August 29, 2002
"Good
Rockin Tonight: Legacy Of Sun Records" - DVD


Artists including Sir Paul McCartney, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Sheryl
Crow and Matchbox Twenty pay tribute to Sam Phillips and rock n’
roll creators Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, and Junior
Parker
Image Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ: DISK), long recognized as the
market leader in music video long forms, announced the October 1
release of Good Rockin’ Tonight: The Legacy of Sun Records, on DVD
and videocassette.
Originally produced and broadcast by PBS as part of the renowned
"American Masters" series, this illuminating film highlights
today’s major music artists, such as Sir Paul McCartney, Jimmy Page,
Robert Plant and Matchbox Twenty as they pay tribute to Elvis Presley,
Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Junior Parker and many
others who created a new genre of music that Sun Records founder Sam
Phillips unleashed on a highly susceptible and receptive populace.
Good Rockin’ Tonight: The Legacy of Sun Records was produced by
Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, and executive produced by
former Atlantic Records UK president, Phil Carson. The insightful
performance documentary features Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
recording Bill Monroe’s "Blue Moon of Kentucky," Eric
Clapton & The Impressions hitting their stride with "Just
Walkin’ in the Rain," and Kid Rock joining The Howling Diablos
for "Drinkin’ Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee."
The program also features performances by Sir Paul McCartney
("That’s All Right"), Chris Isaak (Hank Williams’
"It Wouldn’t Be The Same Without You") and Live ( Johnny
Cash’s "I Walk The Line.") Others include Sheryl Crow,
Matchbox Twenty, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page, Bryan Ferry, Mark
Knopfler, and Jools Holland. For the first DVD pressing, Image is
including a packaged Sun Records Sampler CD from Orby Records.
Source : Surround Music
Sun Records CD Sampler
Tracks List:
1. That's All Right - Orion
2. Mystery Train - Little Junior's Blue Flames
3. My Bucket Got A Hole In It - Sonny Burgess
4. Blue Suede Shoes - Carl Perkins
5. Ooby Dooby - Roy Orbison
6. Bear Cat - Rufus Thomas, Jr.
7. Red Hot - Billy Lee Riley
8. Just Walkin' In The Rain - The Prisonaires
9. Lonely Weekends - Charlie Rich
10. Who Will The Next Fool Be? - Charlie Rich
11. Go, Go, Go (Down The Line) - Roy Orbison
12. I Walk The Line - Johnny Cash
13. Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee - Malcolm Yelvington
14. You Win Again - Jerry Lee Lewis
August 29, 2002
Memorial
complex to include two golf courses
ESPN (Reuters - August 28, 2002)
MUNICH, Germany -- John Daly is helping to design an Elvis Presley
memorial complex in Memphis that will include two golf courses.
"We are doing this thing called 'Elvis Presley Ranch' in
Memphis," Daly, who defends his BMW International title in
Germany this week, told reporters Tuesday. "Hopefully we are
getting hold of Pete Dye and Tom Fazio to design two courses.
"One will be a water course which Pete is the master at, and the
other by Tom will be with trees."
Daly, the big-hitting former PGA and British Open champion, has been
employed as a consultant on the complex, which will also include a
replica White House as well as a studio, concert venue and hotels.
"It is really going to be beautiful," Daly said. "This
is Elvis's dream ranch."
August 28, 2002
U.K.
Subscription Service To Offer 100,000 Tracks
Billboard - August 28, 2002
HMV
has unveiled plans to become the U.K.'s first major music retailer
with an online subscription service, Billboard Bulletin reports. The
company will offer what it claims is the largest official catalog of
digital music ever in the territory. The project, a partnership with
digital distributor On Demand Distribution (OD2), is due to go live
next month, offering access to nearly 100,000 tracks. Content from
EMI, Warner Music, BMG, and independent labels such as Telstar,
Mushroom, and V2 will be available at launch.
An array of artists and music genres will be featured, including, for
the first time, almost the entire Elvis Presley catalog of 990 songs.
Also available will be more than 260 Genesis tracks, the complete
repertoire of Craig David and Westlife, and content from Kylie
Minogue, Coldplay, Dido, David Bowie, and the Chemical Brothers.
"We're actually looking at it very much as an experiment,"
HMV e-commerce director Stuart Rowe tells Bulletin. "We haven't
set any benchmarks or hurdles that we have to achieve; [we're using
the project] as a piece of research and development."
For a monthly subscription fee of L 4.99 ($7.60), the service at
hmv.co.uk will offer various usage options. A maximum of 50 tracks can
be downloaded each month; alternatively, subscribers can choose to
either stream up to 500 tracks or burn approximately five tracks to
CD.
There is also an option that is a mix of all three. Single tracks can
also be purchased as downloads or burned onto CDs as part of the
subscription.
-- Lars Brandle, London
August 28, 2002
The
Elvis 'Mystery Guitar"

On the televised comeback of Elvis Presley, the one in
which he wore the black leather outfit, Elvis played the Gibson Super
400 that Jody Reynolds gave him in late 1967. Jody purchased the
guitar in 1962 from Pat Barbara Music and played it at hundreds of
gigs until 1967 when Jody opened his own music store called "The
Music Room" in Palm Springs, California.
Elvis came in to the Music Room one day and saw the Super 400 hanging
on the wall. He said to Jody, "I know what that guitar is and I
want it!". Jody took the guitar down and plugged it into an
amplifier, Elvis strummed a few nice chords out it and said "how
much?". Jody told Elvis that he could have the guitar since
Elvis' Heartbreak Hotel was the inspiration for Jody's writing his
multi-million seller "Endless Sleep". For the next five to
seven years, Jody sold Elvis many guitars as well as a piano.
After a long disappearance, the Gibson Super 400 is being auctioned
for $1 million and is the very same guitar pictured on the front cover
of Jody's Endless CD and also the same guitar he played on some songs
in the CD.

