Showing posts with label Rock and Roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock and Roll. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Elvis on The Ed Sullivan Show - The Real Story - September 9, 1956

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On September 9, 1956 Elvis Presley made his national television debut on the Ed Sullivan Show before a record 72 million people.  Here is the Man and the real story.  While estate restrictions prohibit playing the Ed Sullivan appearance, here is live footage from his return to Tupelo after the Sullivan national broadcast made Elvs a star.  Double click video for full screen.



The Real Story - Elvis on Ed Sullivan Show September 9, 1956

by Christine Gibson, former editor at American Heritage magazine.

Given that many fans think Elvis is still alive despite his death certificate, highly publicized funeral, and gravestone, it’s no surprise that misunderstandings abound about his career. Among those events surrounded by fallacies—perhaps because it strongly affected popular culture as well as Elvis’s work—is his legendary first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show, 49 years ago today, on September 9, 1956.

Books and periodicals mentioning the show, which broke ratings records for the young medium and was one of the first to bring rock ’n’ roll to a mass audience, have erroneously reported that Elvis was shown only from the waist up, a triumph of censorship and evidence of the continued prudery of the 1950s. Others, aware of the hoopla surrounding the program, remember it as Elvis’s first performance on TV. The truth, as usual, is a little more complicated—and more interesting.


Presley, who had released his first three number-one hits by the time of the show, was already a TV veteran. He had appeared six times on the Dorsey brothers’ Stage Show between January and March 1956 and then on The Milton Berle Show on April 3, to increasing, if not yet fevered, press attention. But after his second Berle show, on June 5, members of the press expressed sudden revulsion at what the New York Journal-American called his “primitive physical movement difficult to describe in terms suitable to a family newspaper.” The New York Daily News reported that Elvis “gave an exhibition that was suggestive and vulgar, tinged with the kind of animalism that should be confined to dives and bordellos,” while the San Francisco Chronicle deemed it “in appalling taste.”

The reaction was enough to make Steve Allen, who had booked Elvis for his show before the backlash, briefly consider reneging, but in the end, Elvis did appear on his show on July 1, although in strangely tame form. Allen, going comically overboard to avoid scandal, dressed him in top hat, tails, and white gloves. Elvis soldiered on gamely, singing “Hound Dog” to a top-hatand bow-tie-clad basset hound.


Sullivan, never a fan of controversy, had already refused an offer to hire Elvis for $5,000. The famously prickly host had been burned before by rock ’n’ roll stars: He vowed to drum Bo Diddley out of television after his 1955 act on the show, when he sang his own hit “Bo Diddley” instead of Sullivan’s request, Tennessee Ernie Ford’s “Sixteen Tons.” But Elvis’s ratings—his stint on the Allen show had trounced Sullivan—changed his mind. Even as he professed to the press that Elvis was “not my cup of tea,” Ed Sullivan had already begun negotiations with Elvis’s agent, Colonel Tom Parker. His hesitation cost him heavily, however. He would end up agreeing to shell out $50,000 for three appearances, an unprecedented sum.

Elvis made his Sullivan debut on the show’s season premiere, but on the big night neither Sullivan nor Elvis was in the New York studio. Elvis was in Hollywood, filming his first movie, and he sang from the CBS studio there. Sullivan was recovering from an August head-on car collision, and Charles Laughton, the star of Mutiny on the Bounty, filled in for the host, hailing his guest by saying, “Away to Hollywood to meet Elvis Presley.”


Elvis, wearing a loud plaid jacket, greeted the audience from a set decorated with stylized guitar shapes. He announced that the show was “probably the greatest honor I have ever had in my life,” and then launched into “Don’t Be Cruel.” The camera stayed above his waist for now, sometimes closing in on his face, sometimes turning to show his backup singers, but something Elvis was doing out of lens range was causing unexplained screams from the audience. After the number was over, he acknowledged the vocal segment of the crowd, saying, “Thank you, ladies.” To finish the first segment, he played the title song to his new movie, “Love Me Tender,” introducing it as ”completely different from anything we’ve ever done.” Nationwide, disk jockeys taped the performance and played the song, which had yet to be released, on their radio shows, increasing pre-release orders to almost a million and pushing forward the single’s release date.

