Elvis Aaron Presley (January 8, 1935 – August 16, 1977) was an
American singer and actor. A cultural
icon, he is commonly known by the single
name Elvis. One of the
most popular musicians of the 20th century, he is often referred to as the
"King of Rock and Roll" or "the King".
Born in Tupelo, Mississippi, Presley moved to Memphis, Tennessee, with his family at
the age of 13. He began his career there in 1954, working with Sun Records owner Sam Phillips, who wanted to bring the
sound of African-American music to a wider audience. Accompanied by
guitarist Scotty Moore and bassist Bill Black, Presley was the most
important popularizer of rockabilly,
an uptempo, backbeat-driven
fusion of country and rhythm
and blues. RCA Victor acquired his contract in a deal
arranged by Colonel Tom Parker,
who went on to manage the singer for over two decades. Presley's first RCA
single, "Heartbreak Hotel", released in January 1956, was a
number-one hit. He became the leading figure of the newly popular sound of rock and roll with a series of network television
appearances and chart-topping records. His energized interpretations of songs,
many from African-American sources, and his uninhibited
performance style made him enormously popular—and controversial. In November
1956, he made his film debut in Love
Me Tender.
Drafted into military service in
1958, Presley relaunched his recording career two years later with some of his
most commercially successful work. He staged few concerts however, and guided
by Parker, proceeded to devote much of the 1960s to making Hollywood movies and
soundtrack albums, most of them critically derided. In 1968, after seven years
away from the stage, he returned to live performance in a celebrated comeback television special that led to an extended Las Vegas concert residency and a string of
profitable tours. In 1973 Presley staged the first concert broadcast globally
via satellite, Aloha from
Hawaii. Prescription drug abuse severely deteriorated his health, and he
died suddenly in 1977 at the age of 42.
Presley is regarded as one of the
most important figures of 20th-century popular culture. He had a versatile
voice and unusually wide success encompassing many genres, including country, pop ballads, gospel, and blues. He is the best-selling solo artist in the
history of popular music. Nominated for 14 competitive Grammys, he won three, and received
the Grammy Lifetime Achievement
Award at age 36. He has been
inducted into multiple music halls
of fame.
Early years
Elvis Presley was born on January
8, 1935, in Tupelo, Mississippi,
to 18-year-old Vernon Elvis and 22-year-old Gladys Love Presley, in the two-room shotgun house built by his father in readiness for
the birth. Jesse Garon Presley, his identical twin brother, was delivered stillborn 35 minutes before him. As an only
child, Presley became close to both parents and formed an unusually tight bond
with his mother. The family attended an Assembly
of God church, where he found his
initial musical inspiration.
Presley's ancestry was primarily
a Western European mix: on his mother's side, he was Scots-Irish, with some French Norman; one of Gladys'
great-great-grandmothers was Cherokee.
His father's forebears were of Scottish or German origin. Gladys was regarded by relatives
and friends as the dominant member of the small family. Vernon moved from one
odd job to the next, evidencing little ambition. The family often relied on
help from neighbors and government food assistance. In 1938, they lost their
home after Vernon was found guilty of altering a check written by the
landowner. He was jailed for eight months, and Gladys and Elvis moved in with
relatives.
In September 1941, Presley
entered first grade at East Tupelo Consolidated, where his instructors regarded
him as "average". He was encouraged to enter a singing contest after
impressing his schoolteacher with a rendition of Red Foley's country song "Old Shep" during
morning prayers. The contest, held at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy
Show on October 3, 1945, was his first public performance: dressed as a cowboy,
the ten-year-old Presley stood on a chair to reach the microphone and sang
"Old Shep". He recalled placing fifth. A few months later,
Presley received his first guitar for his birthday; he had hoped for something
else—by different accounts, either a bicycle or a rifle. Over the following
year, he received basic guitar lessons from two of his uncles and the new
pastor at the family's church. Presley recalled, "I took the guitar, and I
watched people, and I learned to play a little bit. But I would never sing in
public. I was very shy about it."
Entering a new school, Milam, for
sixth grade in September 1946, Presley was regarded as a loner. The following
year, he began bringing his guitar in on a daily basis. He played and sang
during lunchtime, and was often teased as a "trashy" kid who played hillbilly music. The family was by then living
in a largely African-American neighborhood. A devotee of Mississippi Slim's show on the Tupelo
radio station WELO, Presley was
described as "crazy about music" by Slim's younger brother, a
classmate of Presley's, who often took him in to the station. Slim supplemented
Presley's guitar tuition by demonstrating chord techniques. When his protégé
was 12 years old, Slim scheduled him for two on-air performances. Presley was
overcome by stage fright the first time, but succeeded in performing the
following week.
Teenage life in Memphis
In November 1948, the family
moved to Memphis, Tennessee.
After residing for nearly a year in rooming
houses, they were granted a two-bedroom apartment in the public housing complex known as the Courts. Enrolled
at Humes High School, Presley
received only a C in music in eighth grade. When his music teacher told him he
had no aptitude for singing, he brought in his guitar the next day and sang a
recent hit, "Keep Them Cold Icy Fingers Off Me", in an effort to
prove otherwise. A classmate later recalled that the teacher "agreed that
Elvis was right when he said that she didn't appreciate his kind of
singing." He was generally too shy to perform openly, and was occasionally
bullied by classmates who viewed him as a "mama's boy". In 1950, he
began practicing guitar regularly under the tutelage of Jesse Lee Denson, a
neighbor two-and-a-half years his senior. They and three other boys—including
two future rockabilly pioneers, brothers Dorsey and Johnny
Burnette—formed a loose musical collective that played frequently around the
Courts. That September, he began ushering at Loew's State Theater. Other jobs
followed during his school years: Precision Tool, Loew's again, and MARL Metal
Products.
During his junior year, Presley
began to stand out more among his classmates, largely because of his
appearance: he grew out his sideburns and styled his hair with rose oil and
Vaseline. On his own time, he would head down to Beale Street, the heart of Memphis's
thriving blues scene, and gaze longingly at the wild,
flashy clothes in the windows of Lansky
Brothers. By his senior year, he was wearing them. Overcoming his reticence
about performing outside the Courts, he competed in Humes's Annual
"Minstrel" show in April 1953. Singing and playing guitar, he opened
with "Till I Waltz Again with You", a recent hit for Teresa Brewer. Presley recalled that
the performance did much for his reputation: "I wasn't popular in school
... I failed music—only thing I ever failed. And then they entered me in this
talent show ... when I came onstage I heard people kind of rumbling and
whispering and so forth, 'cause nobody knew I even sang. It was amazing how
popular I became after that."
Presley, who never received
formal music training or learned to read music, studied and played by ear. He
frequented record stores with jukeboxes and listening booths. He knew all of Hank Snow's songs and he loved records
by other country singers such as Roy
Acuff, Ernest Tubb, Ted Daffan, Jimmie Rodgers, Jimmie Davis, and Bob Wills. The Southern Gospel singer Jake Hess, one of his favorite
performers, was a significant influence on his ballad-singing style. He was a
regular audience member at the monthly All-Night Singings downtown, where many
of the white gospel groups that performed reflected the influence of
African-American spiritual music.
He adored the music of black gospel singer Sister
Rosetta Tharpe. Like some of his peers, he may have attended blues venues—of
necessity, in the segregated
South, only on nights designated for exclusively white audiences. He certainly
listened to the regional radio stations that played "race records":
spirituals, blues, and the modern, backbeat-heavy
sound of rhythm and blues. Many
of his future recordings were inspired by local African-American musicians such
as Arthur Crudup and Rufus
Thomas. B.B. King recalled that he knew Presley before
he was popular when they both used to frequent Beale Street. By the time he
graduated from high school in June 1953, Presley had already singled out music
as his future.
First recordings (1953-55)
Presley in a Sun Records promotional photograph, 1954
Sam Phillips and Sun Records
In August 1953, Presley walked
into the offices of Sun Records.
He aimed to pay for a few minutes of studio time to record a two-sided acetate disc: "My Happiness"
and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin". He would later claim he
intended the record as a gift for his mother, or was merely interested in what
he "sounded like", though there was a much cheaper, amateur
record-making service at a nearby general store. Biographer Peter Guralnick argues that he chose Sun in the hope
of being discovered. Asked by receptionist Marion
Keisker what kind of singer he
was, Presley responded, "I sing all kinds." When she pressed him on
whom he sounded like, he repeatedly answered, "I don't sound like
nobody." After he recorded, Sun boss Sam
Phillips asked Keisker to note
down the young man's name, which she did along with her own commentary:
"Good ballad singer. Hold." Presley cut a second acetate in January
1954—"I'll Never Stand In Your Way" and "It Wouldn't Be the Same
Without You"—but again nothing came of it.
Not long after, he failed an
audition for a local vocal quartet, the Songfellows. He explained to his
father, "They told me I couldn't sing." Songfellow Jim Hamill later claimed that he was turned down
because he did not demonstrate an ear for harmony at the time. In April,
Presley began working for the Crown Electric company as a truck driver. His
friend Ronnie Smith, after playing a few local gigs with him, suggested he
contact Eddie Bond, leader of Smith's professional band, which had an opening for
a vocalist. Bond rejected him after a tryout, advising Presley to stick to
truck driving "because you're never going to make it as a singer."
Phillips, meanwhile, was always
on the lookout for someone who could bring to a broader audience the sound of the
black musicians on whom Sun focused. As Keisker reported, "Over and over I
remember Sam saying, 'If I could find a white man who had the Negro sound and
the Negro feel, I could make a billion dollars.'" In June, he acquired a
demo recording of a ballad, "Without You", that he thought might suit
the teenaged singer. Presley came by the studio, but was unable to do it
justice. Despite this, Phillips asked Presley to sing as many numbers as he
knew. He was sufficiently affected by what he heard to invite two local
musicians, guitarist Winfield
"Scotty" Moore and upright bass player Bill Black, to work something up with
Presley for a recording session.
The session, held the evening of
July 5, proved entirely unfruitful until late in the night. As they were about
to give up and go home, Presley took his guitar and launched into a 1946 blues
number, Arthur Crudup's "That's All Right". Moore recalled, "All
of a sudden, Elvis just started singing this song, jumping around and acting
the fool, and then Bill picked up his bass, and he started acting the fool,
too, and I started playing with them. Sam, I think, had the door to the control
booth open ... he stuck his head out and said, 'What are you doing?' And we
said, 'We don't know.' 'Well, back up,' he said, 'try to find a place to start,
and do it again.'" Phillips quickly began taping; this was the sound he
had been looking for. Three days later, popular Memphis DJ Dewey Phillips played "That's All Right" on
his Red, Hot, and Blue show. Listeners began phoning in,
eager to find out who the singer was. The interest was such that Phillips
played the record repeatedly during the last two hours of his show.