This guitar can be seen and heard on Jody Reynolds' latest double CD
package of 53 songs, "Endless" which can be ordered from:
Tru-Gems Records
P.O. Box 3683
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Lee Silver
trugems@earthlink.net
Source : Rockabilly Hall of Fame
August 27, 2002
MOBILE
GRACELAND Tours America in Support of ELVIS 30 #1 HITS
-------------------------------------------------------------------
EPE - 8/26/2002

More than 12 million Elvis Presley fans have visited Graceland to pay
tribute to "The King of Rock and Roll" since his home opened
to the public in 1982. Now through the end of the year, hundreds of
thousands more will be able to take part in the Elvis experience as
Mobile Graceland travels to 31
cities, appearing exclusively at 22 Harrah's casinos and 16 FYE (For
Your Entertainment) affiliated stores.
Marking the 25th anniversary of Elvis' passing, Mobile Graceland is a
museum-quality exhibit featuring authentic Elvis memorabilia, much of
which has never been displayed outside Memphis and spans the
superstar's unparalleled career. The collection housed in an
ultra-modern 53-foot-long, 18-wheel semi contains jewelry,
clothing, instruments and other artifacts as unique as the man who
owned them. The exhibit, which offers a glimpse of the extensive Elvis
experience visitors enjoy at Graceland each year, also includes rarely
seen archival photographs of the legendary recording artist and four
listening and viewing stations where fans can enjoy samples of his
work.
Mobile Graceland, which debuted in Memphis for Elvis Week 2002, is a
collaborative effort of RCA/BMG and Graceland/EPE to promote ELVIS
30 #1 HITS, which will be released worldwide on September 24.
See the Mobile Graceland web
site for the tour schedule and more information.
(Elvis News! - August 13, 2002)
The
Mobile Graceland Tour
August 25, 2002
A
REALLY BIG SHOW DESERVES A REALLY BIG BOXED SET

ED SULLIVAN'S ROCK 'N' ROLL CLASSICS Hits
Stores On September 24, 2002, In A 9-Volume Collectible Set
From Rhino Home Video Rhino Home Video unleashes the most influential
musical performances ever to appear on television with the release of
ED SULLIVAN'S ROCK 'N' ROLL CLASSICS. This groundbreaking collection
of live music, modern history, pop culture, and nostalgia is available
for first time on DVD on September 24, 2002.
The complete 9-volume set, spanning the 20-plus years the show was on
the air (June 20, 1948 - June 6, 1971) contains 144 career-defining
performances from some of the most important musical artists of our
time.
Highlights include:
Click
Here!
Source : Rhino Home Video
August 25, 2002
Circle G Ranch developers
acquire 883 acres
By William C. Bayne, The
Commercial Appeal - August 24, 2002

Developers of the proposed Circle G Ranch resort said Friday they've
acquired all the land they need for the planned golf and entertainment
complex.
"The developers have 883.96 acres under contract," said
Ginger Morris, a spokesman for Circle G Resort, LLC, in Atlanta.
"They have closed in escrow on the (original) Circle G Ranch
property."
The 155-acre ranch once owned by Elvis Presley is to be the
cornerstone of the resort development, which is expected to cost about
$600 million.
Almost all the property for the proposed development near Goodman and
Miss. 301 was annexed by Horn Lake, effective this week.
Developers still haven't filed a final site plan or announced the
hiring of architects for the project or for the two championship golf
courses planned for the resort.
As of Friday, Morris said that hasn't changed.
"These things take time. We will make an announcement when more
details are worked out."
Last week, a crowd of more than 200 gathered in a tent on the property
for the project's ceremonial
groundbreaking.
The resort will include two 18-hole golf courses, retail shops,
theaters, convention halls, a video arcade, two hotels, condos, a day
spa and swimming pools.
Circle
G Resort
August 24, 2002
As expected, Elvis week was everything and more than any of us could
have expected or could have hoped for in any way. I don't know how
many times over the past years I have thought how proud Elvis would be
to see the ongoing following from his fans. Having said that, This
past week set an all time high in the continued love shown from near
and far, I know as a very proud family member that I was overwhelmed
once again .....
Full
Story
Source : Donna Presley
August 23, 2002
New
Elvis Single CD "Burning Love"
Release Date : Septemper 16, 2002

BMG 74321 968242
Tracks List:
1. Burning Love (Mixed and mastered version from ELV1S 30
#1 HITS)
2. Burning Love (Original version)
3. Burning Love (Rare, alternate take 2 from original
recording session 3/28/72)
Source : BMG
August 23, 2002
SONNY WEST AND MARSHALL
TERRILL WORKING ON A NEW BOOK "TAKING
CARE OF BUSINESS"

Sonny West has started work on a follow-up book to "Elvis: What
Happened?" more than 25 years after the book was released.The
book, co-authored with Red West and Dave Hebler, sold more than 4
million copies and was considered the best-selling original paperback
when it was released in 1977. The book drew much controversy because
it blew the lid on Elvis Presley's abuse of prescription drugs while
he was still alive.
West has enlisted biographer Marshall Terrill to write his second book
on Presley tentatively titled, "Taking Care of Business."
Terrill is the author of seven books including the best-selling
biography "Steve
McQueen: Portrait of An American Rebel" and his latest, "Sergeant
Presley: Our Untold Story of Elvis' Missing Years" with Rex
and Elisabeth Mansfield."
West said "Elvis: What Happened?" covered mainly the years
from 1970 to 1976 during Presley's downward spiral.
The new book, he said, will cover his years with Elvis from 1960 to
1976, the aftermath of "Elvis: What Happened?" to his
thoughts on Elvis today. West said the book will contain many stories
that have never been told before, with many never seen before photos
from West's personal collection and photos donated from the Russ Howe
collection. West said the book is not a look back in anger, but a
portrait of a man he claims was like a brother to him."The first
book was written as a challenge to Elvis," West said. "The
second book is written out of love."