Viewers got to see the full Elvis—legs, hips, and all—during the second segment, when he performed the up-tempo Little Richard song “Ready Teddy” and two verses of “Hound Dog.” Young rock fans today would doubtless have a hard time understanding what all the scandal was about, as his frenetic swivels and shuffles look chaste compared to the gyrations common on MTV. But Elvis on that night (and his rock star peers in general around the same time) arguably set in motion a trend that continues today.



The press was quick to note that the cameras switched to close-up shots whenever he started dancing, in effect censoring him, but the TV audience got to see plenty, and besides, the girls screamed when he grunted, moved his tongue, crossed his eyes, or even stood perfectly still. With Elvis, censorship began to seem irrelevant. As Laughton noted at the end of the hour, ”Well, what did someone say? Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast?”

The viewing audience certainly wasn’t so offended that it changed the channel. The September 9 Sullivan show reached 82.6 percent of the TV audience, and Steve Allen hadn’t even seen fit to offer an alternative; NBC had showed a movie instead. Censorship did enjoy one last gasp during Elvis’s third appearance, on January 6, 1957, when Sullivan—or, as some historians believe, a publicity-hungry Parker—did indeed instruct the camera operator to show him only from the waist up, even when he sang the gospel tune “Peace in the Valley.” It was the last song he would ever perform on the show. Parker was now demanding $300,000 for future TV engagements, stipulating that a network must also commit to two guest spots and an hour-long special.

Even as he priced his client out of its range, Parker credited the program with the success of “Love Me Tender” and earning Elvis the esteem of American adults for the first time. Historians assert that Elvis’s three nights on the Sullivan show helped bridge the gap between the first rock ’n’ roll generation and their parents. Whether at the same time his behavior on those shows ultimately caused today’s generation gap—that is, whether MTV’s rump-shakers should look to Elvis as their earliest role model and parents can blame him for Britney Spears—is still up for debate.
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CPT Spirits in the Sky - Elvis Presley - The King of Rock and Roll

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Elvis Aaron Presley
January 8, 1935 - August 16, 1977

August 16 is the 39th anniversary of the death of Elvis Presley, husband of Priscilla Presley, father of Lisa Marie Presley and one time father-in-law to Michael Jackson. As I have written before, nearly four decades after his death Elvis continues to make far more money than he ever did during his 42 years of life, topping $55 million in 2015.


In his early years the only way we could hear Elvis records in the Bible belt was when friends in the military were stationed in the south and would bring back Elvis recordings. Over time I got to see him twice in concert including during his last tour in 1977. It was June 19 in Omaha, Nebraska and RCA was recording the concert for a new Elvis project. One week later, June 26, he performed his last concert in Indianapolis and died three weeks later.


This much I can tell you. His voice was as powerful as ever that June in 1977 though he appeared to be physically exhausted. There was a certain melancholy in his voice as if he wanted one last time to give his fans what they expected. When he performed his ballets and gospel songs like My Way and The Impossible Dream there was not a dry eye in the auditorium.


Presley almost single-handedly created the genre of rockabilly and rock and roll and he was the first white person to merge the Black blues and gospel with country rock. In 1973 Elvis performed the first global concert via satellite and 1.5 billion people tuned in making it the most watched broadcast by an individual entertainer in history, including to this day.

Jailhouse Rock
Double click for full screen

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The dance sequence from his movie Jailhouse Rock has been considered one of the best motion picture dance sequences ever recorded which he choreographed himself and I hope you will take a look at the number on the YouTube video I added. This is the Elvis we will always remember, the shy kid from Tupelo, Mississippi who grew up to become King of the world.


Here are some other facts about the King of Rock and Roll.

Elvis Aaron Presley was born in Tupelo, Mississippi on January 8, 1935. He married Priscilla Beaulieu in 1967 after a long courtship. Lisa Marie is their only child, and she was born in 1968. Elvis and Priscilla divorced in 1973 and he never married again. Presley died on August 16, 1977 in Memphis, Tennessee at Graceland. He was 42-years-old at the time of his death.



The total net worth of the Elvis Presley estate is reported to be approximately $300 million. The singer rose to fame in 1954 after signing a deal with Sun Records. The recording company sold Elvis’ contract to RCA in 1955, and he began recording for them in 1956. RCA paid $5.4 million for the contract and Elvis and the Colonel split the money. His most popular recordings include Jailhouse Rock, Heartbreak Hotel and Don’t be Cruel. Estimates for his record sales are over the one billion mark.


Thousands of people still visit the home every year to see where the “King” lived. Special celebrations help draw even larger crowds, such as the 60 Years of Rock ‘n’ Roll celebration that is being held at Graceland. It is only appropriate considering Elvis is credited with starting the rock and roll era.

