|
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.
An American phenomenon
Elvis Presley is widely credited with bringing rock and roll into mainstream
culture. According to Rolling Stone magazine "it was Elvis who made rock
'n' roll the international language of pop." A PBS
documentary once described Presley as "an American music giant of the 20th century
who
singlehandedly changed the course of music and culture in the mid-1950s."
[1]. His recordings, dance moves, attitude and clothing came to be seen as embodiments
of rock and roll. Presley sang both hard driving
rockabilly and
rock and roll dance songs
and ballads, laying a commercial foundation
upon which other rock and roll musicians would build.
African-American performers
like Little Richard and
Chuck Berry came to national
prominence after Presley's acceptance among mass audiences of
white teenagers. Singers like
Jerry Lee Lewis, the
Everly Brothers,
Buddy Holly,
Roy Orbison and others immediately
followed in his wake, leading John
Lennon to later observe, "Before Elvis, there was nothing."
Teenagers came to Presley's concerts in unprecedented numbers. When he performed
at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair in 1956 a hundred
National Guardsmen surrounded
the stage to control crowds of excited fans. When municipal politicians began denying
permits for Presley appearances teens piled into cars and traveled elsewhere to
see him perform. It seemed as if the more adults tried to stop it, the more teenagers
across North America insisted on having what they wanted. When adult programmers
announced they would not play Presley's music on their radio stations (some because
God told them it was sexually suggestive
Devil music, others saying it was southern
"nigger" music) the economic power of
that generation became evident when they tuned in any radio station playing Elvis
records. In an industry already shifting to all-music formats in reaction to
television, profit-conscious radio
station owners learned hard lessons when sponsors bought advertising time on new
rock and roll stations reaching enormous markets at night with
clear channel signals from
AM broadcasts.
During the 1950s post-WWII economic boom
in the United States, many parents were able to give their teenaged children much
higher weekly allowances, signalling
a shift in the buying power and purchasing habits of teens. During the 1940s
bobby soxers had idolized
Frank Sinatra but the buyers
of his records were mostly between the ages of eighteen and twenty-two. Presley
triggered a juggernaut of demand for his records by near-teens and early teens aged
ten, twelve, thirteen and up.
Presley's overwhelming appeal was to girls. Many boys adapted his look to attract
them. Along with Elvis' ducktail
haircut, the demand for black slacks and loose, open-necked shirts resulted in new
lines of clothing for teenaged boys. In 1956 America, birthday and Christmas gifts
were often music or even Elvis related. A girl might get a pink portable 45 rpm
record player for her bedroom. Meanwhile American teenagers began buying newly available
portable transistor radios
[2] and listened to rock
'n' roll on them (helping to propel that fledgling industry from an estimated
100,000 units sold in 1955 to 5,000,000 units by the end of 1958). Teens were asserting
more independence and Elvis Presley became a national symbol of their parents' consternation.
Presley's impact on the American youth consumer market was noted on the front
page of
The Wall
Street Journal on December 31, 1956 when future
Pulitzer Prize-winning business journalist
Louis M. Kohlmeier wrote, "Elvis Presley today is a business," and reported
on the singer's record and merchandise sales (this may have been the first time
a journalist described an entertainer as a business). Half a century later, historian
Ian Brailsford (University
of Auckland, New Zealand)
commented, "The phenomenal success of Elvis Presley in 1956 convinced many doubters
of the financial opportunities existing in the youth market."
Birth & Childhood
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
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.
Movies
In late 1955, Presley made his earliest known film appearance in a documentary
entitled
The Pied Piper of Cleveland, a look at the career of
disk jockey
Bill Randle. The film, which reportedly included performance footage of Elvis
as well as
Bill
Haley and His Comets and other acts, was shown in its entirety only once (in
Cleveland) and was never
released commercially. The film is currently considered "misplaced" and some Presley
researchers maintain it never existed, although there is ample evidence to suggest
it did.
Beginning with
Love Me
Tender (opened on November
15, 1956), Presley starred
in 31 motion pictures, having signed to multiple long-term contracts on the advice
of his manager. These were usually musicals based around Presley performances, and
marked the beginning of his transition from rebellious rock and roller to all-round
family entertainer. Elvis was praised by all his directors, including the highly
respected Michael Curtiz,
as unfailingly polite and extremely hardworking.
The movies
Jailhouse
Rock (1957),
King Creole (1958),
and Flaming Star (1960)
are widely regarded as his best among film critics. Among fans,
Blue Hawaii (1961)
and Viva Las Vegas
(1964) are also highly praised.
In addition to his own films, Presley has been the subject of more than seventy
films that have his name in the title.
For details on films in which he starred, see the
List of Elvis Presley films.
Relationships
No entertainer has ever had their life and intimate relationships examined in
as much detail as has Elvis Presley. Even the FBI
had a file on him of more than 600 pages. He has been the subject of many books
including two by his only wife,
Priscilla Beaulieu Presley
(whom he married on May 1, 1967) and several others by former girlfriends including
June Juanico. Since his death many claims to relationships have been made by women
who were no more than acquaintances or had short term affairs which were exaggerated
for personal gain.
High school and early stardom
According to interviews with teachers and former fellow students at Milam Junior
High school in Tupelo, Mississippi, noted Presley biographer
Elaine Dundy in her book
Elvis and Gladys
wrote (p.124) that beginning in his early teens, Elvis embarked upon the "indefatigable
pursuit of girls" but was totally rebuffed and that this was something that contributed
to his lifelong need for a beautiful woman to validate his feelings of inadequacy.
However, between 1954 and 1956 the impoverished son of welfare recipients went from
being shunned and even mocked by some of the popular girls at school to dating glamorous
young Hollywood starlets such as
Natalie Wood and
Connie Stevens. Author
Elaine Dundy wrote that actress
Shelley Winters (usually
considered a reliable source for Hollywood goings-on and who portrayed Gladys Presley
in the 1979 made-for-TV movie
Elvis) claimed the relationship between Presley and Natalie Wood developed
into something more serious than what was generally reported in the media.
There were several significant relationships in Presley's life other than his
one marriage to Priscilla Beaulieu. They included Dixie Locke, a high school sweetheart
who he met at his Assemblies
of God Pentecostal church
and was part of his life before and during his Sun Records time. Locke was portrayed
by actress Jennifer Rae Westley in the 2005 CBS TV miniseries
Elvis. Anita Wood, another wholesome
Christian girl whom Gladys Presley
hoped he would eventually marry, was with Elvis as he rose to superstardom, served
in the US military and returned home in 1960. Wood lived at Graceland for a time
but moved out after confronting him over Priscilla Beaulieu, the "girl in Germany."
Although rarely giving public statements, in 2005 Anita Wood was interviewd by renowned
television talk show host
Larry King. She told him that
following media reports of a girlfriend in Germany, Elvis "had me believing that
she (Priscilla Beaulieu) was just a friend and her daddy was in the Army with him,
and there was nothing to it whatsoever." Presley used his charm to persuade Anita
to move back into Graceland but she remained only a few months before leaving permanently.
Elvis immediately began a short-lived affair with
Anne Helm, his co-star from the
film Follow That
Dream. Ms Helm came to Graceland for a short time but her quick exit allowed
for the entrance of Priscilla Beaulieu who moved to Memphis in 1962.
|