Source : Marshall Terrill
August 23, 2002
ELVIS-THE
CONCERT - Fourth European Tour 2003
----------------------------------------------------------
EPE
|
European
Tour Schedule - May/June 2003 - May/June 2003
|
|
May 24
|
London, England
|
Wembley Arena
|
|
May 25
|
Birmingham, England
|
NEC Arena
|
|
May 26
|
Glasgow, Scotland
|
SECC
|
|
May 27
|
Belfast, Ireland
|
Odyssey Arena
|
|
May 29
|
Dublin, Ireland
|
RDS Arena
|
|
May 30
|
Manchester, England
|
MEN Arena
|
|
May 31
|
Sheffield, England
|
Sheffield Arena
|
|
June 1
|
London, England
|
London Arena
|
|
June 3
|
Rotterdam, Holland
|
AHOY
|
|
June 4
|
Antwerp, Belgium
|
Sportpalais
|
|
June 6
|
Zurich, Switzerland
|
Hallenstadion
|
|
June 7
|
To Be Announced
|
To Be Announced
|
August 22, 2002
New Sonny West Book :
'Takin' Care Of Business'
By Marshall Terrill
Marshall Terrill is the author of seven books including the
best-selling biography "Steve McQueen: Portrait of An American
Rebel" and his last books, "Sergeant Presley: Our Untold
Story of Elvis' Missing Years'" with Rex and Elisabeth Mansfield
and "The King, McQueen and the Love Machine" with Barbara
Leigh.
Full info. soon!!!
Source : Marshall Terrill
-
Book : "The King,
McQueen and the Love Machine"
By Barbara Leigh with Marshall Terrill
(photos
page)
August 21, 2002
25th
anniversary of Elvis death
in Polish Newspapers

Click here to enlarge image!
August 21, 2002
That
Old Feeling: Golden Sun
(TIME)
Richard Corliss on the 50th
anniversary of Sun Records, first home to Elvis, Carl Perkins, Roy
Orbison and
the holy horror of rock 'n roll, Jerry Lee Lewis
I
say meet me in a hurry behind the barn
Don'tcha be afraid, y'know I'll do you no harm
I want you to bring along my rockin' shoes
'Cause tonight I'm gonna rock away all the blues
I heard the news, there's good a-rockin' tonight.
— recorded by Elvis Presley, September 1954
He died 25 years ago next Friday (he did die, didn't he?), but the
Presley industry is bigger than ever. "A Little Less
Conversation," an obscure 1968 tune from the movie "Love a
Little, Love a Little," was recently the #1 song in Britain in a
remix by Dutch deejay JXL. A collection of 100 alternate (read:
not-so-hot) takes of Elvis songs fills a new four-CD box set. A pity
that daddy Vernon didn't record his infant son squealing in the crib;
then RCA could release "Elvis: the Colic Years."
Anyway, this is a time to celebrate a hallowed anniversary. Fifty
years ago, Sam Phillips, who ran the Memphis Recording Service
(Preserve those weddings and bar mitzvahs forever on wax! Bring your
child in to sing "Jambalaya" — he could be the next Hank
Williams!), started his own record label. He called it Sun, and it was
good.
Sun started out as a "race music" label, as Phillips brought
into his modest studio some exemplary blues shouters and players:
Howlin' Wolf, B.B. King, Rufus Thomas, James Cotton, Sleepy John
Estes, Herman "Little Junior" Parker and the Blue Flames,
Little Milton Campbell, Ike Turner (yes, Tina's future ex-).
Then a young truck driver, stupefyingly shy until he stood before a
microphone, walked in to make a record for his mother. A few visits
later, abetted by guitarist Scotty Moore, bass player Bill Black and
Phillips at a primitive console, Elvis Presley fooled around until he
came up with a variation on the Arthur Crudup song "That's All
Right." It was, too. "That's different," Phillips
legendarily said. "That's a pop song now, just 'bout." What
it was, just 'bout, was rock 'n roll — a mighty mutant of pop, blues
and country, born July 5, 1954, right there at 706 Union Avenue.
Within a year, Phillips had sold Presley's contract to RCA Victor for
$25,000. He says he never regretted the decision, never looked back.
He soon had another rockabilly prodigy, Carl Perkins, whose "Blue
Suede Shoes" kicked some serious chart butt: #1 country &
western, #2 pop and rhythm 'n blues. Johnny Cash, the Arkansas gent
with a grave voice and a lifer's stare, recorded "I Walk the
Line": #1 country, #17 pop. Roy Orbison, who would not fully
flower till the '60s, did an early stretch at Sun, recording some
goofy rockers and writing a hit song (for the Everly Brothers) about
his girl friend Claudette. Charlie Rich came in as a staff songwriter
and soon had his own smash, "Lonely Weekends." All of these
performers got the can't-miss slapback echo-chamber treatment, and all
eventually bolted Sun. By the end of the '50s the revolution was over
for the bright yellow label with the sun-ray stripes, the rooster and
the encircling clef notes.
Only one Sun star — that big swig of Louisiana moonshine named Jerry
Lee Lewis — stayed there when he became hot, and that is because,
quite soon, he was not. (Marrying your 13-year-old cousin-once-removed
will do that.) But it's Lewis who embodied — hell, embodies — so
much of what was feral and profound about the new music. He knew its
varied roots and how to tap them. As he announced at the conclusion of
his belated, heroically defiant debut at the Grand Ole Opry in 1973:
"Let me tell ya somethin' about Jerry Lee Lewis, ladies and
gentlemen. I am a rock-'n'-rollin', country-and-Western,
rhythm-'n'-blues-singin' mothafucker."
Good mo'nin', judge, and your jury too
I've got a few things I'd like to say to you:
I'm gonna murder my baby
Yes, I'm gonna murder my baby
Yes, I'm gonna murder my baby (yeah, I'm tellin' the truth now)
'Cause she don't do nothin' but cheat and lie.
—recorded by Pat Hare, May 1954
Phillips deserves all praise for finding these musicians — including
blues guitarist Hare, who in 1960 did indeed let life (or rather
death) imitate art by murdering his baby. In the uniquely free-form
Sun atmosphere, Sam helped performers express their tangled visions;
they would come in with no songs or arrangements prepared but just
noodle and canoodle until inspiration struck. Of course, he also
should earn a week's detention for dropping the black acts when
Presley showed him he could make money with white ones. But, hey,
that's show business.