Interviewing Presley on-air, Phillips asked him what high school he attended in
order to clarify his color for the many callers who had assumed he was black.
During the next few days, the trio recorded a bluegrass number, Bill Monroe's "Blue Moon of
Kentucky", again in a distinctive style and employing a jury-rigged echo effect that Sam Phillips dubbed
"slapback". A single was pressed with "That's All Right" on
the A side and "Blue Moon of Kentucky" on the reverse.
Early live performances and
signing to RCA
The trio played publicly for the
first time on July 17 at the Bon Air club—Presley still sporting his child-size
guitar. At the end of the month, they appeared at the Overton Park Shell, with Slim Whitman headlining. A combination of his
strong response to rhythm and nervousness at playing before a large crowd led
Presley to shake his legs as he performed: his wide-cut pants emphasized his
movements, causing young women in the audience to start screaming. Moore
recalled, "During the instrumental parts he would back off from the mike
and be playing and shaking, and the crowd would just go wild". Black, a
natural showman, whooped and rode his bass, hitting double licks that Presley
would later remember as "really a wild sound, like a jungle drum or
something". Soon after, Moore and Black quit their old band to play with
Presley regularly, and DJ and promoter Bob Neal became the trio's manager. From
August through October, they played frequently at the Eagle's Nest club and
returned to Sun Studio for more recording sessions, and Presley quickly grew
more confident on stage. According to Moore, "His movement was a natural
thing, but he was also very conscious of what got a reaction. He'd do something
one time and then he would expand on it real quick." Presley made what
would be his only appearance on Nashville's Grand Ole Opry on October 2; after a polite audience
response, Opry manager Jim Denny told Phillips that
his singer was "not bad" but did not suit the program. Two weeks
later, Presley was booked on Louisiana
Hayride, the Opry's
chief, and more adventurous, rival. The Shreveport-based
show was broadcast to 198 radio stations in 28 states. Presley had another
attack of nerves during the first set, which drew a muted reaction. A more
composed and energetic second set inspired an enthusiastic response. House drummer D.J. Fontana brought a new element, complementing
Presley's movements with accented beats that he had mastered playing in strip
clubs. Soon after the show, the Hayride engaged Presley for a year's worth of
Saturday-night appearances. Trading in his old guitar for $8 (and seeing it
promptly dispatched to the garbage), he purchased a Martin instrument for $175, and his trio
began playing in new locales including Houston,
Texas, and Texarkana, Arkansas.
By early 1955, Presley's regular Hayride appearances, constant touring, and well-received
record releases had made him a substantial regional star, from Tennessee to
West Texas. In January, Neal signed a formal management contract with Presley
and brought the singer to the attention of Colonel
Tom Parker, whom he considered the best promoter in the music business.
Parker—Dutch-born, though he claimed to be from West Virginia—had acquired an
honorary colonel's commission from country singer turned Louisiana governor Jimmie Davis. Having successfully
managed top country star Eddy Arnold,
he was now working with the new number-one country singer, Hank Snow. Parker
booked Presley on Snow's February tour. When the tour reached Odessa, Texas, a 19-year-old Roy Orbison saw Presley for the first time:
"His energy was incredible, his instinct was just amazing. ... I just
didn't know what to make of it. There was just no reference point in the
culture to compare it." Presley made his television debut on March 3 on
the KSLA-TV broadcast of Louisiana Hayride. Soon after,
he failed an audition for Arthur
Godfrey's Talent Scouts on
the CBS television network. By August, Sun had
released ten sides credited to "Elvis Presley, Scotty and Bill"; on
the latest recordings, the trio were joined by a drummer. Some of the songs,
like "That's All Right", were in what one Memphis journalist
described as the "R&B idiom of negro field jazz"; others, like
"Blue Moon of Kentucky", were "more in the country field",
"but there was a curious blending of the two different musics in
both". This blend of styles made it difficult for Presley's music to find
radio airplay. According to Neal, many country-music disc jockeys would not
play it because he sounded too much like a black artist and none of the
rhythm-and-blues stations would touch him because "he sounded too much
like a hillbilly." The blend came to be known as rockabilly. At the time, Presley was
variously billed as "The King of Western Bop", "The Hillbilly
Cat", and "The Memphis Flash".
Presley renewed Neal's management
contract in August 1955, simultaneously appointing Parker as his special
adviser. The group maintained an extensive touring schedule throughout the
second half of the year. Neal
recalled, "It was almost frightening, the reaction that came to Elvis from
the teenaged boys. So many of them, through some sort of jealousy, would
practically hate him. There were occasions in some towns in Texas when we'd
have to be sure to have a police guard because somebody'd always try to take a
crack at him. They'd get a gang and try to waylay him or something." The
trio became a quartet when Hayride drummer Fontana joined as a full
member. In mid-October, they played a few shows in support of Bill Haley, whose "Rock Around
the Clock" had been a number-one hit the previous year. Haley observed
that Presley had a natural feel for rhythm, and advised him to sing fewer
ballads.
At the Country Disc Jockey
Convention in early November, Presley was voted the year's most promising male
artist. Several record companies had by now shown interest in signing him.
After three major labels made offers of up to $25,000, Parker and Phillips
struck a deal with RCA Victor on November 21 to acquire Presley's
Sun contract for an unprecedented $40,000. Presley, at 20, was still a minor,
so his father signed the contract. Parker arranged with the owners of Hill and Range Publishing, Jean and Julian Aberbach, to create two
entities, Elvis Presley Music and Gladys Music, to handle all of the new
material recorded by Presley. Songwriters were obliged to forego one third of
their customary royalties in exchange for having him perform their
compositions. By December, RCA had begun to heavily promote its new singer, and
before month's end had reissued many of his Sun recordings.
Commercial breakout and
controversy (1956-58)
First national TV appearances and
debut album
On January 10, 1956, Presley made
his first recordings for RCA in Nashville. Extending the singer's by now
customary backup of Moore, Black, and Fontana, RCA enlisted pianist Floyd Cramer, guitarist Chet Atkins, and three background
singers, including Gordon Stoker of the popular Jordanaires quartet, to fill out the sound. The
session produced the moody, unusual "Heartbreak Hotel", released as a
single on January 27. Parker finally brought Presley to national television,
booking him on CBS's Stage
Show for six appearances over
two months. The program, produced in New York, was hosted on alternate weeks by
big band leaders and brothers Tommy and Jimmy
Dorsey. After his first appearance, on January 28, Presley stayed in town to
record at RCA's New York studio. The sessions yielded eight songs, including a
cover of Carl Perkins' rockabilly
anthem "Blue Suede Shoes". In February, Presley's "I Forgot to
Remember to Forget", a Sun recording initially released the previous
August, reached the top of the Billboard country chart. Neal's contract was
terminated and, on March 2, Parker became Presley's manager.
RCA Victor released Presley's self-titled debut album on March 23. Joined by five previously
unreleased Sun recordings, its seven recently recorded tracks were of a broad
variety. There were two country songs and a bouncy pop tune. The others would
centrally define the evolving sound of rock
and roll: "Blue Suede Shoes"—"an improvement over Perkins' in
almost every way", according to critic Robert
Hilburn—and three R&B numbers that had been part of Presley's stage
repertoire for some time, covers of Little
Richard, Ray Charles, and The Drifters. As described by Hilburn,
these "were the most revealing of all. Unlike many white artists ... who
watered down the gritty edges of the original R&B versions of songs in the
'50s, Presley reshaped them. He not only injected the tunes with his own vocal
character but also made guitar, not piano, the lead instrument in all three
cases." It became the first rock-and-roll album to top the Billboard chart, a position it held for 10
weeks. While Presley was not an innovative instrumentalist like Moore or
contemporary African American rockers Bo
Diddley and Chuck Berry, cultural historian
Gilbert B. Rodman argues that the album's cover image, "of Elvis having
the time of his life on stage with
a guitar in his hands played
a crucial role in positioning the guitar...as the instrument that best captured
the style and spirit of this new music."
Milton Berle Show and “Hound Dog”
Presley made the first of two
appearances on NBC's Milton
Berle Show on April 3. His
performance, on the deck of the USS Hancock in San
Diego, prompted cheers and screams from an audience of sailors and their dates.
A few days later, a flight taking Presley and his band to Nashville for a
recording session left all three badly shaken when an engine died and the plane
almost went down over Arkansas. Twelve weeks after its original release,
"Heartbreak Hotel" became Presley's first number-one pop hit. In late
April, Presley began a two-week residency at the New Frontier Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. The shows were poorly
received by the conservative, middle-aged hotel guests—"like a jug of corn
liquor at a champagne party", wrote a critic for Newsweek. Amid his Vegas
tenure, Presley, who had serious acting ambitions, signed a seven-year contract
with Paramount Pictures. He began
a tour of the Midwest in mid-May, taking in 15 cities in as many days. He had
attended several shows by Freddie
Bell and the Bellboys in Vegas,
and was struck by their cover of "Hound Dog", a hit in 1953 for blues
singer Big Mama Thornton by songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. It
became the new closing number of his act. After a show in La Crosse, Wisconsin, an urgent
message on the letterhead of the local Catholic diocese's newspaper was sent to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. It warned that
"Presley is a definite danger to the security of the United States. ...
[His] actions and motions were such as to rouse the sexual passions of teenaged
youth. ... After the show, more than 1,000 teenagers tried to gang into
Presley's room at the auditorium. ... Indications of the harm Presley did just
in La Crosse were the two high school girls ... whose abdomen and thigh had
Presley's autograph."
The second Milton Berle Show appearance came on June 5 at NBC's
Hollywood studio, amid another hectic tour. Berle persuaded the singer to leave
his guitar backstage, advising, "Let 'em see you, son." During the
performance, Presley abruptly halted an uptempo rendition of "Hound
Dog" with a wave of his arm and launched into a slow, grinding version
accentuated with energetic, exaggerated body movements. Presley's gyrations
created a storm of controversy. Television critics were outraged: Jack Gould of The
New York Times wrote,
"Mr. Presley has no discernible singing ability. ... His phrasing, if it
can be called that, consists of the stereotyped variations that go with a
beginner's aria in a bathtub. ... His one specialty is an accented movement of
the body ... primarily identified with the repertoire of the blond bombshells
of the burlesque runway." Ben Gross of the New York Daily News opined that popular music "has
reached its lowest depths in the 'grunt and groin' antics of one Elvis Presley.
