Posts Tagged ‘Elvis’

My Elvis Presley Blog Returns!

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Hello Again Faithful Readers. 

I say faithful because if you’re reading this after waiting for nearly 5 months for new content, you must be completely faithful.  I’ve been away.  Not from my computer or home or any physical location but away from this blog about my fascination with the love affair I am having with Elvis.

I’ve immersed myself in a whole another world since January.  It’s a hard one.  Cruel, heart wrenching scenes of betrayal, abuse and ultimately, more often than not, death. It is the world of shelter animal rescue.  If you would like to read more about that world and my experience in it, Beloved Critters is coming soon to a RSS feed nearby.  Will update on that when it’s launched.

Rest assured that my passion for Elvis has not cooled even an smidgen.  In fact, I think it may have intensified.  For the past 20 years here on the Lower Mainland, I have always used public transit to get back and forth to work and used a mp3 player to listen to Elvis while being “transited publicly”.   Personal circumstances changed this past February so I am now driving my beautiful Jetta to work and back.  Elvis is playing on the cd player although I have to admit, I miss the closeness of the mp3 player.  And my CD player chews disks for breakfast so I keep having to burn new ones.  That’s a bit of a bummer.

But now I can sing along!  Public transit does not lend itself to singing along to Elvis although there are some whackos out there that will do it anyway.  All by yourself in the car sitting in backed up traffic is almost as good as the shower for sounding good while singing along with the Master.  Sometimes I even have to tell myself to shut up so I can actually listen to Elvis for a change!  However, I really do harmonize well if I DO say so myself.

So back to my blog about all things Elvis and it’s rebirth from a 5 month sabbatical.  I plan to continue the series on Elvis and his women.  It is still a subject that fascinates.   Up until recently, the women who were loved by Elvis have been Viva Las Vegas - Elvis and Ann Margretreticent to speak of their affairs with him.  I want to know why.  It’s established that he wasn’t the greatest lover in the world but it’s also accepted that he could romance your pants off in seconds flat!  Why than are the women who loved Elvis so tight lipped?

Everything about this blog that was true in January is still true now.  Thank you for staying loyal if you’re getting this on the RSS feed.  Remember to sign up for RSS if you want to follow along.

Elvis Presley: Jailhouse Rock

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Songwriters: Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller

Probably the first rock music video of all time, Elvis Presley’s Jailhouse Rock dance scene was historic in many ways in the making.  Elvis didn’t dance. Onstage he just moved rhythmically to the music. And boy! could he move.  There’s no account anywhere that I can find where Elvis ever danced with a girlfriend other then slow dancing in the dark.  When at clubs or parties, no one ever states that Elvis would ever just dance to fast music the way most of us relate to dancing.

So when Jailhouse Rock was being filmed and talk of the choreography for the title song began, it was quite humorous to read that the choreographer for the scene was aiming for some kind of old fashioned Gene Kelly type of performance from Elvis.  What? Have you seen this guy on stage?

According to George Klein, an Elvis friend from way back, “When Alex Romero, who was the choreographer of Jailhouse Rock, first presented the dance sequence for Jailhouse Rock, Elvis shook his head and he said, ‘That’s not me. I can’t do that, Alex. I appreciate, you know, what you’ve done here.’ He wanted Elvis to do more of a Gene Nelson/Fred Astaire type.  Elvis said, ‘It’s not me. I’ll try it.’ And Elvis being the cooperative guy, he got up and tried.  He said, ‘See Alex, it’s not me.’  And that’s when Alex said, ‘Elvis, I’ll tell you what.  Let me incorporate your stage act into what I wanna do, and let’s see if that’ll work.’  and he went home that night, came back the next day, and had taken Elvis’s stage act and incorporated that into a dance sequence. Elvis said, ‘Hey, I can do that. That’s me.’  And in one take, right there in the rehearsal hall at MGM, Elvis had it down.  And of course it became historic in being Elvis’s best dance sequence in a motion-picture.”

Sharon Sheeley, songwriter and friend of Elvis, remembers coming home from that movie (Pajama Game).  And it was very late at night, and there this little drizzle out.  And “Jailhouse Rock” came on the radio.  And I remember Elvis stopped the car, got out of the car.  It was on Fountain Avenue. And he danced the whole scene he did in the movie, in the middle of the street on Fountain Avenue.  And I kept thinking if people woke up right now and looked out their windows, they’d see Elvis Presley dancing in the streets like Gene Kelly.