The two groups are integrated on a couple of Sun anthologies: the
newly issued two-CD set "Sun Records: The 50th Anniversary
Collection" (from BMG Heritage); and the older, fuller three-CD
opus, "The Sun Record Collection" (on the ever-dependable
Rhino label). The BMG set has some strange omissions: there's no
Howlin' Wolf, whom Phillips called the greatest artist he ever
recorded ("This is where the soul of man never dies"); no
"Good Rockin' Tonight"; and, criminally, no "Great
Balls of Fire," the Jerry Lee Lewis number that ... well, I'll
save those superlatives for later.
Black and white did mingle in the studio, not physically but in their
overlapping styles and choice of material. Turner's piano work,
backing Jackie Brenston on Phillips's first hit, "Rocket
'88'," has some of the boogie-woogie triplets, rolling rhythm
down low and bang-it-till-it-breaks urgency on high that were later
identified with Lewis. In September 1954, Parker recorded his own
"Mystery Train," a spectral blues song that has sax-man
James Wheeler evoking a train's mournful whistle and Floyd Murphy's
guitar providing the chugging wheels. Ten months later Elvis covered
it, speeding the tempo and lending the tune his own eccentric
authority.
Sun artists often covered one another's songs, at Phillips'
encouragement: He owned the catalogue. He also took droit de seigneur
on certain compositions. Somehow, between Little Junior's initial
recording of "Mystery Train" and Elvis' remake, Phillips had
become the song's co-author. (Presley took instruction from the
master: when he moved to RCA, he demanded and got co-authorship on
Otis Blackwell's "Don't Be Cruel" and "All Shook
Up.")
In rock 'n roll's wildcatting days, everybody was borrowing, stealing,
learning from everyone else. "At that time," says Milton
Campbell in "Sun Records: An Oral History" by John Floyd,
"the trend was, whoever had a hit record out, you would try to
make up some lyrics as you go along and try to sound as close to that
record as possible." On the "50th Anniversary
Collection" you'll hear a 1953 instrumental, Jimmy & Walter's
"Easy," whose melody closely copies the 1950 Ivory Joe
Hunter ballad "I Almost Lost My Mind." Cash's "Folsom
Prison Blues" was, as they say, "inspired by" Gordon
Jenkins's "Crescent City Blues"; in the late '60s, the
courts ruled that a better word would be "swiped," and Cash
had to pay up. Rufus Thomas's "Bear Cat (The Answer to Hound
Dog)," whose composition was credited to one Sam Phillips, was so
direct a copy of the Leiber-Stoller hit that Sun had two pay Lion
Records two cents a copy. (All this and much more itemized in Colin
Escott and Martin Hawkins' book "Good Rockin' Tonight: Sun
Records and the Birth of Rock 'n Roll.")
Phillips was not the fastest man with a buck. One reason Cash and
Perkins left Sun for Columbia was that Phillips paid 3-percent
royalties instead of the standard 5 percent. The boss retired a rich
man — not from selling Sun Records, which he did in the late '60s,
but because he was an original shareholder in another mid-century
Memphis business, Holiday Inns. Inc.
He didn't sing or play an instrument; he often left session
supervision to his assistant Jack Clement, an actual musician and
songwriter. But Phillips did have an ear. He could hear the brilliance
in a raw musician. (Sam liked raw; it was what made him rock's first
impresario.) He could also hear what wasn't there but could be: what a
performer might accomplish if given full freedom in the studio.
Who knows where Phillips got this gift of creative listening? Says
singer Jim Dickinson: "There are people who will say about Sam's
period of genius that ... it is the same period of time as his
alcoholism, and it's also right after his shock treatment
therapy" in 1951. Dickinson recalls a time when Sam took a
screwdriver to a fuse box. "It looked like lightning struck the
thing. And Sam has yet even to recoil. He says, 'A little one-ten
doesn't hurt you. You need a two-twenty every now and then just to
know you're alive.'"
The music Sam Phillips godfathered had the same effect on American
kids as the jolt from a 220-volt fuse. It let them know they were
alive.
Come on over, baby, we got a chicken in the barn/ Whose barn? What
barn? My barn!
Come on over, baby, really got the bull by the horn
We ain't fakin', whole lotta shakin' goin' on.
—recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis, February 1957
The summer of '57 was a blistering time for primal rock 'n roll. At a
million places like South Jersey's Avalon Ballroom (admission: 25
cents), kids worked up a sweet sweat jitterbugging to Bobby Day's
"Rockin' Robin," Elvis' "All Shook Up," Ray
Charles's "Talkin' 'Bout You," the Crickets' "That'll
Be the Day," Little Richard's "Good Golly Miss Molly,"
the Coasters' "Searchin'," Buddy Knox's "Party
Doll," Ricky Nelson's "Be Bop Baby," Fats Domino's
"I'm Walkin'," the Everly Brothers' "Bye Bye
Love," the Diamonds' "Little Darlin'," the Dell
Vikings' "Come Go with Me" and Chuck Berry's "School
Days." Then they'd slow down for some smooth churning to ballads
like "Long Lonely Nights," "Love Letters in the
Sand," "Loving You," "A White Sport Coat" and
(the season's top-selling song, I'm chagrined to say)
"Tammy."
But for me the summer of '57 belonged to Jerry Lee Lewis and
"Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On." Sun had issued his rendition
of the song (written by Dave Williams and Roy Hall, a.k.a Sonny David)
in the spring, but it started soaring after Lewis's July 28th
appearance on Steve Allen's Sunday night show. I remember watching
that performance with the same startled excitement that seized me when
I saw Elvis's debut on the Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey "Stage
Show" 18 months earlier. A sharp intake of breath, a gnarl of the
stomach and an irresistibly bopping head could mean only one thing to
a kid reaching puberty at the same time rock did: The revolution was
here.