... Elvis, who rotates his pelvis ... gave an exhibition that was suggestive
and vulgar, tinged with the kind of animalism that should be confined to dives
and bordellos". Ed Sullivan,
whose own variety show was the nation's most popular, declared him "unfit
for family viewing". To Presley's displeasure, he soon found himself being
referred to as "Elvis the Pelvis", which he called "one of the
most childish expressions I ever heard, comin' from an adult."
Steve Allen Show and first
Sullivan appearance
The Berle shows drew such high
ratings that Presley was booked for a July 1 appearance on NBC's Steve Allen Show in New York. Allen, no fan of rock and
roll, introduced a "new Elvis" in a white bow tie and black tails.
Presley sang "Hound Dog" for less than a minute to a basset hound wearing a top hat and bow tie. As
described by television historian Jake Austen, "Allen thought Presley was
talentless and absurd... [he] set things up so that Presley would show his
contrition". Allen, for his part, later wrote that he found Presley's
"strange, gangly, country-boy charisma, his hard-to-define cuteness, and
his charming eccentricity intriguing" and simply worked the singer into
the customary "comedy fabric" of his program. Presley would refer
back to the Allen show as the most ridiculous performance of his career. Later
that night, he appeared on Hy
Gardner Calling, a popular local TV show. Pressed on whether he had learned
anything from the criticism to which he was being subjected, Presley responded,
"No, I haven't, I don't feel like I'm doing anything wrong. ... I don't
see how any type of music would have any bad influence on people when it's only
music. ... I mean, how would rock 'n' roll music make anyone rebel against
their parents?"
The next day, Presley recorded
"Hound Dog", along with "Any Way You Want Me" and
"Don't Be Cruel". The
Jordanaires sang harmony, as they
had on The Steve Allen Show;
they would work with Presley through the 1960s. A few days later, the singer
made an outdoor concert appearance in Memphis at which he announced, "You
know, those people in New York are not gonna change me none. I'm gonna show you
what the real Elvis is like tonight." In August, a judge in Jacksonville, Florida, ordered Presley
to tame his act. Throughout the following performance, he largely kept still,
except for wiggling his little finger suggestively in mockery of the order. The
single pairing "Don't Be Cruel" with "Hound Dog" ruled the
top of the charts for 11 weeks—a mark that would not be surpassed for 36 years.
Recording sessions for Presley's second album took place in Hollywood during
the first week of September. Leiber and Stoller, the writers of "Hound
Dog", contributed "Love Me".
Allen's show with Presley had,
for the first time, beaten CBS's Ed
Sullivan Show in the ratings.
Sullivan, despite his June pronouncement, booked the singer for three
appearances for an unprecedented $50,000. The first, on September 9, 1956, was
seen by approximately 60 million viewers—a record 82.6 percent of the
television audience. Actor Charles
Laughton hosted the show, filling
in while Sullivan recuperated from a car accident. Presley appeared in two
segments that night from CBS
Television City in Los Angeles.
According to Elvis legend, Presley was shot only from the waist up. Watching
clips of the Allen and Berle shows with his producer, Sullivan had opined that
Presley "got some kind of device hanging down below the crotch of his
pants–so when he moves his legs back and forth you can see the outline of his cock.
... I think it's a Coke bottle. ... We just can't have this on a Sunday night.
This is a family show!" Sullivan
publicly told TV Guide,
"As for his gyrations, the whole thing can be controlled with camera
shots." In fact, Presley was shown head-to-toe in the first and second
shows. Though the camerawork was relatively discreet during his debut, with
leg-concealing closeups when he danced, the studio audience reacted in
customary style: screaming. Presley's performance of his forthcoming single,
the ballad "Love Me Tender", prompted a record-shattering million
advance orders. More than any other single event, it was this first appearance
on The Ed Sullivan Show that made Presley a national celebrity
of barely precedented proportions.
Accompanying Presley's rise to
fame, a cultural shift was taking place that he both helped inspire and came to
symbolize. Igniting the "biggest pop craze since Glenn Miller and Frank
Sinatra ... Presley brought
rock'n'roll into the mainstream of popular culture", writes historian
Marty Jezer. "As Presley set the artistic pace, other artists followed.
... Presley, more than anyone else, gave the young a belief in themselves as a
distinct and somehow unified generation—the first in America ever to feel the
power of an integrated youth culture."
Crazed crowds and movie debut
The audience response at
Presley's live shows became increasingly fevered. Moore recalled, "He'd
start out, 'You ain't nothin' but a Hound Dog,' and they'd just go to pieces.
They'd always react the same way. There'd be a riot every time." At the
two concerts he performed in September at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and
Dairy Show, 50 National Guardsmen were added to the police security to
prevent crowd trouble. Elvis,
Presley's second album, was released in October and quickly rose to number one.
Assessing the musical and cultural impact of Presley's recordings from
"That's All Right" through Elvis,
rock critic Dave Marsh wrote that "these records, more
than any others, contain the seeds of what rock & roll was, has been and
most likely what it may foreseeably become."
Presley returned to the Sullivan
show at its main studio in New York, hosted this time by its namesake, on
October 28. After the performance, crowds in Nashville and St. Louis burned him
in effigy. His first motion picture, Love
Me Tender, was released on November 21. Though he was not top billed, the
film's original title—The Reno Brothers—was changed to capitalize on his
latest number one record: "Love Me Tender" had hit the top of the
charts earlier that month. To further take advantage of Presley's popularity,
four musical numbers were added to what was originally a straight acting role.
The movie was panned by the critics but did very well at the box office.
Presley would receive top billing on every subsequent film he made.
On December 4, Presley dropped
into Sun Records where Carl Perkins and Jerry
Lee Lewis were recording and jammed with them. Though Phillips no longer
had the right to release any Presley material, he made sure the session was
captured on tape. The results became legendary as the "Million Dollar
Quartet" recordings—Johnny Cash was
long thought to have played as well, but he was present only briefly at
Phillips' instigation for a photo opportunity. The year ended with a front-page
story in The Wall Street
Journal reporting that
Presley merchandise had brought in $22 million on top of his record sales, and Billboard's declaration that he
had placed more songs in the top 100 than any other artist since records were
first charted. In his first full year on RCA, one of the music industry's
largest companies, Presley had accounted for over 50 percent of the label's
singles sales.
Leiber and Stoller collaboration and draft notice
Presley made his third and final Ed Sullivan Show appearance on January 6, 1957—on this
occasion indeed shot only down to the waist. Some commentators have claimed
that Parker orchestrated an appearance of censorship to generate publicity. In
any event, as critic Greil Marcus describes, Presley "did not tie
himself down. Leaving behind the bland clothes he had worn on the first two
shows, he stepped out in the outlandish costume of a pasha, if not a harem
girl. From the make-up over his eyes, the hair falling in his face, the
overwhelmingly sexual cast of his mouth, he was playing Rudolph Valentino in The
Sheik, with all stops out." To close, displaying his range and defying
Sullivan's wishes, Presley sang a gentle black spiritual, "Peace in the
Valley". At the end of the show, Sullivan declared Presley "a real
decent, fine boy". Two days
later, the Memphis draft board announced that Presley would be classified 1A and would probably be drafted sometime
that year.
Presley and
costar Judy Tyler in
the trailer for Jailhouse Rock, released
October 17, 1957
Each of the three Presley singles
released in the first half of 1957 went to number one: "Too Much",
"All Shook Up", and "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear". Already
an international star, he was attracting fans even where his music was not
officially released. Under the headline "Presley Records a Craze in
Soviet", The New York
Times reported that pressings
of his music on discarded X-ray plates were commanding high prices in
Leningrad. Between film shoots and recording sessions, the singer also found
time to purchase an 18-room mansion eight miles (13 km) south of downtown
Memphis for himself and his parents: Graceland. Loving You—the soundtrack to his second film, released in July—was
Presley's third straight number one album. The title track was written by Leiber
and Stoller, who were then retained to write four of the six songs recorded at
the sessions for Jailhouse
Rock, Presley's next movie. The songwriting team effectively produced the Jailhouse sessions and developed a close working
relationship with Presley, who came to regard them as his "good-luck
charm". The title track was yet another number one hit, as was
the Jailhouse Rock EP.
Presley undertook three brief
tours during the year, continuing to generate a crazed audience response. A
Detroit newspaper suggested that "the trouble with going to see Elvis
Presley is that you're liable to get killed." Villanova students pelted him with eggs in
Philadelphia, and in Vancouver, the crowd rioted after the end of the show,
destroying the stage. Frank Sinatra, who had famously inspired the swooning of
teenaged girls in the 1940s, condemned the new musical phenomenon. In a
magazine article, he decried rock and roll as "brutal, ugly, degenerate,
vicious. ... It fosters almost totally negative and destructive reactions in
young people. It smells phoney and false. It is sung, played and written, for
the most part, by cretinous goons. ... This rancid-smelling aphrodisiac I
deplore." Asked for a response, Presley said, "I admire the man. He
has a right to say what he wants to say. He is a great success and a fine
actor, but I think he shouldn't have said it. ... This is a trend, just the
same as he faced when he started years ago."
Leiber and Stoller were again in
the studio for the recording of Elvis'
Christmas Album. Toward the end of the session, they wrote a song on the
spot at Presley's request: "Santa Claus Is Back In Town", an
innuendo-laden blues. The holiday release stretched Presley's string of number
one albums to four and would eventually become the best selling Christmas album of all
time. After the session, Moore and Black—drawing only modest weekly salaries,
sharing in none of Presley's massive financial success—resigned. Though they
were brought back on a per diem basis a few weeks later, it was clear that they
had not been part of Presley's inner circle for some time. On December 20,
Presley received his draft notice. He was granted a deferment to finish the
forthcoming King Creole,
in which $350,000 had already been invested by Paramount and producer Hal Wallis. A couple of weeks into the
new year, "Don't", another Leiber and Stoller tune, became Presley's
tenth number one seller. It had been only 21 months since "Heartbreak
Hotel" had brought him to the top for the first time. Recording sessions
for the King Creole soundtrack were held in Hollywood mid-January.