Source for George Klein and Sharon Sheeley: Remember Elvis, Produced by Joe Esposito

The recording of Jailhouse Rock took place at MGM’s Radio Recorders on April 30th, 1957.  Morning and afternoon rehearsals were strange for Elvis who was more likely to start rehearsing at 10PM and work through until dawn but this was the movies and people kept somewhat regular hours. Elvis was never known to throw tantrums or lose his temper during rehearsals however he did lose it during this rehearsal.  Elvis always warmed up his voice by singing his favorite gospel tunes with the band and the back up singers.  During the rehearsals here at MGM, Elvis spent the morning doing just that and then broke for lunch.  During lunch, the production team spoke to Gordon Stoker, one of the backup singers in the Jordanaires group and asked that they not join Elvis in the gospel singing if he began doing that again after lunch. They needed to get to work.

When Elvis came back from lunch and got wind of this, he simply stood up and walked out.  As was the way Elvis always worked, if they had just let him be, he more then likely would have finished all the takes they required that day or possibly by the next day but as it was, they had nothing. Other singers may have taken weeks to get what they needed from him.  Elvis returned the next morning and finished all the required songs.  I’ve never read where anybody tried to interfere with his work habits after that.

The soundtrack version of Jailhouse Rock, heard here on this video, includes orchestration and back up vocals that are not on the released single version. That version included only Elvis’s original band Scotty Moore, Bill Black and DJ Fontana with the addition of Dudley Brooks on piano.  Of course the Jordanaires were ever present as back up singers but even the back up vocals were toned down from the soundtrack version. I personally prefer the single released version but I’ll never stop loving watching Elvis perform in this video.  Today it seems almost cheesy in it’s simplicity but remember, we’re talking over 52 years ago.  I was only 4 months away from making my entrance into the world.

Jailhouse Rock debuted at No.1 for the week of November 9th, 1957. This was to be Elvis’s 8th chart topper. During this year, Elvis had the No. 1 hit 17 out of 56 weeks according to Cash Box Magazine Charts.

The single with the B side of Treat Me Nice (one of my all time favorites) was a US #1 hit for 7 weeks.  The song as sung by Elvis is #67 on Rolling Stone’s list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and was named one of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.

Elvis - Jailhouse RockBuy at AllPosters.com

Elvis - Jailhouse Rocker

Buy at AllPosters.com

Women's: Elvis - One JailhouseBuy at AllPosters.com

Elvis Presley: T-Shirts Galore!

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

There’s nothing I enjoy better then wearing my love for Elvis for all to see. I think it helps keep Elvis on people’s minds and that’s a good thing. Although the two main colors I wear most of the time are pink and black, I actually only own one Elvis Presley t-shirt that I got as a freebie from ShopElvis.com for buying a bunch of other stuff. It’s a t-shirt from Aloha Hawaii and it’s not that great, the decal will eventually peel, but I still wear it proudly. 

My real pride and joy is my official Elvis/Dale Earnhardt Jr. winter jacket special Las Vegas 2007 (30th Anniversary) edition that has gotten me so many looks and compliments, it’s almost embarrassing.  Someday soon I’ll get a picture of that jacket up here because it is a collector’s item now. You can’t get it anywhere that I can find.

But I digress.

Today I added a new section to my blog which features Elvis Presley merchandise hand-selected by yours truly.  Most of the crap you can buy these days with Elvis’s likeness on it is so cheesy, I just know Elvis is spinning in his grave when he sees it. Like Pez dispensers for pete’s sake!  Or bobble heads!  Or Elvis wigs!  Just plain awful stuff no matter how you look at it.

But there is some really cool stuff available and when I find it, I will feature it here under the Elvis Merchandise section of this blog.  To begin, I found the most gorgeous collection of t-shirts (over 360!) and have included my list of 9 favorites.  Check them out here and if you’re friend or family, consider this my wish list.  Christmas IS coming after all. ;-)   If you’re an Elvis fan, you’ll definitely not want to go without at least 2 or 3 of these beautiful tributes to The King.

Enjoy!

Elvis’s Women: June Juanico

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

On June 26, 1955, Elvis performed at the Slavonian Lodge, Biloxi, Mississippi, where he, Scotty and Bill opened the new club with air-conditioning to a sell-out crowd.  Elvis noticed June when she was coming out of the ladies room at half time at of one of his shows.

junejuanico3 They struck up a conversation… “You’re not leaving are you?” Elvis inquired anxiously. “No, I’m just going to sit down.” “I’d like to see you after the show,” Elvis announced. “Why don’t you show me the town?”