Random Facts:

So you thought you knew everything about “The King” huh? Here’s 11 random facts that will challenge that theory!


1. Elvis’ hair wasn’t even naturally black! He started dying it in high school. His natural hair color was actually a dirty blonde!

2. His breakout hit, Heartbreak Hotel, was inspired by a local suicide in 1956.

3. Elvis’ Mom bought him his first guitar at age 12 for his birthday. Elvis tried to convince his Mom to get him a rifle, but that wasn’t happening. She insisted a guitar would be a better option.

4. Elvis recorded over 600 songs! BUT, he didn’t write any of them!


5. When Elvis and Priscilla met, he was 24 and she was 14…. kind of creepy!

6. In Florida, Elvis was called a “Savage” and forbidden from shaking his body… So he waggled his finger in rebellion instead. Elvis you savage!

7. It took him 31 consecutive takes to record “Hound Dog.”

8. Elvis’ entourage was called the “Memphis Mafia” and were known for wearing gold and diamond rings with the letters “TCB” on them, which stands for “Taking Care of Businesses.”


9. He made 31 movies in his lifetime!

10. Elvis would let groups of “good looking girls” who waited at the gates of Graceland in to party late at night. The biggest group was said to be 152 women in one night!

11. Oddly enough, Elvis was related to Presidents Abraham Lincoln AND Jimmy Carter!
Do you know more facts about Elvis? Comment below!

How much is Elvis Presley’s Net Worth? $300 Million!

Thursday, August 04, 2016

CPT Spirits in the Sky - Hello Goodbye Old Friend - Jerry Garcia - America's King of Counter Culture!


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Jerome John "Jerry" Garcia
(August 1, 1942 – August 9, 1995) 
the facts

Jerry Garcia. Undeniably one of the most well known men in the history of rock 'n' roll. Both his image and his music are instantly recognizable to people the world over. And while the truly remarkable events and details of Jerry's life have been recorded over the years by fans and critics alike, there are some facts that are known only by the most dedicated Garcia followers. We bet there are some facts that you just may not have known!!!!!

1.  As a high school student, Jerry studied art at the California School of Fine Arts in North Beach on weekends and summer sessions.
2.  Jerry's full name was Jerome John Garcia--named after the great Broadway musical composer Jerome Kern.
3.  Jerry was surrounded by music as a child; his mother listened to opera, his father was a professional musician, and when his family got together, they would have sing-alongs.
4.  Jerry lost his middle finger of his right hand--his brother accidentally chopped it off splitting wood.
5.  His third grade teacher encouraged him to draw pictures, paint murals and make ceramics.
6.  Having asthma as a child, Jerry spent a lot of his time in bed reading.


7.  Jerry was an avid collector of comic books.
8.  Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream named a flavor," Cherry Garcia," after him-the first ice cream to be named after a musical legend.
9.  In jerry's first gig, his band won a contest and got to record a song. They chose Bill Doggett's "Raunchy".
10.  Jerry enlisted in the Army at age 17, but was dishonorably discharged just nine months later.
11.  Jerry's first paying gig came with his future songwriting partner, Robert Hunter. Named "Bob and Jerry," each earned $5.00.
12.  Early in his life, Jerry was torn between music and art, but realized he couldn't concentrate on two art forms at once. he chose music, because he enjoyed the interaction and creativity of others working together.



13.  Some of his early influences were Joan Baez and the New Lost City Ramblers; he incorporated and expanded their technique to create his own artistry.
14.  Garcia loved to play the five string banjo, which inspired him to organize a bluegrass band in 1962- the Hart Valley Drifters, later called the Wildwood Boys.
15.  In the spring of 1963, Jerry and Sarah Ruppenthal performed as "Jerry and Sarah," playing acoustic music front the 1920's and 1930's. Later that year, Sarah became Jerry's first wife.
16.  Jerry performed in several groups that only existed for a gig or two: the Thunder Mountain Tub Thumpers, the Sleepy Hollow Hog Stompers, the Wildwood Boys, and the Black Mountain Boys.
17.  Garcia met Bob Weir and decided to assemble a jug band- Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions- featuring instruments such as the jug, wash tub bass, harmonica, washboard, and the kazoo.
18.  Jerry and Mother McCree's took their music in a different direction. They started using electric instruments, and then changed the name of their group to the Warlocks.