Leiber and Stoller provided three songs and were again on hand, but it would be
the last time they worked closely with Presley. A studio session on February 1
marked another ending: it was the final occasion on which Black was to perform
with Presley. He died in 1965.
Military service and mother’s death (1958-60)
On March 24, Presley was inducted
into the U.S. Army as a private at Fort
Chaffee, near Fort Smith,
Arkansas. His arrival was a major media event. Hundreds of people descended on
Presley as he stepped from the bus; photographers then accompanied him into the
base. Presley announced that he was looking forward to his military stint,
saying he did not want to be treated any differently from anyone else:
"The Army can do anything it wants with me."
Soon after Presley commenced
basic training at Fort Hood,
Texas, he received a visit from Eddie Fadal, a businessman he had met on tour.
According to Fadal, Presley had become convinced his career was
finished—"He firmly believed that." During a two-week leave in early
June, Presley cut five sides in Nashville. In early August, his mother was
diagnosed with hepatitis and her condition swiftly worsened. Presley, granted
emergency leave to visit her, arrived in Memphis on August 12. Two days later,
she died of heart failure, aged 46. Presley was devastated; their relationship
had remained extremely close—even into his adulthood, they would use baby talk
with each other and Presley would address her with pet names.
After training, Presley joined
the 3rd Armored Division in Friedberg,
Germany, on October 1. Introduced to amphetamines by a sergeant while on
maneuvers, he became "practically evangelical about their
benefits"—not only for energy, but for "strength" and weight
loss, as well—and many of his friends in the outfit joined him in indulging. The Army also introduced Presley
to karate, which he studied seriously, later including it in his live
performances. Fellow soldiers have attested to Presley's wish to be seen as an
able, ordinary soldier, despite his fame, and to his generosity. He donated his
Army pay to charity, purchased TV sets for the base, and bought an extra set of
fatigues for everyone in his outfit.
While in Friedberg, Presley met
14-year-old Priscilla Beaulieu.
They would eventually marry after a seven-and-a-half-year courtship. In her
autobiography, Priscilla says that despite his worries that it would ruin his
career, Parker convinced Presley that to gain popular respect, he should serve
his country as a regular soldier rather than in Special Services, where he
would have been able to give some musical performances and remain in touch with
the public. Media reports echoed Presley's concerns about his career, but RCA
producer Steve Sholes and Freddy
Bienstock of Hill and Range had
carefully prepared for his two-year hiatus. Armed with a substantial amount of
unreleased material, they kept up a regular stream of successful releases.
Between his induction and discharge, Presley had ten top 40 hits, including
"Wear My Ring Around Your Neck", the best-selling "Hard Headed
Woman", and "One Night" in 1958, and "(Now and Then
There's) A Fool Such as I" and the number one "A Big Hunk o'
Love" in 1959. RCA also generated four albums compiling old material
during this period, most successfully Elvis'
Golden Records (1958), which
hit number three on the LP chart.
Focus on movies (1960-67)
Elvis Is Back
Presley returned to the United
States on March 2, 1960, and was honorably discharged with the rank of sergeant
on March 5. The train that
carried him from New Jersey to Tennessee was mobbed all the way,
and Presley was called upon to appear at scheduled stops to please his fans. On
the night of March 20, he entered RCA's
Nashville studio to cut tracks
for a new album along with a single—"Stuck on You" was rushed into
release and swiftly became a number one hit. Another Nashville session two
weeks later yielded a pair of his best-selling singles, the ballads "It's
Now or Never" and "Are You Lonesome Tonight?", along with the
rest of Elvis Is Back! The album features several songs
described by Greil Marcus as full of Chicago
blues "menace, driven by
Presley's own super-miked acoustic guitar, brilliant playing by Scotty Moore,
and demonic sax work from Boots
Randolph. Elvis's singing wasn't sexy, it was pornographic." As a whole,
the record "conjured up the vision of a performer who could be all
things", in the words of music historian John Robertson: "a
flirtatious teenage idol with a heart of gold; a tempestuous, dangerous lover;
a gutbucket blues singer; a sophisticated nightclub entertainer; [a] raucous
rocker". Released only days after recording was complete, it reached
number two on the album chart.
Presley returned to television on
May 12 as a guest on The Frank
Sinatra Timex Special—ironic for both stars, given Sinatra's not-so-distant
excoriation of rock and roll. Also known as Welcome
Home Elvis, the show had been taped in late March, the only time all year
Presley performed in front of an audience. Parker secured an unheard-of
$125,000 fee for eight minutes of singing. The broadcast drew an enormous
viewership.
G.I. Blues, the
soundtrack to Presley's first film since his return, was a number one album in
October. His first LP of sacred material, His
Hand in Mine, followed two months later. It reached number 13 on the U.S.
pop chart and number 3 in Great Britain, remarkable figures for a gospel album.
In February 1961, Presley performed two shows for a benefit event in Memphis,
on behalf of 24 local charities. During a luncheon preceding the event, RCA
presented him with a plaque certifying worldwide sales of over 75 million
records. A 12-hour Nashville session in mid-March yielded nearly all of
Presley's next studio album, Something
for Everybody. As described by John Robertson, it exemplifies the Nashville sound, the restrained,
cosmopolitan style that would define country music in the 1960s. Presaging much
of what was to come from Presley himself over the next half-decade, the album
is largely "a pleasant, unthreatening pastiche of the music that had once
been Elvis's birthright." It would be his sixth number one LP. Another
benefit concert, raising money for a Pearl
Harbor memorial, was staged on
March 25, in Hawaii. It was to be
Presley's last public performance for seven years.
Lost in Hollywood
Parker had by now pushed Presley
into a heavy moviemaking schedule, focused on formulaic, modestly budgeted
musical comedies. Presley at first insisted on pursuing more serious roles, but
when two films in a more dramatic vein—Flaming Star (1960) and Wild in the Country (1961)—were less commercially
successful, he reverted to the formula. Among the 27 movies he made during the
1960s, there were few further exceptions. His films were almost universally
panned; one critic dismissed them as a "pantheon of bad taste".
Nonetheless, they were virtually all profitable. Hal Wallis, who produced nine of them,
declared, "A Presley picture is the only sure thing in Hollywood."
Of Presley's films in the 1960s,
15 were accompanied by soundtrack albums and another 5 by soundtrack EPs. The
movies' rapid production and release schedules—he frequently starred in three a
year—affected his music. According to Jerry Leiber, the soundtrack formula was
already evident before Presley left for the Army: "three ballads, one
medium-tempo [number], one up-tempo, and one break blues boogie". As the
decade wore on, the quality of the soundtrack songs grew "progressively
worse". Julie Parrish, who
appeared in Paradise, Hawaiian
Style (1966), says that he
hated many of the songs chosen for his films. The Jordanaires' Gordon Stoker
describes how Presley would retreat from the studio microphone: "The
material was so bad that he felt like he couldn't sing it." Most of the
movie albums featured a song or two from respected writers such as the team of Doc Pomus and Mort
Shuman. But by and large, according to biographer Jerry Hopkins, the numbers seemed to
be "written on order by men who never really understood Elvis or rock and
roll." Regardless of the songs' quality, it has been argued that Presley
generally sang them well, with commitment. Critic Dave Marsh heard the
opposite: "Presley isn't trying, probably the wisest course in the face of
material like 'No Room to Rumba in a Sports Car' and 'Rock-a-Hula Baby.'"
In the first half of the decade,
three of Presley's soundtrack albums hit number one on the pop charts, and a
few of his most popular songs came from his films, such as "Can't Help
Falling in Love" (1961) and "Return to Sender" (1962).
("Viva Las Vegas", the title track to the 1964 film, was a minor hit
as a B-side, and became truly popular only later.) But, as with artistic merit,
the commercial returns steadily diminished. During a five-year span—1964
through 1968—Presley had only one top-ten hit: "Crying in the Chapel"
(1965), a gospel number recorded back in 1960. As for non-movie albums, between
the June 1962 release of Pot
Luck and the November 1968
release of the soundtrack to the television special that signaled his comeback,
only one LP of new material by Presley was issued: the gospel album How Great Thou Art (1967). It won him his first Grammy Award, for Best Sacred
Performance. As Marsh described, Presley was "arguably the greatest white
gospel singer of his time [and] really the last rock & roll artist to make
gospel as vital a component of his musical personality as his secular
songs."
Shortly before Christmas 1966,
more than seven years since they first met, Presley proposed to Priscilla
Beaulieu. They were married on May 1, 1967, in a brief ceremony in their suite
at the Aladdin Hotel in Las Vegas. The flow of formulaic movies and
assembly-line soundtracks rolled on. It was not until October 1967, when the Clambake soundtrack LP registered record low
sales for a new Presley album, that RCA executives recognized a problem.
"By then, of course, the damage had been done", as historians Connie
Kirchberg and Marc Hendrickx put it. "Elvis was viewed as a joke by
serious music lovers and a has-been to all but his most loyal fans."
Comeback (1968-73)
Elvis: the ’68 Comeback Special
The '68 Comeback Special produced "one of the most famous
images" of Presley.
Taken on June 29, 1968, it was adapted for the cover
of Rolling Stone in July 1969.
Presley's only child, Lisa Marie, was born on February 1,
1968, during a period when he had grown deeply unhappy with his career. Of the eight Presley singles
released between January 1967 and May 1968, only two charted in the top 40, and
none higher than number 28. His forthcoming soundtrack album, Speedway, would die at number
82 on the Billboard chart. Parker had already shifted his
plans to television, where Presley had not appeared since the Sinatra Timex
show in 1960. He maneuvered a deal with NBC that committed the network to both
finance a theatrical feature and broadcast a Christmas special.
Recorded in late June in Burbank, California, the special,
called simply Elvis, aired
on December 3, 1968. Later known as the '68 Comeback Special, the show featured
lavishly staged studio productions as well as songs performed with a band in
front of a small audience—Presley's first live performances since 1961. The
live segments saw Presley clad in tight black leather, singing and playing
guitar in an uninhibited style reminiscent of his early rock-and-roll days.
Director and coproducer Steve
Binder had worked hard to
reassure the nervous singer and to produce a show that was far from the hour of
Christmas songs Parker had originally planned. The show, NBC's highest rated
that season, captured 42 percent of the total viewing audience. Jon Landau of Eye magazine remarked, "There is
something magical about watching a man who has lost himself find his way back
home. He sang with the kind of power people no longer expect of rock 'n' roll
singers. He moved his body with a lack of pretension and effort that must have
made Jim Morrison green with envy." Dave Marsh
calls the performance one of "emotional grandeur and historical
resonance."