“Well there isn’t much to see in Biloxi,” June countered. “I don’t care,” Elvis replied. “Just show me what there is.” Still dripping with perspiration after gyrating wildly on stage in what would become his trademark pelvis-thrusting style, Elvis picked June up in front of the theatre that night in his 1955 pink-and-white Ford Crown Victoria.

“He said he wanted to change, so we drove to his motel and I waited in the car while he ran in,” says June. “We took in some floor shows and then talked until daylight. At dawn Elvis kissed me for the first time.” “It was the most memorable date I had with Elvis. We spent four hours parked outside my house. He suggested we see the sun rise together, but I told him I’d have to go if my mother’s bedroom light came on. As dawn broke, Elvis kissed me, ever so gently. Then he poured out his heart to me and told me about his twin brother.” June says it was clear from that first date that Elvis had a deep love for his family. He told her how his mother had named his stillborn twin brother Jesse Garon because she didn’t want a grave that simply read Baby Boy Presley. But what struck June most about Elvis was how much he was amazed at his own success.  junejuanico2

‘One of the questions I’m always asked is, “Did you sleep with Elvis?”,’ says June Juanico, the woman the star nearly married in 1956. ‘I tell ‘em no.’ Juanico talks of the couple making love in ‘their own special way’, of Elvis saying he wanted the first time to be special and of their agreement to wait until they were married. ‘There were a lot of virgins about in those days.’

‘Elvis was a very sensitive person, very tender, but on the outside he was very macho,’ she says. An outspoken and feisty teenager, June recalls a time when she stood up to Elvis in front of his band of hangers-on, who even then were beginning to accompany him everywhere. He grabbed her arm, took her into the bathroom and declared: ‘Look, you are so right, I am really sorry.’ He kept her there for five minutes, then swaggered out, his image intact.

The couple dated throughout 1956. Elvis would serenade June with the soulful ballad, IS IT SO STRANGE. “I loved that song,” recalls June. “So I asked Elvis to record it. just for me. The verse, ‘Is it so strange, I have no eyes for any other girl.’ still has a special meaning for me till this very day.” When Elvis recorded that song, he called the album, JUST FOR YOU. While Elvis and his ‘devil music’ were becoming the center of controversy, Hollywood was clamouring to get a piece of the action. “Elvis always talked about wanting to be in the movies,” says June.

On one of his frequent returns to Memphis, Elvis invited June home to meet his parents. For two weeks she shared his life. Friends dropped by, and Gladys was always ready with a Southern-style meal. Elvis wanted to hire servants, but Gladys wouldn’t hear of it. “Gladys was happy as punch just to cook because Elvis had outfitted the kitchen with every conceivable appliance,” says June.

june_juanico_gulf_hills_dude_ranch_1956Vernon (Elvis’ father) just sat around reading the newspaper. “Vernon wasn’t a man of many words, but Gladys talked non-stop about Elvis and how shy he was as a child. “She worried about his future. She hoped she had brought his up right, so he could put a handle on his fame.” Gladys and June shared a mutual admiration which bonded into more than friendship. Gladys insisted that June use her first name – “Mrs Presley just don’t sound right, we being as close as family,” she would say. “So, I called her Lovey, a derivation of her middle name Love. She thought was special.”

In March of 1957,  June made the most crucial decision of her life. “I couldn’t wait in the wings while Elvis got on with his career,” she says. “I said good bye to Elvis because he broke his vow – he was supposed to be true to me. It just didn’t work out that way.” “There was no one in particular in his life then, but I knew Elvis was not being true to me. We parted friends,” says June. Elvis told June she would always be welcome in his home, but for the next six years she had no contact with him as she pieced her life back together. It was not until 1963 that June plucked up the courage to face Elvis again.

She drove to Memphis to catch Elvis at Graceland, but Elvis was not home. Elvis’ uncle, Vester Presley told her Elvis was at the local movie theatre. “The moment I entered the theatre I picked Elvis in the crowd. He was sitting up front. Priscilla was sitting next to him,” June recalls. “Elvis was so surprised to see me, he jumped out of his seat and gave me a big bear-hug.” “Strange that Elvis introduced me to the rest of his entourage, but not to Priscilla.” “Priscilla didn’t even look my way. She kept her eyed focused on the screen the whole time. I guess, she was already used to girls falling about Elvis.”