19.  Jerry didn't read musical notes; rather he improvised by playing by ear and by feel.
20.  The Warlocks realizing that there already was a band playing under that same name, decided to change it. after numerous that were no good, Jerry got a dictionary, opened it, and came across the words Grateful Dead.
21.  Jerry's dad, Jose Ramon Garcia emigrated from Spain in 1919.
22.  Jerry, along with the likes of Janis Joplin, became known as one of the originators of the "San Francisco Sound."
23.  Garcia often would develop intense themes in the middle of songs, making this improvisational style of playing the Grateful Dead's trademark.
24.  Garcia produced Jefferson Airplane's second album, Surrealistic Pillow, but only got credit as being a spiritual advisor.
25.  Jerry earned the nickname "Captain Trips" because of his interest in LSD excursions.



26.  Garcia's love for bluegrass and old-time music led him to form a number of side groups over the years while playing in the Grateful Dead.
27.  Garcia was not happy with both his and the Dead's performance at Woodstock, calling it a disappointment.
28.  Jerry started performing in a country-western band called the New Riders of the Purple Sage- the New Riders even opened for the Grateful dead for a while.
29.  Jerry loved to play several types of music, including folk, bluegrass, country, rock 'n' roll, and acid rock.
30.  Jerry played all the instruments except the drums for his first solo album, titled Garcia.
31.  Jerry's second album was also titled Garcia, but later became known as Compliments of Garcia because there was a promotional sticker that said "Compliments of" on the cover.
32.  The Jerry Garcia Band was his second longest-lived music group-- the Grateful Dead was his first.



33.  Having a strong passion for the visual aspect of art, Jerry helped create The Grateful Dead movie, working on the sound track and editing.
34.  Jerry's second wife, Carolyn Adams, was nicknamed Mountain Girl.
35.  Born on August 1, 1942, Jerry was his parents second and final child.
36.  Garcia was selected as the Bay Area Musician of the Year in 1980 through a readers' poll in Bay Area Music magazine.
37.  Jerry collaborated with members of Saturday Night Live and developed skits around Grateful Dead folklore, including a bit entitled "Jerry's Kids."
38.  Garcia helped to set up a foundation to help support various charities, the Rex Foundation, which made contributions to numerous social and environmental causes in need.
39.  Garcia was once given an ultimatum by the Grateful Dead- to chose between the band and the drugs.
40.  Jerry's gaining weight led to an inspired slogan amongst the fans," It's not over until the fat man rocks."
41.  Jerry had a strong liking for red and black tee-shirts.
42.  Jerry had long been a fan of Bob Dylan, and had covered many of Dylan's songs with both the Jerry Garcia band and the Grateful Dead.
43.  Jerry's first commercial was a thirty second radio advertisement for Levis 501 jeans-fittingly, a San Francisco-based company.
44.  Garcia won awards for Musician of the Year and Best Guitarist in 1988 at the Bay Area Music awards.
45.  Jerry was a strong environmental activist-the album Blues from the Rainforest was a project he worked on to help create awareness for the diminishing rainforests.
46.  While recovering from a diabetic coma in 1986, received over 65,000 calls on the Grateful Dead hotline.



47.  Jerry's oldest daughter, Heather, became a first chair violinist for the Red wood Symphony.
48.  Jerry had his first art exhibit in 1991 at the Weir Gallery in BerkleyCalifornia- prices for these works of art ranged from $300 to $40,000.
49.  Jerry published a book of his artwork entitled The Book J. Garcia; Paintings, Drawings, and Sketches.
50.  A tie manufacturer was impressed with his artwork and began a production of J. Garcia Art in Neckwear.
51.  Garcia put out more than 30 albums with either the Jerry Garcia Band, the Grateful Dead, or as a solo performer.
52.  Jerry supervised and approved a comic of the Dead- Grateful Dead Comix, which featured interpretations of songs and band members as characters.
53.  Garcia developed his fondness for country music while listening to the Grand Ole Opry broadcasts with his grandmother.
54.  "Touch of Grey" was both Jerry's and the Grateful Dead's only top ten hit.
55.  Jerry would often smoke as much as three packs of cigarettes a day.
56.  Jerry received his first guitar at the age of 15.
57.  While on a fishing trip in 1948, Jerry saw his father swept away to his death in a California river.
58.  Jerry believed his life began after a 1960 auto accident in which a close talented friend of his died.
59.  Jerry's first idol on the guitar was Chuck Berry.
60.  The science fiction writer, Ray Bradbury, was Jerry's favorite author.