By January 1969, the single
"If I Can Dream", written for the special, reached number 12. The soundtrack album broke into the top ten. According to
friend Jerry Schilling, the
special reminded Presley of what "he had not been able to do for years,
being able to choose the people; being able to choose what songs and not being
told what had to be on the soundtrack. ... He was out of prison, man."
Binder said of Presley's reaction, "I played Elvis the 60-minute show, and
he told me in the screening room, 'Steve, it's the greatest thing I've ever
done in my life. I give you my word I will never sing a song I don't believe
in.'"
Buoyed by the experience of the
Comeback Special, Presley engaged in a prolific series of recording sessions at American Sound Studio, which led to
the acclaimed From Elvis in
Memphis. Released in June 1969, it was his first secular, non-soundtrack
album from a dedicated period in the studio in eight years. As described by
Dave Marsh, it is "a masterpiece in which Presley immediately catches up
with pop music trends that had seemed to pass him by during the movie years. He
sings country songs, soul songs and rockers with real conviction, a stunning
achievement." The
album featured the hit single "In the Ghetto", issued in April, which
reached number three on the pop chart—Presley's first non-gospel top ten hit
since "Bossa Nova Baby" in 1963. Further hit singles were culled from
the American Sound sessions: "Suspicious Minds", "Don't Cry
Daddy", and "Kentucky Rain".
Presley was keen to resume
regular live performing. Following the success of the Comeback Special, offers
came in from around the world. The London
Palladium offered Parker $28,000
for a one-week engagement. He responded, "That's fine for me, now how much
can you get for Elvis?" In May, the brand new International Hotel in Las Vegas, boasting the largest
showroom in the city, announced that it had booked Presley. He was scheduled to
perform 57 shows over four weeks beginning July 31. Moore, Fontana, and the
Jordanaires declined to participate, afraid of losing the lucrative session
work they had in Nashville. Presley assembled new, top-notch accompaniment, led
by guitarist James Burton and including two gospel groups, The Imperials and Sweet
Inspirations. Nonetheless, he was nervous: his only previous Las Vegas
engagement, in 1956, had been dismal. Parker, who intended to make Presley's
return the show business event of the year, oversaw a major promotional push.
For his part, hotel owner Kirk
Kerkorian arranged to send his
own plane to New York to fly in rock journalists for the debut performance.
Presley took to the stage without
introduction. The audience of 2,200, including many celebrities, gave him a
standing ovation before he sang a note and another after his performance. A
third followed his encore, "Can't Help Falling in Love" (a song that
would be his closing number for much of the 1970s). At a press conference after the show,
when a journalist referred to him as "The King", Presley gestured
toward Fats Domino, who was
taking in the scene. "No," Presley said, "that's the real king
of rock and roll." The next day, Parker's negotiations with the hotel
resulted in a five-year contract for Presley to play each February and August,
at an annual salary of $1 million. Newsweek commented, "There are several
unbelievable things about Elvis, but the most incredible is his staying power
in a world where meteoric careers fade like shooting stars." Rolling Stone called Presley "supernatural, his
own resurrection." In November, Presley's final non-concert movie, Change of Habit, opened. The
double album From Memphis To
Vegas/From Vegas To Memphis came
out the same month; the first LP consisted of live performances from the
International, the second of more cuts from the American Sound sessions.
"Suspicious Minds" reached the top of the charts—Presley's first U.S.
pop number one in over seven years, and his last.
Cassandra Peterson, later
television's Elvira, met Presley during this period in Las Vegas, where she was
working as a showgirl. She recalls of their encounter, "He was so
anti-drug when I met him. I mentioned to him that I smoked marijuana, and he
was just appalled. He said, 'Don't ever do that again.'" Presley was not
only deeply opposed to recreational drugs, he also rarely drank. Several of his
family members had been alcoholics, a fate he intended to avoid.
Back on tour and meeting Nixon
Presley returned to the
International early in 1970 for the first of the year's two month-long
engagements, performing two shows a night. Recordings from these shows were
issued on the album On Stage.
In late February, Presley performed six attendance-record–breaking shows at the Houston Astrodome. In April, the
single "The Wonder of You" was issued—a number one hit in Great
Britain, it topped the U.S. adult
contemporary chart, as well. MGM filmed
rehearsal and concert footage at the International during August for the
documentary Elvis: That's the
Way It Is. Presley was by now performing in a jumpsuit, which would become
a trademark of his live act. During this engagement, he was threatened with
murder unless $50,000 was paid. Presley had been the target of many threats
since the 1950s, often without his knowledge. The FBI took
the threat seriously and security was stepped up for the next two shows.
Presley went onstage with a Derringer in his right boot and a .45 pistol in
his waistband, but the concerts went off without incident.
The album That's the Way It Is, produced
to accompany the documentary and featuring both studio and live recordings,
marked a stylistic shift. As music historian John Robertson notes, "The
authority of Presley's singing helped disguise the fact that the album stepped
decisively away from the American-roots inspiration of the Memphis sessions
towards a more middle-of-the-road sound. With country put on the back burner,
and soul and R&B left in Memphis, what was left was very classy, very clean
white pop—perfect for the Las Vegas crowd, but a definite retrograde step for
Elvis." After the end of his International engagement on September 7,
Presley embarked on a week-long concert tour, largely of the South, his first
since 1958. Another week-long tour, of the West Coast, followed in November.
Presley meets
U.S. President Richard Nixon
in the White House Oval Office,
December 21, 1970
On December 21, 1970, Presley
engineered a meeting with President Richard
Nixon at the White House, where
he expressed his patriotism and his contempt for the hippie drug culture. He asked Nixon for a Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs badge, to add to similar
items he had begun collecting and to signify official sanction of his patriotic
efforts. Nixon, who apparently found the encounter awkward, expressed a belief
that Presley could send a positive message to young people and that it was
therefore important he "retain his credibility". Presley told Nixon
that The Beatles, whose songs he
regularly performed in concert during the era, exemplified what he saw as a
trend of anti-Americanism and drug abuse in popular culture. (Presley and his
friends had had a four-hour get-together with The Beatles five years earlier.)
On hearing reports of the meeting, Paul
McCartney later said that he
"felt a bit betrayed. ... The great joke was that we were taking [illegal]
drugs, and look what happened to him", a reference to Presley's death,
hastened by prescription drug abuse.
The U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce named Presley one of its annual Ten
Most Outstanding Young Men of the Nation on January 16, 1971. Not long after,
the City of Memphis named the stretch of Highway
51 South on which Graceland is
located "Elvis Presley Boulevard". The same year, Presley became the
first rock and roll singer to be awarded the Lifetime
Achievement Award (then known as
the Bing Crosby Award) by the National
Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the Grammy Award organization. Three
new, non-movie Presley studio albums were released in 1971, as many as had come
out over the previous eight years. Best received by critics was Elvis Country, a concept record that focused on genre standards. The
biggest seller was Elvis Sings
the Wonderful World of Christmas, "the truest statement of all",
according to Greil Marcus. "In the midst of ten painfully genteel
Christmas songs, every one sung with appalling sincerity and humility, one
could find Elvis tom-catting his way through six blazing minutes of 'Merry
Christmas, Baby,' a raunchy old Charles
Brown blues. ... If [Presley's]
sin was his lifelessness, it was his sinfulness that brought him to life".
Marriage breakdown and Aloha from
Hawaii
MGM again filmed
Presley in April 1972, this time for Elvis
on Tour, which went on to win the Golden
Globe Award for Best Documentary Film that
year. His gospel album He
Touched Me, released that month, would earn him his second Grammy Award,
for Best Inspirational Performance. A 14-date tour commenced with an
unprecedented four consecutive sold-out shows at New York's Madison Square Garden. The evening
concert on July 10 was recorded and issued in LP form a week later. Elvis: As Recorded at Madison
Square Garden became one of
Presley's biggest-selling albums. After the tour, the single "Burning
Love" was released—Presley's last top ten hit on the U.S. pop chart.
"The most exciting single Elvis has made since 'All Shook Up'", wrote
rock critic Robert Christgau.
"Who else could make 'It's coming closer, the flames are now licking my
body' sound like an assignation with James
Brown's backup band?"
Presley in Aloha from Hawaii, broadcast
live via satellite on January 14, 1973.
The singer himself came up with his
famous outfit's eagle motif,
as "something that would say 'America' to the
world."
Presley and his
wife, meanwhile, had become increasingly distant, barely cohabiting. In 1971,
an affair he had with Joyce Bova resulted—unbeknownst to him—in her pregnancy
and an abortion. He often raised the possibility of her moving in to Graceland,
saying that he was likely to leave Priscilla. The
Presleys separated on February 23, 1972, after Priscilla disclosed her
relationship with Mike Stone, a karate instructor Presley had recommended to
her. Priscilla relates that when she told him, Presley "grabbed ... and
forcefully made love to" her, declaring, "This is how a real man
makes love to his woman." Five months later, Presley's new girlfriend, Linda Thompson, a songwriter and
one-time Memphis beauty queen, moved in with him. Presley and his wife filed
for divorce on August 18. According to Joe Moscheo of the Imperials, the
failure of Presley's marriage "was a blow from which he never
recovered."
In January 1973,
Presley performed two benefit concerts for the Kui Lee Cancer Fund in connection with a groundbreaking TV
special, Aloha from Hawaii.
The first show served as a practice run and backup should technical problems
affect the live broadcast two days later. Aired as scheduled on January 14, Aloha from Hawaii was the first global concert satellite
broadcast, reaching millions of viewers live and on tape delay. Presley's
costume became the most recognized example of the elaborate concert garb with
which his latter-day persona became closely associated. As described by Bobbie Ann Mason, "At the end of
the show, when he spreads out his American Eagle cape, with the full stretched
wings of the eagle studded on the back, he becomes a god figure." The accompanying double album, released in
February, went to number one and eventually sold over 5 million copies in the
United States. It proved to be Presley's last U.S. number one pop album during
his lifetime.
At a midnight
show the same month, four men rushed onto the stage in an apparent attack.