The last time June saw Elvis, was August, 1969 in Las Vegas. No longer under contract to Hollywood, Elvis took on the new challenge performing live. He went on a diet. Reduced his drug intake. And walked to stage looking more handsome than ever. For the next seven years, the mature, Elvis poured out his heart and soul to the screaming fans – always to a packed house. “Elvis told me he was being true to himself by performing before a live audience again,” recalls June. “I was never much of a screaming fan, but that night brought back old memories, and I felt the need to scream…” junejuanico

Seeing Elvis in 1969, June never dreamed that a mere 8 years later Elvis Presley would become caricature of his former self. Tears spring to her eyes and her voice drops to a whisper as she remembers the day, 16 years ago, that Elvis died. “For years I couldn’t talk about Elvis. But now with all that ugly stuff being written about Elvis, I have the need to set the record straight,” says June.

She is writing her story, IN THE TWILIGHT OF MEMORY. The title is from a line in THE PROPHET. “If in the twilight of memory we should meet once more. We shall speak again together and you shall sing to me a deeper song.” The book that June gave to Elvis in 1957 was found after his death, on his bedside table at Graceland. It is still there to this day.

Did Elvis love June? Probably but not in any long term forever way.  The timeline here crosses over when he was still dating Dixie.  She was in Memphis and June was in Biloxi.  I believe we’ll find as we explore this intriguing subject further that there are other women lurking in the shadows here as well at the same time.  So no, Elvis did not feel true unconditional love for June although I believe she did for him.  After all, what’s not to love?

Today in History: July 21, 1960

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009
Elvis obtained his first-degree black belt in karate.

Elvis working his moves on Red West

Elvis working his moves on Red West

Did Elvis Ever Really Know True Love?

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

Is it possible that Elvis lived his brief 42 years and never knew true unconditional love?   Could Elvis even recognize true unconditional love if he saw it?

I think this question is much too deep and complicated to cover under one blog so this is merely an introduction to the subject.  I will be exploring it in more depth in upcoming blogs.

But first, what is true unconditional love?  Click here to read what I think are probably the best definitions although everyone’s idea will be different for sure.

I suspect Elvis didn’t really know what true love was despite the hundreds of songs he sang about the subject, despite the millions of fans who never wavered in their undying love and support of him even after his passing, despite the numerous people he kept close to  him who “claimed” to have loved him but made no effort to save him and despite the numerous women who passed through his life who also claimed to have loved him but only if he changed his “evil ways” for them.

It may be that these people did in fact love him but was it unconditional and did he know it to be true?  Did Elvis actually love anybody besides his mother unconditionally?  Did he know true love in his lifetime? So many questions, where shall I find the answers?

The Women in Elvis’ Life:
It is my opinion that Elvis did not really love Priscilla nor do I believe that she ever truly loved him.  She loved Elvis Presley the rock star, she didn’t really love Elvis the man until possibly after he died.  To understand Elvis’ attraction to Priscilla we have to understand a darker side of Elvis that seemed to enjoy being with young girls.  There seemed to be a part of him that enjoyed the control and power he had with younger girls.  Of note is the molding of Priscilla into a girl barely recognizable when she married Elvis from the young girl he met in Germany.

priscilla_germany

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There were a lot of significant women in Elvis’s life and this subject will be lengthy and complicated.  I look forward to exploring it further.

The Friends Elvis Surrounded Himself With:
Elvis also depended on his Memphis Mafia buddies to protect him from harm, but more importantly I think it was to feed his gigantic ego and to keep him from ever being lonely.  Loneliness was something Elvis suffered his whole life as ironic as that may seem.  Did he love any of these men? Was that love unconditional? My research so far indicates the answer is no and I will explore that more deeply later as well.

Elvis’ Family:
I’m sure just about everybody has heard the story of how one Christmas, shortly after Elvis purchased Graceland, he decided to test every family member who was hanging around the house.  After inviting them individually up to his bedroom for a chat, he excused himself to go to the bathroom.  After being in the bathroom awhile, he’d come out, end his conversation with the family member and show them out.  Then he counted the stack of money he’d left out on his bed.  I don’t think he ever revealed to anyone who if anyone actually snatched a bill or two but he was always wary of letting certain family members hang around after that, so the story goes.