And if Elvis sent the Romanovs scurrying from the Winter Palace, Jerry
Lee was Lenin triumphant — the shock of the new suddenly sitting,
smirking, raving on the old throne. Except JLL sat on a piano stool.
Sat at the beginning, anyway. Then the fingers at the ends of those
long, thin, untanned arms attacking the piano with the furiously
proficient ardor of a Rubinstein or a Rubirosa. Yes, children, I
remember that performance as if it were from the best, clearest
yesterday that changed my teen tomorrows. But Nick Tosches, Lewis'
biographer, conjures it with an infernal eloquence I couldn't match.
Here, then, a passage from "Hellfire":
"He sat at the big piano and he looked sideways at the camera,
eyeballed it the way he has looked at those girls in the Arkansas beer
joint, and then he began to play the piano and howl about the shaking
that was going on. He rose, still pounding, and he kicked the piano
stool back. It shot across the stage, tumbling, skidding... Steve
Allen laughed and threw the stool back, then threw other furniture,
and Jerry Lee played some high notes with the heel of his shoe. Then
he stopped and looked at the camera sideways again. Neither he nor
Steve Allen had ever heard louder applause."
Those three TV minutes revealed Jerry Lee's electrifying,
near-electrocuting showmanship. But the music was what got me. The
bass figure on the piano starts rumbling and, two beats later, J.M.
Van Eaton's cymbals join in. After the four-bar intro (which he first
used in his own composition "End of the Road," recorded
November 14, 1956), Jerry Lee makes the vocal invocation: "Come
on over, baby, whole lotta shakin' goin' on!" It's a firm but
liquid tenor, at times quavering with the infusion of the Spirit
(perhaps holy, perhaps profane) that Jerry Lee heard and sang in the
Assembly of God meetings of his youth. Which is of course at the
sundered heart of his music: a wrasslin' match between the Deity and
the Devil. Jerry Lee, whose cousin is the evangelist Jimmy Swaggart,
has often said he is a man of God doing Satan's work. His music,
beginning with "Whole Lotta Shakin'," imparts much of the
thrill and dread of someone who has taken the Lord's gift and twisted
it to make rock 'n roll gold.
The song is a familiar 12-bar blues in boogie-woogie tempo: two
verses, a chorus ("Shake, baby, shake"), two verses of
instrumental break (one featuring Jerry Lee amok on piano, his
pummeling accentuated by an arpeggio as if he were running barefoot
over the keys, and one of Roland Janes's less ornate but
momentum-sustaining guitar work) followed by a reprise of the second
verse with the inspired vocal filler "We got a chicken in the
barn/ Whose barn? What barn? My barn!" (the drums whacking the
"whose-what-my" to give it extra force and fun), then two
softer, near-spoken verses — one with the ad-lib "You can shake
it one time for me" and a brief impression of the Elvis baritone
("Did you hear me, I said come on over, baby" but, in the
Presley style, omitting all consonants), the second a little sermon on
shakin' ("All ya gotta do, honey, is kinda stand in one spot,/
Wiggle around just a little bit,/ And that's when ya got something,
yeah") — and finally, after the caressing, the orgasm, the
imperious "Shake it, make it shake!" as the piano pumps like
a marathoner's heart, the stool goes rush-stumbling across the floor
and the listener rises in exhausted exaltation.
You shake my nerves and you rattle my brain
Too much love drives a man insane
You broke my will
But what a thrill
Goodness gracious! Great balls o' fire!
—recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis, October 6-8, 1957
I remember another Lewis manifestation, on Dick Clark's
"Bandstand." It was Thanksgiving Day 1957 and, as Tosches
notes, the other guests were the teen duo Tom and Jerry, later Simon
and Garfunkel. For the kids in Philadelphia, Pa., Lewis sang his
follow-up hit, "Great Balls of Fire." He tore through the
number and, toward the end, shook his long, slicked-back blond hair
until it fell forward, like a toupee attached at the brow line,
virtually covering his face. He was suddenly a peroxided version of
the Addams Family's Cousin Itt, and for a moment I could feel my
stomach clutch. Hair wasn't supposed to do that, not in the '50s. Gene
Vincent's was greasy, James Brown's extravagantly pompadoured, Elvis's
as carefully coiffed as the 18th green at Augusta. Jerry Lee's hair
was a creature from a horror film, a redneck monster that arose,
erupted and smothered its host. The Attack of the 50 Ft. Flaxen! Great
bolls of follicles!
Anyway, I was once more transfixed by the music. I still believe that
"Whole Lotta Shakin' " and "Great Balls of Fire"
constitute the most potent one-two punch any pop performer ever
launched and landed. And of these, "Balls" is certainly the
greater. The first song was standard 12-bar boogie: C, C, F, C, G-F,
C. "Great Balls," written by ace '50s rock composer Otis
Blackwell (of "Don't Be Cruel" and "Fever" fame)
and Jack Hammer, is a declaration of lust so impatient it needs only
eight bars, dropping the second and fourth C lines. It gets the job
done in a majestically compressed 1min, 50sec.
Other improvements over "Whole Lotta Shakin' ": 1) Jerry
Lee's pianistry was never so pertinently fortissimo. 2) The singing
has a ferocious assurance, hitting preacher-like peaks. 3) And because
the song is in the deranged-exclamatory mode — the lyric engorged
with religio-carnal seizures ("You came along and mooooved me,
honey!"), adolescent giddiness ("Kiss me, baby! Mmm-mm,
feels good!"), desperate anticipation ("Hold me, baby! Well,
I wants to love you like a lover should!") and
obsessive-compulsive behavior ("I chew my nails and I twiddle my
thumb!") — the comic intensity of JLL's glissandous vocal
underlines, not undermines the sexual fervor. This is singing in
tongues, wild sex behind the barn, rock for the ages.
Four bold notes, ascending by thirds, and then a break; the pattern
repeated four times in the first verse, and Van Eaton's drums
emphasizing the musical statement, as JLL itemizes a lover's
complaint, "You shake my nerves and you rattle my brain..."
