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Elvis Aron Presley (January 8, 1935 ? August 16, 1977), also known as
The King of Rock and Roll or The King, was an American singer and
actor. Early in his career he was referred to as The Hillbilly Cat.
Later, his friends referred to him as "E".
Rolling Stone magazine said "Elvis Presley is rock 'n' roll" and called
his body of work "acres of perfect material." During an active
recording career that lasted more than two decades, Presley set and
broke many sales records with over 100 top 40 hit singles including 18
number ones.
"Presley was not the very first white man to sing rhythm blues;
Bill Haley predated him in that regard, and there may have been others
as well. Elvis was certainly the first, however, to assertively fuse
country and blues music into the style known as rockabilly."
Elvis
Aaron Presley was born in a two-room house in East Tupelo, Mississippi
to Vernon Elvis Presley and Gladys Love Smith Presley. He was raised
both in East Tupelo (which merged with Tupelo in 1948) and later in
Memphis, Tennessee, where his family moved when he was 13. Elvis had a
twin brother (Jesse Garon Presley) who died at birth. In 1949 the
family moved to Lauderdale Courts public housing development which was
near musical and cultural influences like Beale Street, Ellis
Auditorium and the Poplar Tunes record store along with the Sun Studio
about a mile away.
In her book, Elvis and Gladys author Elaine Dundy wrote that those
close to Elvis as a boy say he was a fan of comic book superhero
Captain Marvel, Jr. and would later model his trademark hairstyle and
some of his stage costumes on the comic book character.
Elvis took up the guitar at 11 and practiced in the basement laundry
room at Lauderdale Courts. He played gigs in the malls and courtyards
of the Courts with other musicians who lived there. After high school
he worked at Precision Tool Company, then drove a truck for the Crown
Electric Company.
The Sun recordings
In the summer of 1953 Presley paid $4 to record the first of two
double-sided demo acetates at Sun Studios, "My Happiness" and "That's
When Your Heartaches Begin" which were popular ballads at the time.
While Presley claimed to have recorded the demo as a birthday present
for his mother this is sometimes disputed since Gladys Presley's
birthday was in April and he recorded the acetate in July. Sun Records
founder Sam Phillips and assistant Marion Keisker heard the discs and
called him in June 1954 to fill in for a missing ballad singer.
Although that session was not productive, Sam Phillips put Elvis
together with local musicians Scotty Moore and Bill Black to see what
might develop. During a rehearsal break on July 5, 1954 Elvis began
singing a blues song written by Arthur Crudup called "That's All
Right". Philips liked the resulting record and released it as a 78RPM
single backed with Elvis' hopped-up version of Bill Monroe's bluegrass
song "Blue Moon Of Kentucky." Memphis radio station WHBQ began airing
it two days later, the record became a local hit and Elvis began a
regular touring schedule which expanded his fame beyond Tennessee.
Presley was booked on Nashville's Grand Ole Opry but in a bitter
disappointment his performance was not well received. He continued to
tour the U.S. South and on October 16, 1954 he made his first
appearance on Louisiana Hayride, a radio broadcast of live country
music in Shreveport, Louisiana and was a hit with a large audience
accustomed to mostly pure country music sounds. Following this Presley
was signed to a one-year contract for a weekly performance and he was
soon introduced to Colonel Tom Parker.
The influence of Colonel Tom Parker
Parker took over Presley's career by contract on August 18, 1955. The
colonel established two recording companies for Presley and demanded
that composers share their royalties with the singer. He wasted no time
in marketing his new product to the hilt, pushing Elvis buttons and
trinkets, and even lipstick and cookware. According to Marty Lacker, a
member of the Memphis Mafia, Elvis had no business savvy or skills and
he relied on his manager Parker for anything to do with contracts and
deals. Lacker says he thought of Parker as a "hustler and scam artist"
who abused Elvis's reliance on him. "If Parker ever thought Elvis was
going to be around somebody who would (influence) him, Parker did his
utmost to end that relationship." At Parker's urging Presley also
shifted his focus from music to Hollywood. For instance, under his
manager's influence Elvis was forced to take the chief part in some
low-budget standard musical comedies (see "Movies" section below). With
money seemingly being at the forefront of all decisions made by the
Colonel, his management contract with Elvis was even renegotiated to an
even 50/50 split between the two.
