CD compilation called Reconsider Baby. No wonder the girls
screamed.
YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL
(1957)
One of Elvis’ loveliest
ballads, as sincere as anything he ever recorded and for my money far better
than the more well-known ‘Are You Lonesome Tonight’ which is taken at the same
slow tempo. From the Jailhouse Rock
soundtrack. I also have a stunning live version of this song by Aaron Neville.
FOLLOW THAT DREAM
(1962)
I hadn’t paid much
attention to this song until I heard Bruce Springsteen perform it at Wembley Arena
in June 1981 on his River tour. As Bruce explained, Elvis followed his dream
and this gave it an importance beyond its rather lightweight pop veneer. At just over 90 seconds, it’s very short and sweet but Elvis sings it with consummate
professionalism, a pop master at work.
TOMORROW IS A LONG
TIME (1966)
This cover of an
early Bob Dylan song appeared on the otherwise worthless Spinout soundtrack album in 1966, recorded on May 27, 1966, at
RCA’s studios in Nashville during sessions for the gospel album How Great Thou Art. Elvis was taped
singing two verses of ‘I Shall Be Released’ too, and like the only other known recording
of Elvis singing a Dylan song – ‘Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright’ – it was the
product of a spirited jam session. When I worked for RCA between 1979 and 1981
I suggested to the A&R department that unedited versions of these songs might
make a decent double A-sided 12” single or an EP called Elvis Sings Dylan. No one was interested.
LONG BLACK
LIMOUSINE (1969)
This morality tale takes
on greater meaning in the light of its autobiographical symbolism. Opening with
an ominous tolling of what appears to be a monotonous funeral bell, it's the
story of a girl who’d left behind her poverty-stricken background to find
riches but paid the ultimate price for her sins. Elvis’ intense vocal turns the
song into a kind of Biblical parable, his voice weary and despairing, perhaps drawing
an analogy between his own life and, morbidly prescient, the way it would end.
I JUST CAN’T HELP
BELIEVING (1970)
By Barrie Mann and
Cynthia Weill, Elvis in pure pop mode. The live version I have, on his 70s
Masters set, finds him in wonderful voice, missing a beat on the first verse
and then, for reasons unexplained, acknowledging a burst of applause that inspires
him to a great performance.
ALWAYS ON MY MIND
(1972)
Another heartfelt vocal
performance and surely aimed at Priscilla whenever he sang it live. This was
Elvis’ last release of 1972 coupled ‘Separate Ways’; a country song first
recorded by Gwen McCrae that same year. The Pet Shop Boys released a version of
the same song in 1987.
DANNY BOY (1976)
Elvis tackles ‘The
Londonderry Air’ with both respect and reserve. This is proof positive that
towards the end of his life, when his health and personal life was falling
apart, he could still summon up those extraordinary vocal skills when he was
sufficiently inspired by a beautiful melody; a master singer indeed. Lovely background
vocals too.
That’s a terrific list Chris, one that does The King proud. If I were to add one more song I’d suggest his cover of Chuck Berry’s Promised Land that was recorded at Stax Studios and released just after his 40th birthday. Although Chuck’s original and Johnny Allen’s cover are both wonderful it’s Elvis who captures the song’s spirit best I feel. Rather like ‘Follow That Dream’ the story about the ‘poor boy’ travelling across the USA from Norfolk, Virginia to the promised land of LA/Hollywood/California takes on an extraordinary resonance when Elvis relates it. Great playing from James Burton and co as well.
ReplyDeleteI can remember the astonishment at the time that 40 year olds could still rock out. Over 40s rocking! The very idea…
best
Jaffo
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteGuitar Man does it for me!
ReplyDelete