Security men leapt to Presley's defense, and the singer's karate instinct took
over as he ejected one invader from the stage himself. Following the show, he
became obsessed with the idea that the men had been sent by Mike Stone to kill
him. Though they were shown to have been only overexuberant fans, he raged,
"There's too much pain in me ... Stone [must] die." His outbursts
continued with such intensity that a physician was unable to calm him, despite
administering large doses of medication. After another two full days of raging, Red West, his friend and bodyguard,
felt compelled to get a price for a contract killing and was relieved when
Presley decided, "Aw hell, let's just leave it for now. Maybe it's a bit
heavy."
Health deterioration and death
(1973-77)
Medical crises and last studio
sessions
Presley's divorce took effect on
October 9, 1973. He was now becoming increasingly unwell. Twice during the year
he overdosed on barbiturates,
spending three days in a coma in his hotel suite after the first incident.
Toward the end of 1973, he was hospitalized, semicomatose from the effects of Demerol addiction. According to his main
physician, Dr. George C. Nichopoulos,
Presley "felt that by getting [drugs] from a doctor, he wasn't the common
everyday junkie getting something off the street." Since his comeback, he
had staged more live shows with each passing year, and 1973 saw 168 concerts,
his busiest schedule ever. Despite his failing health, in 1974 he undertook
another intensive touring schedule.
Presley's condition declined
precipitously in September. Keyboardist Tony
Brown remembers the singer's
arrival at a University of
Maryland concert: "He fell
out of the limousine, to his knees. People jumped to help, and he pushed them
away like, 'Don't help me.' He walked on stage and held onto the mike for the
first thirty minutes like it was a post. Everybody's looking at each other
like, Is the tour gonna happen?" Guitarist John Wilkinson recalled,
"He was all gut. He was slurring. He was so fucked up. ... It was obvious
he was drugged. It was obvious there was something terribly wrong with his
body. It was so bad the words to the songs were barely intelligible. ... I
remember crying. He could barely get through the introductions". Wilkinson
recounted that a few nights later in Detroit, "I watched him in his
dressing room, just draped over a chair, unable to move. So often I thought,
'Boss, why don't you just cancel this tour and take a year off...?' I mentioned
something once in a guarded moment. He patted me on the back and said, 'It'll
be all right. Don't you worry about it.'" Presley continued to play to
sellout crowds. As cultural critic Marjorie
Garber describes, he was now
widely seen as a garish pop crooner: "in effect he had become Liberace. Even his fans were now
middle-aged matrons and blue-haired grandmothers."
On July 13, 1976, Vernon
Presley—who had become deeply involved in his son's financial affairs—fired
"Memphis Mafia" bodyguards Red West (Presley's friend since the
1950s), Sonny West, and David Hebler, citing the need to "cut back on
expenses". Presley was in Palm
Springs at the time, and some
suggest the singer was too cowardly to face the three himself. Another
associate of Presley's, John O'Grady, argued that the bodyguards were dropped
because their rough treatment of fans had prompted too many lawsuits. However,
Presley's stepbrother David Stanley has claimed that the bodyguards were fired because
they were becoming more outspoken about Presley's drug dependency. Presley and
Linda Thompson split in November, and he took up with a new girlfriend, Ginger Alden. He proposed to Alden and
gave her an engagement ring two months later, though several of his friends
later claimed that he had no serious intention of marrying again.
RCA, which had enjoyed a steady
stream of product from Presley for over a decade, grew anxious as his interest
in spending time in the studio waned. After a December 1973 session that
produced 18 songs, enough for almost two albums, he did not enter the studio in
1974. Parker sold RCA on another concert record, Elvis: As Recorded Live on Stage in
Memphis. Recorded on March 20, it included a version of "How Great
Thou Art" that would win Presley his third and final competitive Grammy
Award. (All three of his competitive Grammy wins—out of 14 total
nominations—were for gospel recordings.) Presley returned to the studio in
Hollywood in March 1975, but Parker's attempts to arrange another session
toward the end of the year were unsuccessful. In 1976, RCA sent a mobile studio
to Graceland that made possible two full-scale recording sessions at Presley's
home. Even in that comfortable context, the recording process was now a struggle
for him.
For all the concerns of his label
and manager, in studio sessions between July 1973 and October 1976, Presley
recorded virtually the entire contents of six albums. Though he was no longer a
major presence on the pop charts, five of those albums entered the top five of
the country chart, and three went to number one: Promised Land (1975), From Elvis Presley Boulevard,
Memphis, Tennessee (1976),
and Moody Blue (1977). The story was similar with his
singles—there were no major pop hits, but Presley was a significant force in
not just the country market, but on adult contemporary radio as well. Eight
studio singles from this period released during his lifetime were top ten hits
on one or both charts, four in 1974 alone. "My Boy" was a number one
adult contemporary hit in 1975, and "Moody Blue" topped the country
chart and reached the second spot on the adult contemporary chart in 1976.
Perhaps his most critically acclaimed recording of the era came that year, with
what Greil Marcus described as his "apocalyptic attack" on the soul
classic "Hurt". "If he felt the way he sounded", Dave Marsh
wrote of Presley's performance, "the wonder isn't that he had only a year
left to live but that he managed to survive that long."
Final year and death
Journalist Tony Scherman writes
that by early 1977, "Elvis Presley had become a grotesque caricature of
his sleek, energetic former self. Hugely overweight, his mind dulled by the
pharmacopoeia he daily ingested, he was barely able to pull himself through his
abbreviated concerts." In Alexandria,
Louisiana, the singer was on stage for less than an hour and "was
impossible to understand". Presley failed to appear in Baton Rouge; he was unable to get out
of his hotel bed, and the rest of the tour was cancelled. Despite the
accelerating deterioration of his health, he stuck to most touring commitments.
In Rapid City, South Dakota,
"he was so nervous on stage that he could hardly talk", according to
Presley historian Samuel Roy, and unable to "perform any significant
movement." Guralnick relates that fans "were becoming increasingly
voluble about their disappointment, but it all seemed to go right past Elvis,
whose world was now confined almost entirely to his room and his spiritualism books." A cousin, Billy Smith,
recalled how Presley would sit in his room and chat for hours, sometimes
recounting favorite Monty Python sketches and his own past escapades,
but more often gripped by paranoid obsessions that reminded Smith of Howard Hughes. "Way Down",
Presley's last single issued during his lifetime, came out on June 6. His final
concert was held in Indianapolis at Market
Square Arena, on June 26.
The book Elvis: What Happened?,
cowritten by the three bodyguards fired the previous year, was published on
August 1. It was the first
exposé to detail Presley's years of drug misuse. He was devastated by the book
and tried unsuccessfully to halt its release by offering money to the
publishers. By this point, he suffered from multiple ailments: glaucoma, high
blood pressure, liver damage, and an enlarged
colon, each aggravated—and possibly caused—by drug abuse.
Presley was scheduled to fly out
of Memphis on the evening of August 16, 1977, to begin another tour. That
afternoon, Alden discovered him unresponsive on his bathroom floor. Attempts to
revive him failed, and death was officially pronounced at 3:30 pm at
Baptist Memorial Hospital.
President Jimmy Carter issued a statement that credited
Presley with having "permanently changed the face of American popular
culture". Thousands of people gathered outside Graceland to view the open
casket. One of Presley's cousins, Billy Mann, accepted $18,000 to secretly
photograph the corpse; the picture appeared on the cover of the National Enquirer's
biggest-selling issue ever. Alden struck a $105,000 deal with the Enquirer for her story, but settled for less
when she broke her exclusivity agreement. Presley left her nothing in his will.
Presley's funeral was held at
Graceland, on Thursday, August 18. Outside the gates, a car plowed into a group
of fans, killing two women and critically injuring a third. Approximately
80,000 people lined the processional route to Forest Hill Cemetery, where Presley
was buried next to his mother. Within a few days, "Way Down" topped
the country and UK pop charts.
Following an attempt to steal the
singer's body in late August, the remains of both Elvis Presley and his mother
were reburied in Graceland's Meditation Garden on October 2. Since his death, there have been
numerous alleged sightings of Elvis. A long-standing theory among some fans is
that he faked his death. Fans have noted alleged discrepancies in the death
certificate, reports of a wax dummy in his original coffin and numerous
accounts of Presley planning a diversion so he could retire in peace.
Since 1977
Between 1977 and 1981, six
posthumously released singles by Presley were top ten country hits. Graceland
was opened to the public in 1982. Attracting over half a million visitors
annually, it is the second most-visited home in the United States, after the
White House. It was declared a National
Historic Landmark in 2006.
Presley has been inducted into
four music halls of fame: the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1986), the Country Music Hall of Fame (1998), the Gospel Music Hall of Fame (2001), and the Rockabilly Hall of Fame (2007). In 1984, he received the W. C. Handy Award from the Blues Foundation and the Academy of Country Music's first
Golden Hat Award. In 1987, he received the American
Music Awards' Award of Merit.
A Junkie XL remix of Presley's "A Little Less
Conversation" (credited as "Elvis Vs JXL") was used in a Nike advertising
campaign during the 2002 FIFA
World Cup. It topped the charts in over 20 countries, and was included in a
compilation of Presley's number one hits, ELV1S,
that was also an international success. In 2003, a remix of
"Rubberneckin'", a 1969 recording of Presley's, topped the U.S. sales
chart, as did a 50th-anniversary re-release of "That's All Right" the
following year. The latter was an outright hit in Great Britain, reaching
number three on the pop chart.
In 2005, another three reissued
singles, "Jailhouse Rock", "One Night"/"I Got
Stung", and "It's Now or Never", went to number one in the
United Kingdom. A total of 17 Presley singles were reissued during the year;
all made the British top five. For the fifth straight year, Forbes named Presley the top-earning deceased
celebrity, with a gross income of $45 million. He placed second in 2006, returned to the top spot the
next two years, and ranked fourth in 2009. The following year, he was ranked
second, with his highest annual income ever—$60 million—spurred by the
celebration of his 75th birthday and the launch of Cirque du Soleil's Viva Elvis show in Las Vegas. In November 2010, Viva Elvis: The Album was released, setting his voice to
newly recorded instrumental tracks. As of mid-2011, there were an estimated
15,000 licensed Presley products. He was again the second-highest-earning
deceased celebrity.
