When “The King” Became The King-Elvis-
July 5, 1954
Frank Jackman comment:
You never know what will turn up when
you read the newspaper, for those who still do, or will pick up some nugget via
the Internet. The other day, July 5th I happened to glance at the “This
date in history” spot in the Boston Globe
and noticed complete with be-bopping accompanying photograph from the session that
on July 5, 1954 one Elvis Presley (maybe today we need to use the last name but
in my generation all you needed to say was “Elvis” or “the king” and that was
all everybody, every coming of age in the 1950s teenager and maybe a few stray
outraged parents who saw the devil’s work in him needed to know to know exactly
who you were talking about) recorded It’s
All Right, Mama (and the nowhere Blue
Moon of Kentucky on the B side of the 45 RPM record) in Sam Phillips’ Sun
Records studio in Memphis and the rest was rock and roll history.
To be sure no question we are today
on July 5, 2015 very far removed from the “from hunger” good old boy rockabilly
side of the origins of rock and rock from the likes of Elvis, Carl Perkins, Warren
Smith, Jerry Lee Lewis and Sonny Burgess, a time now called the classic age of
rock to distinguish it from post-1964 rock and its progeny, and moreover rock
as a genre has undergone many permutations and transformations on its way to a
niche in history.
But for one moment, one brief moment
in the long history of music as it turned out, we, those of us who came of age
in the 1950s were proud to say that we had been present at the creation. Had
been there at the sea-change. Proud to
say enough of that Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Patty Page, Andrews Sisters,
McGuire Sisters, damn, enough of the musical sensibilities that got our parents
through the dusty “from hunger” 1930s Great Depression and slogging through World
War II that we were force fed on the family radio. Yes, enough of that as we
heard something new, something with a be-bop, be my daddy, be-bop-a-lula, take
me to the hop beat. And Elvis gave us a big chuck of that beat, made us pick up
our feet, snap our fingers.
Get this though, and this is the true
value of that notice in the Globe, as
I thought about my own introduction to Elvis. Maybe some of us if we were boys went
into that new dispensation kicking and screaming, boys with two left feet.
Worse, much worse, about how to the girls that were beginning to go from last year’s
nuisances to, well, interesting, said we didn’t compare with dreamy Elvis no
matter how much we slicked back our hair, moved our cranky non-swivel hips or tried
to imitate that sullen sneer. That patented sneer the girls who were just
kicking and screaming every time they saw those hips swivel said they wished,
no, they would die for, so that they would be happy to take off his face. Yeah,
no question, tongue-tied, two left feet, afraid, no, scared every time a school
sock hop came along and you hoped to high heaven that you would not have to embarrass
yourself by unchaining those cranky teenage hips of yours in front of some girl
who had made your eyeballs sore looking at her all night those were troubled times.
But from that moment on we said rock and roll would never die. And now through
the good offices of YouTube it never
will. So a retro-thanks to Elvis even if I still can’t move those hips of
mine.
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