Can't believe no one has mentioned it. Elvis would be 75 today. Lots of good stuff on BBC4.
Oliver's Army was quite catchy.
They say everyone remembers where they were when Elvis died. Where were you lot?
I was in the back of the Cortina when the news came on my dad's car radio... or was that John Lennon.. I forget now. One of the two anyway.
Working at Currys warehouse in Winnall Estate, Winchester. Someone came in with a copy of the Sun. One old boy was in tears. Me, being a young punk, couldn't give a f*ck.
I love Elvis, but didn't at the time.
Mum loves him but as a kid hearing him incessantly on the radiogram along with Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton, Roger Miller and with Dad's violin and trumpet playing in the next room as a kid turned me against the lot of them. I now know better of course and appreciate the lot.
As a 'young punk' you will no doubt be familiar with the little ditty:
Elvis is dead
Long forgotten
Now 'The King' is
Johnny Rotten.
I find all the weirdos that come with the whole Elvis package a little off putting
Never quite worked out why people think Elvis was the King of rock an' roll. Good performer, in fact, great peformer. But that's about it, for me.
I think that Chuck D summed up the whole Elvis phenomenon with his lyrics from 'Fight the Power'.
"Elvis was a hero to most
But he never meant sh1t to me you see.
Straight up racist that sucker was,
Simple and plain.
Motherf*ck him and John Wayne."
Elvis = Utter ****e!![]()
Not the early stuff. The recordings he did with Sam Phillips at Sun Records in 1954 and 1955 were important fusions of country and R & B. Elvis had significant creative input into those recordings.
His first year at RCA (1956) was also marked by a lot of good material.
But the significance of Elvis as a musical figure was pretty much over once Elvis did his two-year stint in the army and then gave up complete control of his career to the odious Tom Parker.
Like many great figures in music history, Elvis was a synthesizer rather than an innovator.
A great book about Elvis' early career is Last Train to Memphis by Peter Guralnik.
Lyrics by Carlton 'Chuck D' Ridenhour, who no doubt was influence by the infamous quote that was attributed to the King:
“The only thing n*ggers can do for me is buy my records and shine my shoes.”
Whether Elvis actually said this or not is hotly debated; there are plenty of folk who think he did and just as many who disagree.
I did my homework long ago Hamilton Saint, and to be honest I think the jury is out on this one.
And it always will be. But what a lyric!
You need to do some homework Deppo.
Start here:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WHe5...eature=related
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Never liked Elvis. Always thought he was overrated and his music was quite cr*ppy on the whole. I'll probably get slated for that but just my opinion. My musical tastes are pretty obscure anyway.
That quote was "attributed" to Elvis but there is no good evidence that he ever said it. When Elvis was confronted with questions about it, he denied he ever said it, or even anything like it.
In a previous post in this thread I mentioned Peter Guralnik, who wrote a comprehensive, two-volume biography of Elvis: Last Train to Memphis and Careless Love. These are not hagiographies; they are even-handed portraits - warts and all - about his "rise and fall". He probably spent 10-15 years working on these books. There is nothing in Elvis's history that even suggests that he was a racist.
Here's an article that Guralnik wrote about this issue for the New York Times back in 2007, when it was in the news.
http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/pete...s_racist.shtml
Here's another article about that infamous quote; it provides evidence to show why he could not have uttered it. It's by Rob Rabiee:
http://www.elvisinfonet.com/spotlight_racist.html
Speaking of quotes, here's what James Brown said about Elvis:
"I wasn’t just a fan, I was his brother. Last time I saw Elvis alive was at Graceland. We sang ‘Old Blind Barnabus’ together, a gospel song. I love him and hope to see him in heaven. There’ll never be another like that soul brother."
And Little Richard:
"Elvis was an integrator. Elvis was a blessing. They wouldn’t let Black music through. He opened the door for Black music."
And Sammy Davis Jr.:
"On a scale of one to ten, I would rate Elvis eleven."
And Jackie Wilson:
“A lot of people have accused Elvis of stealing the black man’s music, when in fact, almost every black solo entertainer copied his stage mannerisms from Elvis.”
I want to make it clear that I'm not a big Elvis fan. I like a lot of his earlier stuff (1954-56), as I wrote previously, but I think the comments about him being racist are unfair, unhistorical and pernicious
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