Presley holds the records for
most songs charting in Billboard's
top 40 and top 100: chart statistician Joel
Whitburn calculates the
respective totals as 104 and 151; Presley historian Adam Victor gives 114 and
138. Presley's rankings for top ten and number one hits vary depending on how
the double-sided "Hound Dog/Don't Be Cruel" and "Don't/I Beg of
You" singles, which precede the inception of Billboard's unified Hot 100 chart, are analyzed. According
to Whitburn's analysis, Presley and Madonna share the record for most top ten hits
with 38; per Billboard's
current assessment, he ranks second with 36. Whitburn and Billboard concur that The Beatles hold the
record for most number one hits with 20 and that Mariah Carey is second with 18. Whitburn has
Presley also with 18 and thus tied for second; Billboard has him third with 17. Presley retains
the record for cumulative weeks at number one: alone at 80, according to
Whitburn and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; tied with Carey at 79, according
to Billboard. He holds the
records for most British number one hits, with 21, and top ten hits, with 76.
Musical style
Influences
Presley's earliest musical
influence came from gospel. His
mother recalled that from the age of two, at the Assembly of God church in
Tupelo attended by the family, "he would slide down off my lap, run into
the aisle and scramble up to the platform. There he would stand looking at the
choir and trying to sing with them." In Memphis, Presley frequently attended
all-night gospel singings at the Ellis Auditorium, where groups such as the Statesmen Quartet led the music in a style that,
Guralnick suggests, sowed the seeds of Presley's future stage act:
“The Statesmen
were an electric combination ... featuring some of the most thrillingly emotive
singing and daringly unconventional showmanship in the entertainment world ...
dressed in suits that might have come out of the window of Lansky's. ... Bass
singer Jim Wetherington, known universally as the Big Chief, maintained a
steady bottom, ceaselessly jiggling first his left leg, then his right, with
the material of the pants leg ballooning out and shimmering. "He went
about as far as you could go in gospel music," said Jake Hess. "The
women would jump up, just like they do for the pop shows." Preachers
frequently objected to the lewd movements ... but audiences reacted with
screams and swoons.”
As a teenager, Presley's musical
interests were wide-ranging, and he was deeply informed about African American
musical idioms as well as white ones (see "Teenage life in Memphis").
Though he never had any formal training, he was blessed with a remarkable
memory, and his musical knowledge was already considerable by the time he made
his first professional recordings in 1954 at the age of 19. When Jerry Leiber
and Mike Stoller met him two years later, they were astonished at his
encyclopedic understanding of the blues. At a press conference the following
year, he proudly declared, "I know practically every religious song that's
ever been written."
Genres
Presley was a central figure in
the development of rockabilly,
according to music historians. "Rockabilly crystallized into a
recognizable style in 1954 with Elvis Presley's first release, on the Sun
label", writes Craig Morrison. Paul Friedlander describes the defining
elements of rockabilly, which he similarly characterizes as "essentially
... an Elvis Presley construction": "the raw, emotive, and slurred
vocal style and emphasis on rhythmic feeling [of] the blues with the string
band and strummed rhythm guitar [of] country". In "That's All
Right", the Presley trio's first record, Scotty Moore's guitar solo,
"a combination of Merle
Travis–style country finger-picking, double-stop slides from acoustic boogie,
and blues-based bent-note, single-string work, is a microcosm of this
fusion."
At RCA, Presley's rock and roll
sound grew distinct from rockabilly with group chorus vocals, more heavily
amplified electric guitars and a tougher, more intense manner. While he was
known for taking songs from various sources and giving them a rockabilly/rock
and roll treatment, he also recorded songs in other genres from early in his
career, from the pop standard "Blue Moon" at Sun to the country
ballad "How's the World Treating You?" on his second LP to the blues
of "Santa Claus Is Back In Town". In 1957, his first gospel record
was released, the four-song EP Peace
in the Valley. Certified as a million seller, it became the top-selling
gospel EP in recording history. Presley would record gospel periodically for
the rest of his life.
After his return from military
service in 1960, Presley continued to perform rock and roll, but the
characteristic style was substantially toned down. His first post-Army single,
the number one hit "Stuck on You", is typical of this shift. RCA
publicity materials referred to its "mild rock beat"; discographer
Ernst Jorgensen calls it "upbeat pop". The modern blues/R&B sound
captured so successfully on Elvis
Is Back! was essentially
abandoned for six years until such 1966–67 recordings as "Down in the
Alley" and "Hi-Heel Sneakers". The singer's output during most
of the 1960s emphasized pop music, often in the form of ballads such as
"Are You Lonesome Tonight?", a number one in 1960. While that was a
dramatic number, most of what Presley recorded for his movie soundtracks was in
a much lighter vein.
While Presley performed several
of his classic ballads for the '68 Comeback Special, the sound of the show was
dominated by aggressive rock and roll. He would record few new straight-ahead
rock and roll songs thereafter; as he explained, they were "hard to
find". A significant exception was "Burning Love", his last
major hit on the pop charts. Like his work of the 1950s, Presley's subsequent
recordings reworked pop and country songs, but in markedly different
permutations. His stylistic range now began to embrace a more contemporary rock sound
as well as soul and funk.
Much of Elvis In Memphis,
as well as "Suspicious Minds", cut at the same sessions, reflected
his new rock and soul fusion. In the mid-1970s, many of his singles found a
home on country radio, the field where he first became a star.
Vocal style and range
Music critic Henry Pleasants observes that "Elvis Presley has
been described variously as a baritone and a tenor. An extraordinary compass
... and a very wide range of vocal color have something to do with this
divergence of opinion." He identifies Presley as a high baritone,
calculating his range as two octaves and a third, "from the baritone low G
to the tenor high B, with an upward extension in falsetto to at least a D-flat.
Presley's best octave is in the middle, D-flat to D-flat, granting an extra
full step up or down." In Pleasants' view, his voice was "variable
and unpredictable" at the bottom, "often brilliant" at the top,
with the capacity for "full-voiced high Gs and As that an opera baritone
might envy." Scholar Lindsay Waters, who figures Presley's range as two
and a quarter octaves, emphasizes that "his voice had an emotional range
from tender whispers to sighs down to shouts, grunts, grumbles and sheer
gruffness that could move the listener from calmness and surrender, to fear.
His voice can not be measured in octaves, but in decibels; even that misses the
problem of how to measure delicate whispers that are hardly audible at
all." Presley was always "able to duplicate the open, hoarse,
ecstatic, screaming, shouting, wailing, reckless sound of the black
rhythm-and-blues and gospel singers," writes Pleasants, and also
demonstrated a remarkable ability to assimilate many other vocal styles.
Questions over cause of death
"Drug use was heavily
implicated" in Presley's death, writes Guralnick. "No one ruled out
the possibility of anaphylactic
shock brought on by the codeine pills ... to which he was known to
have had a mild allergy." A pair of lab reports filed two months later
each strongly suggested that polypharmacy was the primary cause of death; one
reported "fourteen drugs in Elvis' system, ten in significant
quantity." Forensic historian and pathologist Michael Baden views the
situation as complicated: "Elvis had had an enlarged heart for a long
time. That, together with his drug habit, caused his death. But he was
difficult to diagnose; it was a judgment call."
The competence and ethics of two
of the centrally involved medical professionals were seriously questioned.
Before the autopsy was complete and toxicology results known, medical examiner Dr. Jerry Francisco declared the cause
of death as cardiac arrhythmia, a
condition that can be determined only in someone who is still alive.
Allegations of a cover-up were widespread. While Presley's main physician, Dr.
Nichopoulos, was exonerated of criminal liability for the singer's death, the
facts were startling: "In the first eight months of 1977 alone, he had [prescribed]
more than 10,000 doses of sedatives, amphetamines and narcotics: all in Elvis's
name." His license was suspended for three months. It was permanently
revoked in the 1990s after the Tennessee Medical Board brought new charges of
over-prescription.
Amidst mounting pressure in 1994,
the Presley autopsy was reopened. Coroner Dr. Joseph Davis declared,
"There is nothing in any of the data that supports a death from drugs. In
fact, everything points to a sudden, violent heart
attack." Whether or not combined
drug intoxication was in fact the
cause, there is little doubt that polypharmacy contributed significantly to
Presley's premature death.
Racial issues
When Dewey Phillips first aired
"That's All Right" on Memphis radio, many listeners who contacted the
station by phone and telegram to ask for it again assumed that its singer was
black. From the beginning of his national fame, Presley expressed respect for
African American performers and their music, and disregard for the norms of
segregation and racial prejudice then prevalent in the South. Interviewed in
1956, he recalled how in his childhood he would listen to blues musician Arthur Crudup—the originator of
"That's All Right"—"bang his box the way I do now, and I said if
I ever got to the place where I could feel all old Arthur felt, I'd be a music
man like nobody ever saw." The
Memphis World, an African American newspaper, reported that Presley,
"the rock 'n' roll phenomenon", "cracked Memphis's segregation
laws" by attending the local amusement park on what was designated as its
"colored night". Such statements and actions led Presley to be
generally hailed in the black community during the early days of his stardom. By contrast, many white adults,
according to Billboard's
Arnold Shaw, "did not like him, and condemned him as depraved. Anti-negro
prejudice doubtless figured in adult antagonism. Regardless of whether parents
were aware of the Negro sexual origins of the phrase 'rock 'n' roll', Presley
impressed them as the visual and aural embodiment of sex."
Despite the largely positive view
of Presley held by African Americans, a rumor spread in mid-1957 that he had at
some point announced, "The only thing Negroes can do for me is buy my
records and shine my shoes." A journalist with the national African American
weekly, Louie Robinson, pursued the story. On the set of Jailhouse Rock, Presley granted
him an interview, though he was no longer dealing with the mainstream press. He
denied making such a statement or holding in any way to its racist view.
Robinson found no evidence that the remark had ever been made, and on the
contrary elicited testimony from many individuals indicating that Presley was
anything but racist. Blues singer Ivory
Joe Hunter, who had heard the rumor before he visited Graceland one evening,
reported of Presley, "He showed me every courtesy, and I think he's one of
the greatest." Dudley
Brooks, an African-American composer and studio musician who worked with
Presley during the 1950s and 1960s, also disputed allegations that Presley was
a racist. Though the rumored remark was wholly discredited at the time, it was
still being used against Presley decades later. The identification of Presley
with racism—either personally or symbolically—was expressed most famously in
the lyrics of the 1989 rap hit "Fight the Power", by Public Enemy: "Elvis was a hero
to most / But he never meant shit to me / Straight-up racist that sucker was /
Simple and plain".