Fame
On August 15, 1955 Elvis Presley was signed by Hank Snow
Attractions, a management company jointly owned by singer Hank Snow and
Colonel Parker, who negotitated Presley's signing with RCA Records on
November 21, 1955. On January 27, 1956 Elvis' sixth single and his
first on RCA, "Heartbreak Hotel" / "I Was the One", was released and
made the pop charts (it reached #1 in April). The next day Presley's
national television debut on The Dorsey Brothers Stage Show marked the
beginning of his transition into a teen idol. On June 5, 1956 Presley
scandalized the audience of the The Milton Berle Show with suggestive
hip movements while performing his second RCA single "Hound Dog."
Television critics across the country slammed the performance for its
"appalling lack of musicality," "vulgarity" and "animalism." The
reaction was so severe, Presley was obliged to explain himself on a
local New York City TV show (Hy Gardner Calling). Shortly thereafter he
appeared on The Steve Allen Show dressed in a tuxedo, billed as "the
new Elvis Presley" and singing "Hound Dog" to a basset hound, an
experience Presley later said he found humiliating.
After a string of other TV appearances Presley made his first
performance on the top-rated Ed Sullivan Show on September 9, earning
the broadcast a record 52?60 million viewers (82.6% of the viewership
that night). By the time of his second Sullivan appearance on October
28 Presley had dyed his sandy blond hair jet black. Opposition gathered
against him and even more so against his gyrations on stage. The
December 1956 issue of Cosmopolitan Magazine described Presley as
behaving like "a sex maniac in public." On his third and final Sullivan
appearance (January 6, 1957) Sullivan bowed to pressure from
"moralists" and ordered that Presley be televised from the waist up to
avoid showing his controversial hip movements. Meanwhile the press had
taken to calling him Elvis the Pelvis, a nickname he is said to have
thoroughly disliked.
"Don't Be Cruel" and "Hound Dog" topped the pop, black and country
charts in 1956 and many more hit records followed. Over the next
twenty-one years (until his death in 1977) Elvis had 146 Hot 100 hits,
112 top 40 hits, 72 top 20 hits and 40 top 10 hits, an achievement that
has never been matched by any solo artist.
Gospel roots
Ironically, for all the controversy surrounding his early career,
Elvis Presley's roots in religious music ran deep. In Tupelo,
Mississippi Vernon and Gladys Presley were what was disparagingly
referred to as poor white trash from the "wrong side of the tracks" at
the east end of town. Their Depression-era home (where Elvis was born
in 1935) was a two-room shack on one of several dirt tracks forming a
small community off Old Saltillo Road. They belonged to a local
Assembly of God Pentecostal church which played an important role in
their lives. For Elvis Presley it provided an environment from which he
would instinctively adopt the music, sound and accompanying body
movements in his later rock and roll singing performances. The African
American form of music that became known as Rhythm & Blues (which
also evolved from gospel songs) was also a part of Presley's childhood
world and he probably heard it on a regular basis in the black section
of Tupelo known as "Shakerag" (which was between Tupelo and East
Tupelo, and was demolished in the 1960s as part of an urban renewal
project). The church is said to have brought the Presleys, along with
the rest of its desperately poor congregation, a message of hope
wrapped around "Hell, fire, and brimstone" sermons. For nearly a
quarter century the Pentecostal movement was interracial and during the
1930s and 1940s many of these poor churches did not adopt the growing
policy of racial segregation.
Although Vernon Presley's family was Pentecostal and his sister Nash
Presley became a minister, his wife Gladys was Elvis's devoutly
religious parent. Her uncle Gains Mansell was also a Pentecostal
preacher in East Tupelo whose interracial church services began with
revival meetings held in a tent. Pentecostal church services started,
centered and ended with music and everyone was encouraged to "make a
joyous noise unto the Lord." According to Presley biographer Peter
Guralnick, Gladys Presley said that by the age of two her son was
already trying to sing along in the church. A Pentecostal preacher
would typically lead the congregation in prayer and both singing and
prayer were accompanied by the waving of hands, the swaying of bodies
and dancing about in the Holy Spirit. As it almost always did in those
settings, "when the Spirit strikes" the body would jerk as though hit
by a bolt of lightning and frequently the worshipper would fall to the
floor, rolling around and praying aloud (this is why outsiders referred
to church members as "Holy Rollers" and their services as a "religious
frenzy"). For instrumentation, these church services used a guitar, a
tambourine or two and if they could afford one, a well-worn piano and
perhaps a used piano accordion. Church services lasting three hours and
held several times a week were filled with music as Pentecostals
gyrated their hips, shook their legs, clapped and waved their arms
while belting out pounding, rhythmic songs such as Down By the
Riverside, When The Saints Go Marching In and Standing On The Promises.