This is not a good sign of unconditional love which you might actually expect in a large, Southern, closely knit family such as the Presley/Smith clan.  These families all lived together mostly before Elvis became famous because they were all too poor to support their own homes.  So they were close.  Apparently close didn’t mean trustworthy necessarily.

I will also being exploring whether or not Elvis loved his father, Vernon Presley.  There wasn’t much there to love.  We know Elvis felt obligated but did he feel love?

Elvis’s Manager:
There’s no doubt that Elvis put his entire career in the hands of a flim flam man who had the entire world fooled about his credibility, his citizenship and his intentions.  Some people claim that Elvis loved Tom Parker but I completely disagree with that theory and will prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that not only did Elvis not love Parker but that he actually despised him.  Parker had something on Elvis and it was that something that kept Elvis from firing the circus man.  It certainly wasn’t love.

So sign up and join me as we explore this mystery.

My Affair with Elvis

Friday, June 26th, 2009

I was born in August of 1957 when Elvis’s career was just a little over a year in the making. So growing up, Elvis was not a big part of my music scene although I remember loving Return to Sender, In the Ghetto and Suspicious Minds anytime I heard it on the radio. Being of the age, I was into David Cassidy, The Monkees, Bobby Sherman etc.

Like everybody else, I remember exactly where I was and what I was doing when the news came on TV exactly 20 years later in August of 1977 that Elvis had died. Despite never having been a big fan, I sat down on my couch and cried. The world had lost an icon, that much I knew for sure.

So 30 years later, in January of 2007, when I heard that Elvis would have turned 72 years old that month had he lived, it was startling to me when something clicked somewhere in my brain and I felt my world shift. It was a whisper that simply said “Elvis”. I can’t explain it and I’ve now given up trying but ever since that day, Elvis has never been out of my thoughts. And so my quest began.

I had the 30 Greatest Hits CD only because I got it erroneously from a music club and had never broke the seal or played it but had never returned it either. I also had the 2 CD set Christmas Peace that I only ever played during the holiday season once in awhile. I quickly broke open the 30 Greatest Hits CD and ripped it to my computer and sync’d it to my mp3 player. Since that day, I have listened to nothing but Elvis. I simply can’t listen to anything else because nothing else compares.  Listening to him sing gospel almost makes me believe again but listening to him sing anything brings me great peace of mind.  

Elvis Performs Elvis Performs

Elvis recorded over 900 songs in his brief 24 year career and I now have more then half of those. Approximately 200 of these are on my favorites playlist which I listen to daily commuting back and forth to work and even work sometimes when I need to really buckle down and work. I stick an earphone in my left ear and I’m more productive then I am not listening to him. 

I’ve read over a dozen books about his life and music and will be featuring my reviews, my book reports in essence, here on this blog.  I have others on the nightstand waiting to be read and there’s a stack at amazon that are just waiting to be ordered.  I never do anything half heartedly and I’ll probably die before I have every book written about him, every movie he ever did and every song Elvis ever recorded.   

Elvis

My affair with Elvis began full of lust, grief, bitterness and butterflies. For the first few months I almost couldn’t read the end of any of the books because they all ended the same.  Tragically.  I would put myself to sleep at night wondering what it would have been like to have known him, loved him, been loved by him, held by him.  It was lust and grief, then grief and lust.

After 2 years, my relationship with him is somewhat calmer although I still get butterflies in my stomach whenever I hear his voice, or look at a picture of him or even just think about him, and I think about him a lot.

And whenever he says “Yeah baby” during a song, my head bows, my heart flips and my knees get weak. But I don’t cry so much anymore that he’s gone and I don’t despise the people  who were around him so much anymore who did nothing to try to save him.  Oh there are a couple of people I resent deeply for their part in his downfall and you’ll read more about these as I discuss the books but essentially the downfall was Elvis’s doing.

 

I have finally come to terms “somewhat” with the fact that Elvis’s life was exactly as it was meant to be and nothing anybody did was going to change the outcome.  Bigger then life he was but inside, a shy naive southern boy with a huge heart who just wanted to be loved.  He is the undisputed King of Rock and Roll and his musical influence changed the world as we knew it.  

Elvis, we will meet again someday on that beautiful shore by the river of  life. Meanwhile, I will love you forever and this site is dedicated to your legacy.
My very first video made for E – Just Pretend_Elvis Lives