WHERE MUSIC LISTENS TO YOU

Elvis At 72

Posted over 2 years ago
Every year a bunch of new noisy kids will tell you rock and roll is a young man’s game. At 72 and still The King, Elvis Presley knows that it’s stamina you need. He’s survived medical addictions and years of indifference, the attentions of rock gods and hysteria of fans, and after fifty years he knows one thing no other can claim: I started this. This is my kingdom.It was ex-First Lady Betty Ford who saved him. After he collapsed onstage in Las Vegas in 1976, an embarrassing, obese, shambling dinosaur of a performer, she made contact and quietly persuaded him to check into the Betty Ford Clinic. As an ex-alcoholic and prescription drug addict, she knew the road he stumbled along and if anyone could make Elvis listen it was the wife of a US President. Elvis always did respect authority.We didn’t learn until much later that while he was drying out some of those he had inspired made pilgrimages to offer him comfort and inspiration. It was Bruce Springsteen and Don Henley who got Elvis to focus on his managerial situation. The music world had changed immensely since signing a 50-50 contract with Colonel Parker and over time and talking he saw that his place in the world could be regained and if to do that he had to jettison the man who had made him famous and rich, so be it. The expected legal battle evaporated when the Colonel realised that taking the case to court would expose his illegal immigrant status and he settled quietly. The 1978-79 World Tour eclipsed everything any performer had achieved to that time. The pent-up expectation of a world waiting to see The King created a hysteria not seen again until Michael Jackson’s similar tour ten years later. Just watch director Martin Scorsese’s excellent documentary One Night With You to see how a planet’s adoration inspired The King, fuelling his charisma as he celebrated hit after hit from his extensive song catalogue.The Eighties marked a turning period: What does a fifty year old rocker do? The tour with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers backing him alienated many of his older fans as much as it did Petty’s contemporary audience, and while there were rumours of a recording project with Bruce Springsteen, whatever may have happened in the studio has to this day stayed within the four walls. The so-called “jam sessions” with The Travelling Wilburys were fun, but it was plain Elvis wasn’t comfortable in a group (even this one), and in previous times George Harrison and Dylan had been enemies assaulting his status and relevance. You got the feeling Elvis doesn’t forget, or easily forgive. The albums he recorded were inconsistent, reminding too many people that over the years he had recorded some dreadful material. His moody reading of Tom Waits’ “Downtown Train” was both a surprising choice and a rare hit record. Some years it seemed Elvis was happy just to stay at Graceland and spend his time remodelling the interior.By 1995 he had reached the nadir of rock star status: elder statesman. The subject of endlessly recycled VH-1 “specials”, he was part of the musical wallpaper. To those under 30 Presley was the name of the daughter who married Michael Jackson and then the Elvis obsessed actor Nicholas Cage. His few concerts played only to the faithful. He hadn’t made a decent record in years. Then the unimaginable happened – his record company dropped him.Coincidentally, Rick Rubin was looking for an experienced musician to work with. His overtures were met with scepticism by those around Elvis, but shaken by his label of 40 years dumping him, Presley took the meeting. It was an unlikely partnership but each respected the other’s musical truth. The deal was sealed when Elvis asked what kind of record Rubin wanted to make and Rubin replied, “The best record we can. And we’ll keep recording until we make it.” The album Elvis Presley consciously harkened back to Elvis’s first album of the same name. It sounded spare and naked, the focus on Elvis’s still considerable vocal skills, informed now with a lifetime of experience. What made it memorable was the choice of modern songs, decided by both Elvis and Rubin. The playful take on Springsteen’s “Pink Cadillac” seemed almost too obvious, but the whispering depth of “I’m On Fire” surprised everyone. Perhaps most unexpected was the gospel passion and phrasing Elvis brought to “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For”.Rubin and Elvis unveiled the collaboration with some dates at a small Los Angeles nightclub. To Elvis’s surprise there were young people familiar with his work and respectful of his impact on history. The thrill he got from the intimacy and communication of a small room led to the inclusion of random club dates in subsequent tours, the most coveted experience a fan could have. As their collaboration continued, Elvis’s rehabilitation grew. Blues revisited his love for the music that had set him on this long road some 45 years before and God similarly expressed his passion for church music. In the hands of Rubin they became reflections on what it meant to create a new music that held the