The persistence of such attitudes
was fueled by resentment over the fact that Presley, whose musical and visual
performance idiom owed much to African American sources, achieved the cultural
acknowledgment and commercial success largely denied his black peers. Into the
21st century, the notion that Presley had "stolen" black music still
found adherents. Notable among African American entertainers expressly
rejecting this view was Jackie
Wilson, who argued, "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." And throughout his career, Presley plainly
acknowledged his debt. Addressing his '68 Comeback Special audience, he said,
"Rock 'n' roll music is basically gospel or rhythm and blues, or it sprang
from that. People have been adding to it, adding instruments to it,
experimenting with it, but it all boils down to [that]." Nine years
earlier, he had said, "Rock 'n' roll has been around for many years. It
used to be called rhythm and blues."
Influence of Colonel Parker and
others
Paker and the Aberbachs
Once he became Presley's manager,
Colonel Tom Parker insisted on exceptionally tight control over his client's
career. Early on, he and his Hill and Range allies, the brothers Jean and Julian Aberbach, perceived the close
relationship that developed between Presley and songwriters Jerry Leiber and
Mike Stoller as a serious threat to that control. Parker effectively ended the
relationship, deliberately or not, with the new contract he sent Leiber in
early 1958. Leiber thought there was a mistake—the sheet of paper was blank
except for Parker's signature and a line on which to enter his. "There's
no mistake, boy, just sign it and return it", Parker directed. "Don't
worry, we'll fill it in later." Leiber declined, and Presley's fruitful
collaboration with the writing team was over. Other respected songwriters lost
interest in or simply avoided writing for Presley because of the requirement
that they surrender a third of their usual royalties.
By 1967, Parker's contracts with
Presley gave him 50 percent of most of the singer's earnings from recordings,
films, and merchandise. Beginning in February 1972, he took a third of the
profit from live appearances; a January 1976 agreement entitled him to half of
that as well. Priscilla Presley noted that "Elvis detested the business
side of his career. He would sign a contract without even reading it."
Presley's friend Marty Lacker regarded Parker as a "hustler and a con
artist. He was only interested in 'now money'—get the buck and get gone."
Lacker was instrumental in
convincing Presley to record with Memphis producer Chips Moman and his handpicked musicians at
American Sound Studio in early 1969. The American Sound sessions represented a
significant departure from the control customarily exerted by Hill and Range.
Moman still had to deal with the publisher's staff on site, whose song
suggestions he regarded as unacceptable. He was on the verge of quitting, until
Presley ordered the Hill and Range personnel out of the studio. Although RCA executive Joan Deary was later
full of praise for the producer's song choices and the quality of the
recordings, Moman, to his fury, received neither credit on the records nor
royalties for his work.
Throughout his entire career,
Presley performed in only three venues outside the United States—all of them in
Canada, during brief tours there in 1957. Rumors that he would play overseas
for the first time were fueled in 1974 by a million-dollar bid for an
Australian tour. Parker was uncharacteristically reluctant, prompting those close
to Presley to speculate about the manager's past and the reasons for his
apparent unwillingness to apply for a passport. Parker ultimately squelched any
notions Presley had of working abroad, claiming that foreign security was poor
and the venues unsuitable for a star of his magnitude.
Parker arguably exercised
tightest control over Presley's movie career. In 1957, Robert Mitchum asked Presley to costar with him in Thunder Road, on which Mitchum
was writer and producer. According to George Klein, one of his oldest friends,
Presley was offered starring roles in West
Side Story and Midnight Cowboy. In 1974, Barbra Streisand approached Presley to star with her in
the remake of A Star is Born.
In each case, any ambitions the singer may have had to play such parts were
thwarted by his manager's negotiating demands or flat refusals. In Lacker's
description, "The only thing that kept Elvis going after the early years
was a new challenge. But Parker kept running everything into the ground."
The operative attitude may have been summed up best by the response Leiber and
Stoller received when they brought a serious film project for Presley to Parker
and the Hill and Range owners for their consideration. In Leiber's telling,
Jean Aberbach warned them to never again "try to interfere with the
business or artistic workings of the process known as Elvis Presley".
Memphis Mafia
In the early 1960s, the circle of
friends with whom Presley constantly surrounded himself until his death came to
be known as the "Memphis Mafia". "Surrounded by the[ir]
parasitic presence", as journalist John
Harris puts it, "it was no
wonder that as he slid into addiction and torpor, no-one raised the alarm: to
them, Elvis was the bank, and it had to remain open." Tony Brown, who played piano for Presley
regularly in the last two years of the singer's life, observed his rapidly
declining health and the urgent need to address it: "But we all knew it
was hopeless because Elvis was surrounded by that little circle of people ...
all those so-called friends". In the Memphis Mafia's defense, Marty Lacker
has said, "[Presley] was his own man. ... If we hadn't been around, he
would have been dead a lot earlier."
Larry Geller became Presley's
hairdresser in 1964. Unlike others in the Memphis Mafia, he was interested in
spiritual questions and recalls how, from their first conversation, Presley
revealed his secret thoughts and anxieties: "I mean there has to be a purpose...there's got to be a
reason...why I was chosen to be Elvis Presley. ... I swear to God, no one knows
how lonely I get. And how empty I really feel." Thereafter, Geller
supplied him with books on religion and mysticism, which the singer read
voraciously. Presley would be
preoccupied by such matters for much of his life, taking trunkloads of books
with him on tour.
Sex symbol
The title and
marketing of Girls! Girls!
Girls! (1962)
took advantage
of Presley's sex symbol status.
Presley's physical attractiveness
and sexual appeal were widely acknowledged. "He was once beautiful,
astonishingly beautiful", in the words of critic Mark Feeney. Television director Steve Binder, no fan of Presley's
music before he oversaw the '68 Comeback Special, reported, "I'm straight
as an arrow and I got to tell you, you stop, whether you're male or female, to look
at him. He was that good looking. And if you never knew he was a superstar, it
wouldn't make any difference; if he'd walked in the room, you'd know somebody
special was in your presence." His performance style, as much as his
physical beauty, was responsible for Presley's eroticized image. Writing in
1970, critic George Melly described him as "the master of
the sexual simile, treating his guitar as both phallus and girl." In his
Presley obituary, Lester Bangs credited him as "the man who
brought overt blatant vulgar sexual frenzy to the popular arts in
America." Ed Sullivan's declaration that he perceived a soda bottle in
Presley's trousers was echoed by rumors involving a similarly positioned toilet
roll tube or lead bar.
While Presley was marketed as an
icon of heterosexuality, some cultural critics have argued that his image was
ambiguous. In 1959, Sight and
Sound's Peter John Dyer described his onscreen persona as
"aggressively bisexual in appeal". Brett Farmer places the
"orgasmic gyrations" of the title dance sequence in Jailhouse Rock within a lineage of cinematic musical
numbers that offer a "spectacular eroticization, if not homoeroticization,
of the male image". In the analysis of Yvonne Tasker, "Elvis was an
ambivalent figure who articulated a peculiar feminised, objectifying version of
white working-class masculinity as aggressive sexual display."
Reinforcing Presley's image as a
sex symbol were the reports of his dalliances with various Hollywood stars and
starlets, from Natalie Wood in the 1950s to Connie Stevens and Ann-Margret in the 1960s to Candice Bergen and Cybill
Shepherd in the 1970s. June Juanico of Memphis, one of Presley's early
girlfriends, later blamed Parker for encouraging him to choose his dating
partners with publicity in mind. Presley, however, never grew comfortable with
the Hollywood scene, and most of these relationships were insubstantial.
Legacy
Presley's rise to
national attention in 1956 transformed the field of popular music and had a
huge effect on the broader scope of popular culture. As the catalyst for the cultural
revolution that was rock and roll, he was central not only to defining it as a
musical genre but in making it a touchstone of youth culture and rebellious
attitude. With its racially mixed origins—repeatedly affirmed by Presley—rock
and roll's occupation of a central position in mainstream American culture
facilitated a new acceptance and appreciation of black culture. In this regard, Little Richard
said of Presley, "He was an integrator. Elvis was a blessing. They
wouldn't let black music through. He opened the door for black music." Al Green agreed: "He broke the ice for all
of us." President Jimmy
Carter remarked on his legacy in
1977: "His music and his personality, fusing the styles of white country
and black rhythm and blues, permanently changed the face of American popular
culture. His following was immense, and he was a symbol to people the world
over of the vitality, rebelliousness, and good humor of his country."
Presley also heralded the vastly expanded reach of celebrity in the era of mass
communication: at the age of 21, within a year of his first appearance on
American network television, he was one of the most famous people in the world.
Stamp depicting
Presley issued by the German post
office in 1988
Presley's name,
image, and voice are instantly recognizable around the globe. He has inspired a legion of impersonators. In polls
and surveys, he is recognized as one of the most important popular music
artists and influential Americans. "Elvis Presley is the greatest cultural
force in the twentieth century", said composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein. "He introduced
the beat to everything and he changed everything—music, language, clothes. It's
a whole new social revolution—the sixties came from it." Bob Dylan described the sensation of first
hearing Presley as "like busting out of jail".
A New York Times editorial on the 25th anniversary of Presley's death observed, "All the talentless impersonators and appalling black velvet paintings on display can make him seem little more than a perverse and distant memory. But before Elvis was camp, he was its opposite: a genuine cultural force. ... Elvis's breakthroughs are underappreciated because in this rock-and-roll age, his hard-rocking music and sultry style have triumphed so completely." Not only Presley's achievements, but his failings as well, are seen by some cultural observers as adding to the power of his legacy, as in this description by Greil Marcus:
A New York Times editorial on the 25th anniversary of Presley's death observed, "All the talentless impersonators and appalling black velvet paintings on display can make him seem little more than a perverse and distant memory. But before Elvis was camp, he was its opposite: a genuine cultural force. ... Elvis's breakthroughs are underappreciated because in this rock-and-roll age, his hard-rocking music and sultry style have triumphed so completely." Not only Presley's achievements, but his failings as well, are seen by some cultural observers as adding to the power of his legacy, as in this description by Greil Marcus:
"Elvis Presley is
a supreme figure in American life, one whose presence, no matter how banal or
predictable, brooks no real comparisons. ... The cultural range of his music
has expanded to the point where it includes not only the hits of the day, but
also patriotic recitals, pure country gospel, and really dirty blues. ... Elvis
has emerged as a great artist, a great rocker, a great purveyor of schlock, a great heart throb, a great bore, a great symbol of potency, a great ham, a great nice person, and, yes, a great American."
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