61.  His first guitar was a Danelectro electric with a tiny fender amplifier.
62.  After his release from the Army, Jerry studied painting at the Art Institute in Son Francisco.
63.  Garcia held a job as a music teacher at Dana Morgan's Music.
64.  Jerry died of a heart attack on august 9, 1995, eight days after his 53rd birthday.
65.  Jerry's last recording was a cover of Jimmy Rodger's" blue Yodel #9."
66.  Four months after Jerry's death, in December 1995, the remaining band members stated they would never perform again as the Grateful Dead.
67.  Jerry sang the national anthem for the San Francisco Giants on opening day in 1993.
68.  Jerry did musical and sound effects for the movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
69.  Sting, the lead singer from the rock group the Police, called Garcia, "Father Christmas."
70.  Jerry and the Dead played before more people and played more years than any other music combo in history.
71.  Vice-president Al Gore gave Garcia a personal tour of the White House.
72.  One of Jerry's favorite past times was scuba diving.
73.  Jerry has four children-all daughters.
74.  The Warlocks name was taken from an Egyptian prayer Garcia discovered in a dictionary.
75.  Jerry played lead guitar and sang vocals for the Grateful Dead.
76.  Jerry's parents owned a bar in San Francisco- the Four Hundred Club, named for its
location,400 First Street.
77.  Jerry earned three merit badges in the Boy Scouts: for knot tying, compass reading, and life saving.
78.  Tiff was the nickname Jerry called his older brother Clifford.



79.  Jerry was court marshaled twice while in the Army.
80.  Jerry's mother Ruth Garcia was a registered nurse.
81.  Jerry played several instruments including the saxophone, piano, banjo and the guitar.
82.  One of Jerry's first jobs was picking apricots and beans in a local fields.
83.  One person Jerry wanted to play with was the legendary Bill Monroe, but he never got the chance.
84.  Jerry's mother really wanted Jerry to be a girl; she already had one boy and wanted a daughter.
85.  Garcia became a regular on the radio broadcast of The Midnight Special, a folk music show in BerkleyCalifornia.
86.  Jerry had built up a repertoire of bluegrass tunes, ballads, mountain tunes, rags, and country blues that he performed on the five string banjo.



87.  After seeing the Beatles film A Hard Days Night, Jerry was inspired to change his jug band into a rock band.
88.  The first gig for the Warlocks was at Magoo's Pizza Parlor.
89.  Jerry would practice at any location he could find, sometimes up to ten hours a day.
90.  Jerry's close friend Ken Kesey wrote the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
91.  Jerry got his first piece of national press in Sing Out magazine.
92.  In 1966, the first Grateful Dead record was released- a 45 of "Stealin'." on the flip side was "Don'y Ease Me In."
93.  In 1989, Garcia testified about the plight of the rainforests at the Congressional Human Rights Caucus.
94.  Garcia was a fan of surreal art; some of his influences were Max Ernst and Paul Klee.
95.  The album Deadicated, which featured various bands covering Grateful Dead tunes, was at tribute to the long-time team of Jerry Garcia and Bob Hunter.
96.  At a sold out show on Garcia's 50th birthday, a fan distributed paper masks with Garcia's face and the crowd attempted to sing "Happy Birthday."
97.  Jerry married his third wife, Deborah Koons, on Valentine's Day, 1994.
98.  Jerry considered himself one of the best banjo players in America
99.  Half of Jerry's remains were scattered in the Ganges river in India, a country Jerry had never visited. The second half of Jerry's remains were scattered beneath the Golden GateBridge.

 From the website:  http://members.tripod.com/~wharf_n_lace/99facts.html
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Tuesday, December 08, 2015

Spirits in the Sky - John Lennon - born October 9, 1940, died December 8, 1980.

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John Winston Ono Lennon MBE was an English singer, songwriter, and musician who rose to worldwide fame in the music industry.


Thirty-five years ago today, December 8, 1980, John Lennon, of Beatles fame, was assassinated in New York City at the young age of forty.



The working class kid from Liverpool was an accomplished author, painter, songwriter, singer, musician, philosopher, revolutionary, visionary, father, husband, and the soul and co-founder of the Beatles, the most commercially successful band in the history of popular music.


Here is John Lennon in his own words.

Penny Lane











Happy Xmas

















Imagine











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