possibility of never growing old and how you dealt with the fact that while your heart may still be 17 your body was advancing through its 60s. (Musicians, especially, paid attention since they would one day navigate these same waters.) In the eyes of the world he was once again The King.On turning 70 Elvis decided to celebrate over 50 years of music making. Rock And Roll is an extraordinary album not just for the way he reinterprets some of his greatest hits – “Heartbreak Hotel” and “In The Ghetto” are tours de force in heartache – but the other songs he chose to highlight the rich history of the kingdom he invented. When he sings, on the title song, “It’s been a long time since I rock and rolled,” he means it in a way no-one else can. For the subsequent world tour it must have been his sense of humour to have a band built from every decade: guitarists James Burton and Joe Perry with Jack Casady and Dave Grohl swinging the rhythm, this core group supported by strings, horns and gospel choir. But where people expected a summation, what they saw and heard was a man unconcerned about what he did in the past. It was an exploration of who he was now, how he was on stage and what that performance did to people. In 1957 he said that he had watched blues singer Arthur Crudup on stage and thought if he could achieve what Crudup did then he would be a mighty music man and half a century later he was still reaching for that place. Or as Elvis summed it up in the song that ended every show, “It’s A Long Way To The Top (If You Wanna Rock And Roll)”.

Comments (33)

  1. Known Human says I was really hoping for one of those computer aged photos of what Elvis would look like if he were alive today.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  2. ivylander says If only this could come true....
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  3. QueenofHell says Bravo! That's impressively splendid, but surprising. I thought that Elvis faked his own death and worked in a chip shop in Skegness!
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  4. Terry Staunton says An insightful and considered appraisal of Presley's later years, Jonh, I think you both totally nailed both his enduring legacy and shone a light to the road ahead. Personally, I think Elvis has shown himself to be an evergreen inspirational force, especially in his guest judge spots on American Idol (his "limey wimp" aside directed at Simon Cowell is destined to remain a clip show favourite for decades) , and his brief stint as leader of the house band on Letterman's talk show proved that the hunger and humility was still in place. I find myself reminded of his meeting with Noel Gallagher backstage at Lollapalooza a few years back, the two of them barely able to contain their hilarity as Perry Farrell tried to out-shock Keith Moon during the misjudged collaborative cover of the theme song from The Partridge Family. It's a shame that the resulting recording session at Rockfield, marred by the prolonged "that's my line" confrontation between Elvis and a visiting Amy Winehouse, has never seen the light of day. How the world truly longed to hear Liam wrapping his prolonged vowels around "In The Ghetoooooooaaaaah"! There are those who claim Elvis never quite matched the purity and power of the '68 comeback special, but I urge those people to listen again to his magnificent work on Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go, his duet with Roseanne Barr which underscored that astonishing scene in the very last episode of Will & Grace. Rip up the history books, Moggers, because Elvis Aaron Presley is nowhere near finished adding his footnotes.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  5. The Serenity Vortex says Elvis who? ;)
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  6. Jonh Ingham says Terry, I stayed away from the fall-from rehab years, but it all comes out in the end, doesn't it? The Elvis-Amy 'my line' tape has rightly joined the Brian/Denis Wilson 'cocaine talk' and Lennon/Dylan dawn taxi conversation in the "addled" hall of fame.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  7. Pseudo Cyborg says "Coincidentally, Rick Rubin was looking for an experienced musician to work with." That had me simultaneously rolling and smiling. "When he sings, on the title song, “It’s been a long time since I rock and rolled,” he means it in a way no-one else can." Wow. Just wow, Jonh. This really is a stunning and heartfelt tribute. Kudos.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  8. SpencerAdmin says Funny and observant. Excellent stuff.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  9. oceanrain says great write-up does make you wonder what would of happened to him i read somewhere that if he had lived he would of been bankrupt within 6 months still great post cheers
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  10. Mike the Knife says Thank-yuh-verra-much, Jonh. That was a treat.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  11. deedee says Lovely. Now, where I can get a copy of "Downtown Train"? And does anyone else wonder, in a similar what-if vein, about Buddy Holly?