Mid-rant, he muses that passion has its perverse perks ("You
broke my will, but what a thrill"), before surrendering to
ecstatic inanity: "Goodness gracious! Great balls of fire!"
The second verse, which explains the singer's agitation as an
agreeable form of sexual psychosis, punctuates the news with three
right-hand arpeggios, while the bass drum is joined by a foreground
tapping (presumably the rim of the snare drum), as if someone is
keeping time on the mike with his buck teeth. In the bridge, Jerry
Lee's left hand rumbles menacingly up to the break, when four-note
poundings heighten the melodrama of the lyric: "You're fine, so
kind/ Got to tell this world that you're mine mine mine mine!"
Back to the verse, with more rumblings and eruptions — "C'mon,
baby, ya drive me crazy" — and on to the two instrumental
sections.
No guitar solo this time; in fact, I don't hear a guitar at all, just
the pumping piano and the pulverized drums. The first instrumental
verse starts with a sassy, Jelly Roll Morton-style line, then bangs
out another four-time, four-note, four-on-the-floor figure with, this
time, four arpeggios; it's how a sex-crazed Tex Avery cartoon wolf
would express himself if he could play hot piano. Then the right hand
pounds the same four high keys while the left hand describes a
familiarly stealthy boogie-woogie figure, creeping up and down the
lower register. We're back into the bridge, Jerry Lee's enunciation
more forceful, and rampaging through the final verse. At "C'mon,
baby, ya drive me crazy," the chugging bass figure is briefly
counterpointed by a cute hearts-and-flowers, silent-movie piano
flourish, as if sentiment not sex were the theme of the story — he's
lying with his right hand, telling the truth with his left. A last
"Goodness gracious! Great balls of fire!", a final four-note
blast, and it's over.
My name is Jerry Lee Lewis from a-Louisiana
I'm gonna do ya'a little boogie on this here piana
Do it mighty fine, gonna make you shake it
I'll make ya do it and make ya do it until till ya break
It's called the Lewis boogie in the Lewis way
Oh Lord I do my little boogie-woogie every day.
—recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis, early 1958
If Elvis was the King, the monarch of proto-pop, Jerry Lee was Moloch,
the pagan deity of the Middle East whose worship involved the
sacrifice of children. The early-surly Elvis, once under the stern
tutelage of the illegal immigrant from the Netherlands who called
himself Col. Tom Parker, was processed and pasteurized into a nice
young man who went Hollywood (and Vegas) almost as soon as he became a
star. Jerry Lee, who had and would tolerate no image-makeover
Svengali, wore the musk of venereal danger, styled himself as a
reckless teen girl's wet dream and her mom's nightmare. As Memphis
native Michael Bane said of Lewis in another terrific Tosches book —
"Country: The Twisted Roots of Rock 'n' Roll" — "He
made Elvis acceptable. Elvis tried to be good.... But Jerry Lee was
always a shitkicker." His nickname was 'The Killer,' and who
knows how close he came to living down to his legend?
When asked to compare himself and Elvis, Jerry Lee used to say,
"We are entirely different performers. 'Bout the only thing we
got in common is that we're from Tennessee." Except that Presley
was from Tupelo, Miss., Jerry Lee in Ferriday, La. He was born
September 29, 1935, 274 days after Elvis, in Ferriday, La. Among his
cousins were Swaggart and Mickey Gilley, who much later would mimic
Jerry Lee's style and sell far more singles than the Moloch Man.
From the beginning, Jerry Lee was an apostle, an addict to music:
inhaling all kinds, then reproducing and blending it on the family
piano, where he would do his little boogie-woogie every day. As
Tosches writes: "The child sang in church, and he sang along with
his daddy's old records, and he sang along with the children of the
black sharecroppers who lived nearby. And sometimes, when he was
singing by himself, thinking that no one could hear him, he mixed it
all together. ... Whatever he heard, he swallowed it, then he spat it
out on that old Starck upright."
When he was 20, Lewis made the rounds of Nashville's country
career-makers. JLL recalls that, in the post-Elvis greeding frenzy,
"They said, 'Well, now, you change your act to a gittar and you
might could make it.' I said, 'You can take your gittar and ram it up
your ass.'" What an affront! Jerry Lee was, after all, the
consummate keyboard man, with the best left hand in the business.
Pumpin' that piano was his religion and his most consummate vice. But
even commercially, his retort seemed to make commercial sense in 1956,
when some of the best rockers were singer-pianists: Little Richard,
Ray Charles and JLL's fellow Louisianans Fats Domino, Allen Toussaint
and Huey "Piano" Smith. If '50s record producers thought
they could make a mint with a white kid who sang like a black man, why
couldn't a white kid who played like a black man be big too?
As it happened, history was with the guitar; Elvis and Buddy Holly,
B.B. King and Bo Diddley, The Beatles and the Stones, Jimi Hendrix and
Jeff Beck, ad infinitum ad gloriam, closed that case. And Jerry Lee
would be the definitive piano rocker in part because he was, in the
music's infancy, one of its last. (The saxophone, primal ax of early
rock, also went nearly extinct.) He worked under another disadvantage:
A pianist, unlike a guitarist, couldn't take his instrument to a gig;
at least back then he didn't. Janes ascribes some of Lewis' extreme
behavior on the road to his annoyance at being given "some pretty
bad pianos to play... A lot of the wild stuff he did on piano would be
out of frustration because they'd give him pianos that maybe five or
six of the notes didn't play."
But shoddy or shiny, those rocket 88s did let him blast off. He sold
records by the millions, induced puberty in America's young and
shrugged off the charge by Jerry Lewis (born Joseph Levitch) that
Jerry Lee had stolen his name! He also refuted the skeptics by proving
that a man could still make concert-stage mayhem from a sitting
position. Jerry Lee's one condition for business and pleasure:
"Just give me my money and show me where the piano is."