There were also more serene songs sung with great emotion like Old
Rugged Cross and Softly and Tenderly (Jesus is calling).
In 1948 the Presley family left Tupelo, moving 110 miles northwest to
Memphis, Tennessee. Here too, thirteen-year-old Elvis lived in the
city's slums and attended a Pentecostal church where he could not have
escaped the influence of the Memphis blues.
While Elvis Presley was a teen cataclysm with millions of American
girls screaming at the sight of him, his own church viewed Presley's
gyrations on stage as an affront, labelling it the Devil's work and a
mocking of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. Presley records were
condemned as wicked and Pentecostal preachers thumped their pulpits
with Bibles, warning congregations to keep heathen rock and roll music
out of their homes and away from their children's ears (especially the
music of "that backslidden Pentecostal pup, Elvis Presley"). People who
decades later would be considered part of the religious right spoke out
vigorously against Presley including Cardinal Spellman. In its weekly
periodical, the Roman Catholic Church added to the criticism in an
article titled "Beware Elvis Presley."
In August, 1956 in Jacksonville, Florida a local Juvenile Court judge
called Presley a "savage" and threatened to arrest him if he shook his
body while performing at Jacksonville's Florida Theatre, justifying the
restrictions by saying his music was undermining the youth of America.
Throughout the performance Presley stood still as ordered but poked fun
at the judge by wiggling a finger. Similar attempts to stop his "sinful
gyrations" continued for more than a year and included his often noted
January 6, 1957 appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show when he was seen
only from the waist up.
His Hand In Mine (1960) was the title of Elvis' first gospel album.
During his '68 Comeback Special Elvis said his music came from gospel.
Despite his church's attitude, gospel music was a prominent part of
Presley's repertoire throughout his life. From 1971 to his death in
1977 Presley employed the Stamps Quartet, a gospel group, for his
backup vocals. He recorded several gospel albums, earning three Grammy
Awards for his gospel music. In his later years Presley's live stage
performances almost always included a rendition of "How Great Thou
Art," the 19th century gospel song made famous by George Beverly Shea.
More than forty-five years later (and twenty-four years after his
death) the Gospel Music Association finally inducted him into their
Gospel Music Hall of Fame (2001).
Military service
On December 20, 1957, Presley received his draft notice for the then
compulsory 2-year service with the United States Army. On March 24,
1958, he was inducted into the Army at the Memphis Draft Board. He
received no special treatment and was widely praised for not doing what
many wealthy and influential people did to avoid service or to serve
part time in easy domestic positions such as the Special Services where
he could have sung and continued to maintain a public profile. His
military service received massive media coverage with much speculation
whether or not two years out of the limelight at the height of his
popularity would do irreparable damage to his career. Presley sailed to
Europe on the USS General George M. Randall, and served in Germany as
an ordinary soldier.
Elvis Presley returned to the United States on March 2, 1960, and was
honorably discharged on March 5th. While in the army, he received a
black belt in Kempo and attained the rank of Sergeant.
The musical Bye Bye Birdie satirizes the events of the draft of Elvis
Presley, placing fictional superstar Conrad Birdie in the position of
Elvis.
Comeback
 Elvis' 1968 Comeback Many observers (including John Lennon) later claimed that following
Presley's return from military service the quality of his recorded
output dropped, although others thought he was still capable of
creating records equal to his best (and did so on the infrequent
occasions where he was presented with "decent" material at his movie
recording sessions). Presley himself became deeply dissatisfied with
the direction his career would take over the ensuing seven years,
notably the film contract with a demanding schedule that eliminated
creative recording and giving public concerts. In 1960 the album Elvis
is Back was recorded. This, like his first two albums, Elvis Presley
and Elvis, are considered by many of his fans to be his best work. With
this drop-off, and in the face of the social upheaval of the 1960s and
the British Invasion spearheaded by The Beatles, Presley's star faded
slightly before a triumphant televised performance later dubbed the
Comeback Special. Aired on the NBC network on December 3, 1968, the
show saw him return to his rock and roll roots. His 1969 return to live
performances, first in Las Vegas and then across the country, was noted
for the constant stream of sold-out shows, with many setting attendance
records in the venues where he performed. [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ]
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