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  12. steve simon says this is brilliant john
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  13. Dale says ivylander nailed it; if only. Sigh.
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  14. Jonh Ingham says Thanks to everyone for the good words. It was one of those things that just came out of the ether - in an alternate universe this is just a news story. Cyborg - the Rick Rubin comment is virtually a direct quote from Rick on how he came to work with Johnny Cash. I always thought it a wonderful understatement. deedee: Buddy Holly,,,,hmmm. A Willie Nelson-ish musician who flirts around the edges of country while making timeless and largely uncategorisable music?
    Permalink posted 08/16/2007
  15. ivylander says Buddy Holly? Maybe would've come a little bit back into fashion with the British Invasion and the Beatles' patronage, wigged out a little in the late '60s and put out some very adventurous stuff - challenging but not necessarily popular - and finally settled into a comfortable career of updating Tejano rock and roll for grownups. Kind of a combination of Dion and Doug Sahm, but without the excess.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  16. Pseudo Cyborg says Wow, that is quite an understatement indeed. You gotta had it to Rick, though. He's one of those geniuses that understands the entire musical spectrum. It would have been a treat to hear what he and Elvis could do.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  17. emscee says In 1963, Buddy Holly and the Crickets visited England for a triumphant tour, sharing a bill with The Beatles, The Springfields, and Dion. Buddy didn't care much for the Springfields' dated folk sound, but he liked the lead female singer's voice, and persuaded her to come back to the U.S., where he wrote and produced the first Dusty Springfield album, generally considered to be the first "folk-rock" album. He also became friendly with George Harrison on that tour, and while Lennon & McCartney were dominating the songwriting on the Beatles' albums, Harrison & Holly wrote many of the songs on Buddy's albums in the mid-'60s on Capitol, where Holly signed after leaving Coral Records. The Harrison-Holly friendship lasted through the decade, and Holly was one of the artists George invited on the Delaney & Bonnie tour, along with Dave Mason and Eric Clapton. This led to the famous one-off album "Backstage Jam," which came out to great acclaim in 1969. During the '70s, Holly spent a lot of time in Nashville, working with his old friend Waylon Jennings, producing a Duane Eddy comeback album, and doing Dusty Springfield's one country-music album, the Grammy-winning "Dusty In Nashville." Following his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, where George Harrison gave the induction speech, George invited him to Los Angeles to work on a Buddy Holly solo album, his first in a decade. This led to Holly's participation in the Traveling Wilburys. Most recently, Holly was the co-headliner on Bob Dylan's 2005 leg of his Never Ending Tour, leading to speculation of a Dylan-Holly project. Supposedly, the two were in Clinton Studios in New York for a few weeks worth of recording, but those sessions are, as yet, unreleased.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  18. ivylander says Buddy Holly in the Wilburys. Perfect.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  19. Jonh Ingham says Ivy said it: Holly in the Wilburys is perfect. Cue comeback album on Virgin...And the hit 'I Drove All Night'.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  20. ivylander says And the duet with Emmylou Harris.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  21. deedee says You guys are killing me. The Wilburys... Dusty... George... Emmylou. Too much. If only.
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  22. wassonii says Brilliant threads of alternate realities. Merci!