At the live rock 'n roll shows that blossomed around the country,
Lewis would often tour with — and against — his formidable rivals
Chuck Berry and Little Richard. In an Alan Freed extravaganza at the
Brooklyn Paramount, both he and Berry demanded the closing spot. Freed
chose Berry, for reasons of seniority. And again we consult the Gospel
according to Tosches:
"Jerry Lee did as he was bid that night; he went on before Chuck
Berry. He had the crowd screaming and rushing the stage, and when it
seemed that the screams had grown loudest and the rushing most
chaotic, he stood, kicked the piano stool away with violence, and
broke into 'Great Balls of Fire.' As the screaming chaos grew suddenly
and sublimely greater, he drew from his jacket a Coke bottle full of
gasoline, and he doused the piano with one hand as the other hand
banged out the song; and he struck a wooden match and he set the piano
aflame, and his hands, like the hands of a madman, did not quit the
blazing keys, but kept pounding, until all became unknown tongues and
holiness and fire, and the kids went utterly, magically berserk with
the frenzy of it all; and Jerry Lee stalked backstage, stinking of
gasoline and wrath, and he said to Chuck Berry, real calm, as the
sound of kids going crazy and stamping and yelling shook the walls; he
said, 'Follow that, nigger.' "
Jerry Lee often said that pop music had produced only four supreme
stylists: Al Jolson, Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Williams and himself. (Al
Jolson??) On that incendiary night at the Brooklyn Paramount — March
28, 1958 — JLL could reasonably expect he might soon be the most
popular of the four. "Breathless," his follow-up to
"Great Balls of Fire," was chugging up the charts. His next
single would be the theme song to a (minor) Hollywood film, "High
School Confidential." And in May he would begin a headlining tour
of Great Britain. A star was born. A star prevails.
And angry unkind words you've said
They make those teardrops start
Why can't I free your doubtful mind
And melt your cold cold heart?
— recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis, early 1961
A star fell.
In London he acknowledged that the young lady accompanying him —
Myra Gale Brown, the 13-year-old daughter of his cousin J.W. Brown
(who played bass in his touring band) — had been his wife since
December 12, 1957. Jerry Lee was used to hell breaking loose around
him, but usually he was the one who opened its cage. Now he looked
pale and defenseless in the tabloid press's glare. The Rank theater
chain canceled his bookings, he returned to the U.S. to find the
reception no kinder, and the bride and groom found themselves the
Monica-and-Bill of the '50s. Top-40 radio stations exiled Jerry Lee's
music, and Sun Records issued his next single, "Lewis
Boogie," as the B side of a derisive novelty number called
"The Return of Jerry Lee," which intercut snippets of his
records with a reporter's mock-interrogation. "What did Queen
Elizabeth say about you?" "Goodness gracious! Great balls of
fire!"
The small band of loyal fans like me (I was born the same year as
Myra) were reduced to rooting out his records only in 19-cent
remainder bins. That's where I found "Lewis Boogie," a tune
that, in its rollicking rockin' propulsion, fully merits a place next
to his two signature hits. It begins as abrupt as wartime reveille:
four four-note phrases, each an octave lower than the preceding, on a
piano that sounds a little flat in the upper registers. Then JLL races
into his vocal. This is a 12-bar blues with a difference: the breaks
come not in the first two lines (as in, say, Little Richard's
"Long Tall Sally") but in the fourth and sixth, giving the
lyric room to build to a natural dramatic climax and the pianist room
to paint his sound-portrait. Of course there's a slew of arpeggios
(eight, to the all-time record 11 in "Great Balls") and the
satyr-singer's invocation of the magic moment "when your hips
start rockin'/ Honey, and your knees start knockin'." For a
transcendent 1min, 58 secs., find the song on the Jerry Lee CD
"25 All-Time Greatest Sun Recordings."
With a few exceptions (like "Lewis Boogie"), Jerry Lee
didn't write his own stuff. He made other stuff his own. And though he
kept recording and refining his style, it must have galled him that
some of his later, minor singles were remakes of songs by his old
rivals and traveling companions: Little Richard's "Good Golly
Miss Molly," Chuck Berry's "Little Queenie" and
"Sweet Little Sixteen." Yet Lewis was not one to hide; if
the gigs paid a few hundred dollars instead of the thousand he once
earned, he was man enough to show up. He had some country hits in the
'60s, and in 1968 played Iago in the L.A. production of an
"Othello" musical called "Catch My Soul"; he spoke
the lines word-perfect, in his deep bayou drawl, and stole the show.
"This Shakespeare was really somethin," he told the L.A.
Times. "I wonder what he woulda thought of my records."
Ev'rything I say is wrong
Ev'rything I do goes wrong
My honey's tellin' me, "So long"
What am I gonna do?
—Baby Baby Bye Bye," recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis in early 1960
Why is Jerry Lee Lewis still alive?
He has abused himself with pills and booze for most of his adult life.
He nearly died in 1981 from a ruptured stomach. He shot his bass
player Butch Owens in the chest — accidentally, it is said; Owens
survived. But Lewis's family tree is full of untimely deadwood. His
elder brother Elmo was run over by a truck when JLL was three. His
eldest son Jerry Lee, Jr., died at 19; car crash. Steve Allen Lewis,
his son by Myra, died at 5 in a swimming pool. His fourth wife, Jaren
Pate, also died in a swimming pool, in 1982. His fifth wife, Shawn
Stephens, died a few months into their marriage; it was ruled a
methadone overdose, which doesn't explain her "bruised, bloodied
corpse" police found in the bedroom of the Lewis's Nesbit, Miss.,
mansion. Or the comment Lewis supposedly made to Stevens' sister
Denise. As she told the Detroit Free Press: "I said, 'What
happened?', and Jerry said, 'Your sister's dead, and she was a bad
girl."
Jerry Lee wasn't the only rock star to endure or sow tragedy. Elvis's
twin brother died at birth; Berry was convicted of having sex with a
15-year-old (not his wife) and served three years in jail; Orbison
married the 15-year-old Claudette Frady, who died 11 years later in a
motorcycle crash. But Jerry Lee had such a run of misfortune that the
frequency and enormity of the misfortunes begin to seem ... unseemly.
Some of these events occurred after "Hellfire" went to
press. The book is beautifully written, of course — Tosches is the
Sugar Ray Robinson of biographers, muscular but not muscle-bound,
gliding, circling, then stinging with an insight — and has an
unflagging, indeed accelerating, vigor for 150 pages. Eventually,
though, the narrative winds down into terse renditions of Jerry Lee's
police blotter. It's as if Tosches were waiting, with suppressed
impatience, for his subject to expire or explode.
Didn't happen. Sixty-seven this year, Jerry Lee Lewis refused to die.
What Tosches wrote in 1982 about Lewis in 1962 pertains today:
"Still he pumped onward, roaming the country in a dirty Cadillac,
howling of the fire and the shaking, seeking his own vague salvation,
indomitable." Perhaps God or the Devil has other plans for the
Killer. Or perhaps Jerry Lee sees them still wrasslin' for his soul,
and as referee he refuses to call off the match.
Could be he's just too damn stubborn to die. He may see the Oldies
Show of rock 'n roll pioneers as a last-man-standing competition, in
which he is determined to outlive Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Fats
Domino and other pretenders to the throne — the jewel-encrusted
piano stool — he always believed was his. You know what he said back
in 1977 when he heard Elvis had died? "Another one outta the
way."
August 20, 2002
DJ's
Elvis concert tape finally hits the big time
By ANGELA SIMONEAUX, The Advocate - August
20, 2002
LAFAYETTE -- It didn't take Ray Green long to make the first recording
of an Elvis concert.
"He only sang a few songs, the scoundrel," Green says.
But it took nearly 50 years to get that recording released.
This summer, a 46-year dream came true for Green when his recording of
The King's 1956 Little Rock, Ark., concert was released as part of
"Elvis Today, Tomorrow and Forever." The four-CD set
features "100 rare or previously unheard outtakes, private
recordings and concert recordings" that chronicle the performer's
career.
In May 1956, Green was a radio disc jockey at KLRA and Elvis was an
upstart performer with only one No. 1 hit -- "Heartbreak
Hotel" -- under his belt.
"He was not yet a household name then," Green remembers.
Green wrangled permission to record an interview with Elvis from
"Colonel" Tom Parker by refusing to pick the performer up at
the Little Rock Airport unless Parker agreed.
He remembers Elvis as a polite young man who called him
"sir" during the interview, and feels he met "the
original Elvis."
"He was down-to-earth, courteous, and soft-spoken," Green
said.
Green said he asked Elvis about the burgeoning controversy surrounding
his hips.
"He told me he would never do anything vulgar on stage, because
his mother wouldn't allow it," Green said.
He recorded the brief concert, and officials with Elvis Presley
Enterprises have confirmed it is the first recorded concert of The
King.
While some of the recordings on the disc set aren't of very good
quality, Green's are.
Some reviewers of the disc set have opined that those recordings --
"Heartbreak Hotel," "Long Tall Sally," "I Was
the One," "Money Honey," "I Got a Woman,"
"Blue Suede Shoes" and "Hound Dog" -- are the best
on the disc.
The liner notes indicate Elvis had just heard the song "Hound
Dog" a couple weeks before his stop in Little Rock, at a Freddie
Bell and the Bellboys concert in Las Vegas. He liked the song so much,
he added it to his repertoire.
Three months later, a two-sided single of "Hound Dog" and
"Don't Be Cruel" had captured the No. 1 spot in the country.
Green has enjoyed a little notoriety with the release of these
recordings and the 1996 CD release of his interview with Elvis.
After a story about his experience was published in The American
Legion Magazine, a fellow "called me up and cussed me out."
Turns out the man had been in the 1956 Little Rock audience waiting
for more than an hour because Green's interview delayed the start of
the concert. He hadn't known what the hold-up was until 43 years
later, when he read the article in September 1999.
Another person called and asked if he had actually shaken Elvis' hand.
"I said I had, and then she asked me if I had washed my hand
since then," Green said. "She wanted to come by and touch my
hand."
But the notoriety is not the lesson he's taking from this situation.
"I didn't do anything. This is no big deal. So I interviewed
Elvis Presley. So what?" Green says. "What is important to
me is that I stuck with this for 46 years. I have seven rejection
letters. And now this is in every record store in the world.
"The bottom line is, I stuck with it."
Green, who gives motivational talks, said he uses his story to help
people who have an unfulfilled dream.
Ever since he was a small boy, he has lived by the philosophy that
everything happens for the best, a philosophy laid out in the Bible in
Romans 8:28.
"Maybe this took 46 years so that I could talk about it in my
motivational seminars," he said. "I'm just thrilled that I
did it. Not that I did the interview, but that I finally did it. I
don't know many people who will have the determination to stick with a
project for 46 years."

August 20, 2002
Premiere Radio Networks
Offers Exclusive Elvis 30 #1 Hits Radio Special
WHO: Premiere Radio Networks is
producing the ELV1S 30 #1 HITS RADIO SPECIAL in conjunction with BMG
and the Elvis Presley Estate. BMG selected Premiere Radio as their
official radio partner during the release of this album.
WHAT: ELV1S 30 #1 HITS RADIO
SPECIAL will include many of Elvis's number one hits mixed and
mastered from original master tapes. Also included in the special will
be rarely heard studio outtakes, special Elvis interviews, and
comments from music and entertainment celebrities like Paul McCartney,
Kurt Russell, BBMak, Vanessa Carlton, John Lennon, Motown
producer/writer Eddie Holland and others.
WHEN: ELV1S 30 #1 HITS RADIO
SPECIAL will air September 20-24, 2002, coinciding with BMG's
September 24 release of the new CD, "ELV1S 30 #1 HITS"
Source : Premiere Radio Networks
August 20, 2002
"Elvis'
30 No.1 Hits"
Release date: September 24, 2002

Source: (photos) CD and Cover
from Andylon Lansen (Ep.pgold.com)
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