    Permalink posted 08/17/2007
  23. Spike says Jonh, your piece is a major work. You've out-done yourself. The responses are amazing too. Plus, that version of "Shake, Rattle and Roll" is high-level r & r. I was young enough to be imprinted by Elvis in the 5th grade in 1957 ("All Shook Up"), but the fact that I had missed out on his early greatest years added to my passion. Periodically I listen to some recording by someone else and imagine BEING Elvis and performing it with a cool arrangement, usually in the early 60's when he started losing his intensity, whereas if I had been him, I wouldn't have lost his intensity and would have avoided his career mistakes. Since he had remade "O Sole Mio" into "It's Now or Never," why not make a Brill Building arrangement of one of Joseph Cantaloube's _Songs of the Auvergne_? Also, I found myself imagining concept albums and their covers. I'll describe only one, _Memphis Blues_. The cover would show Elvis, Scotty, Bill and D.J. wearing pastel blue suits standing in front of the statue of Ramses II. (When my wife and I saw it maybe 25 or so years ago, it was on its back, and now, according to Google images, it's housed in a building and people have to look down at it from above.) I imagine my 1960 color photo to be a little closer up than this one. The LP notes would not explain the connection. None of the songs would be a twelve-bar blues, but each song would either mention Memphis or be a cover version of a recording by a Memphis musician. It would include "It's a Good Thing" by Frank Stokes and "Can't I Do It for You" by Memphis Minnie, as well as this:
    Permalink posted 08/18/2007
  24. Spike says "Lula Lee" seems to have twelve-bar blues verses in it, I now realize, but it gets to stay on the LP.
    Permalink posted 08/18/2007
  25. Jonh Ingham says Spike - "Being Elvis"....I trust you don't put on a wig and white suit. The idea of a Memphis concept album is wonderful and thinking about it, I'm surprised no-one has done it. I've never heard of Jimmy Skinner, but that's a wonderful song and it's very easy to hear Elvis singing it.
    Permalink posted 08/20/2007
  26. Spike says By the time he got to the white suit era, he was unsalvageable in my opinion. Once in the 1980's I was browsing alone in a small wildly overpriced rare record store on Canal Street in lower Manhattan, and a fully decked-out professional Elvis impersonator walked in and asked the owner if he had some late-period Elvis live recording. It's the only time I've seen one of these guys in person, and I somehow restrained myself from asking him why these guys always dress like the old Elvis rather than the young Elvis.
    Permalink posted 08/20/2007
  27. FluxCapacitor says Hmm...no adventure into drum'n'bass? Brilliant post, and I love that pic!
    Permalink posted 08/22/2007
  28. Jonh Ingham says Hmmm, the Elvis drum n bass album....I'm sure I saw that last week in the local Oxfam shop. And considering how thoroughly his output has been repackaged, remixed and reviled, it wouldn't surprise me if the boys at BMG/RCA have thought that of a d'n'b album as well. Spike - know what you mean. Maybe it's because the'yre all too fat to fit into the leather suit or the red jacket.
    Permalink posted 08/23/2007
  29. 2Serenity says Elvis' gospel music I feel is his best music ever performed and it is often overlooked. Some people want to say that Elvis was a racist which I can not believe with him singing these spirituals as though he has the holy spirit. Elvis singing How Great Thou Art -- There is a documentary about this called He Touched Me: The Gospel Music of Elvis Presley if you are interested in exploring this more.
    Permalink posted 08/27/2007
  30. Jonh Ingham says Serenity, that's a wonderful clip. I love the way he gets lost in the song. I've always had a soft spot for Elvis' spirituals and usually throw a few into Christmas mix tapes. Hard to see him as a racist when the core of his musical life is based around blues and gospel. He was a product of his time and place, which might look a little 'illiberal' when viewed from now. I'll look for the docu.
    Permalink posted 08/27/2007
  31. Blue Meenie says WOW. Thanks for that imaginative rendering that seems oh so believable. I love the Betty Ford beginning. Wish that was the case. Jonh, you have a very imaginative mind. You should be writing an alternate history of Rock. Care to do another (whining hungrily)? Maybe Jimi, Janis, or Jim Morrison?
    Permalink posted 09/05/2007
  32. Jonh Ingham says Have thought occasionally about Jimi. Janis or Jim...hmmmm.....
    Permalink posted 09/05/2007
  33. soulrocket says both elvis & buddy hollys alternative versions were great, man. well done, had some laughs reading it.
    Permalink posted 09/07/2007

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