Showing posts with label Berle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berle. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Failing is Not a Reason to Give Up





Elvis and the Blue Moon Boys were a pretty new item on the music market in 1954. Their rockabilly style, mixing country, blues and gospel music together, was new, too. As a result, it required an open-minded person to accept these new styles and not be offended by them. And America in the 50’s was a very easy place to offend people.

Back in those days, the Grand Ole Opry was the largest country show in the United States. Sam Phillips, owner of Sun Records and Elvis’s contract, got the Blue Moon Boys a gig at the Grand Ole Opry, a very unusual stroke of luck for a group so young. They were excited. They were unheard of and now they were on one of the greatest shows in the U.S.

But things didn’t go quite as planned. Apparently the country element of rockabilly wasn’t large enough for the conservative country crowd. The crowd did not respond well to the show put on by the boys and the talent producer of the show told Elvis afterwards that he should go back to driving trucks. Ouch.

The Blue Moon Boys weren’t done yet, though. The Louisiana Hayride was also running at this time and, though not as big as the Grand Ole Opry, it was more open-minded. When Elvis and the Blue Moon Boys showed on their show, they were a big hit and returned many times afterwards. Taking the advice of that Talent Producer at the Grand Ole Opry could have destroyed a perfectly good career because Elvis and his band didn’t fit into that shows niche.

Later, Elvis, now managed by Colonel Parker and working for RCA, went onto the Milton Berle show to play a couple songs. He finished with a crowd favourite, a cover of Big Mama Thornton’s “Hound Dog”. Elvis’s version is much more upbeat and rock ‘n’ rolling. Then it would go into a slow section where Elvis would shake his body to the music and get the crowd going wild. The music of the show is fine. The clip is even good and nowadays most people would smile with Elvis’s energetic movements, but not America back in 1956. Some people were so offended, they wanted to have Elvis banned.

The newspapers tore the Mississippi kid apart. But the Colonel got Elvis on the Steve Allen show, a big show similar to David Letterman’s show nowadays. Allen brought Elvis on after a “he’s learnt his lesson” speech. Elvis was further humiliated by singing “Hound Dog”, the song that had got him in trouble, to a real hound, a moment he would say to the end of his life was his most embarrassing moment.

Working through his imminent failure had done him a favour; Steve Allen’s show beat Ed Sullivan’s show in the ratings that night. Sullivan, known for showing the latest cutting edge acts of the day, was flabbergasted and wanted to get the boy who had outdone him that night on his show.

Elvis was booked for a performance which has since become a legendary moment in that show’s history. Sullivan called Elvis, “a very nice boy” and Elvis’s career was safe and back on track again. Elvis returned to the Sullivan show for a further two, unforgettable performances.

Elvis was still not immune to failure; Elvis and his boys were offered a four week engagement down in Las Vegas. But after a couple weeks of bad reception from the conservative audience, who expected entertainment on the line of Dean Martin or Frank Sinatra, Elvis’s group cut their stay short and left casino town. However well he was doing in the charts, Elvis could not guarantee the love of older fans as well.

Fast forward thirteen years to 1969: Elvis has done his ’68 comeback special and has had his biggest selling hit with “Suspicious Minds”. Elvis wants to return to touring and the Colonel has once again booked him in Las Vegas at the International, later the Hilton, Hotel. It’s hard to imagine the thoughts going through Elvis’s mind. This was the town which had seen one of his greatest flops when he was a national sensation. Now he was still making a comeback. His whole concert tour career might hinge on the success of these shows. What would happen if he failed again, even after the changes of time, and he had to cut his tour down, again?

But times had changed and so had people’s opinions. When Elvis performed in Las Vegas, all these years later, he was warmly received. So warmly that a documentary film Elvis –That’s the Way it Is was done through MGM showing Elvis during that first year back in Vegas. Elvis continued to play successfully at the Hilton until the end of his life and is still associated with that famed hotel in Vegas.

Elvis’s Lessons:

Ø Failing is not a reason to give up. Not everyone will dig your style. Take what you can learn from a situation and move on, continuing to do your best. Who knows, maybe next time you try you’ll be successful.

Ø Given different changes and after being altered by the pass of time, situations that once turned out in failure can be turned around to create success. Elvis could do it in Las Vegas, so can you do it in your life.


P.S. If you're interested in seeing Elvis on the Ed Sullivan Show, this is a clip from his first appearance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsP6fluNoTU&feature=related

Make Good Friends





When Elvis got called back to Sun Studios by Sam Phillips in 1954, Phillips hooked him up with Scotty Moore, a guitarist, and Bill Black, an upright bassist. It’s said that the two older session musicians weren’t too impressed with the young Presley when they first met him. He was several years younger than either one of them and less experienced. But after they played together a bit, the rapport started building and first impressions disappeared in place of friendship.

The Blue Moon Boys, as they were then called, created their own unique sound, a mix of country, gospel and blues, later called rockabilly. They first made magic together when they had their first regional hit, a cover of Arthur Crudup’s “That’s Alright, Mama” in 1954. More songs followed, including a breakthrough into the national charts with “Baby Let’s Play House”. Scotty Moore was the original manager and the group started getting a regular local tour circuit.

Soon, Phillips decided that the trio could use a drummer. D.J. Fontana, who met Elvis off the Louisiana Hayride in 1954, got the gig and soon started becoming a feature of the group’s recordings and live performances.

When Elvis’s contract was sold from Sun to RCA in late 1955, Scotty, Bill and D. J. followed right along. The final original addition to the Presley sound came with the vocal group The Jordanaires. When Elvis’s first RCA LP came out in 1956, the legendary Elvis Presley, this group backed Elvis up to Platinum.

But life wasn’t all good; when Elvis was told by the talent agent of the Grand Ole Opry that he should go back to driving trucks, his band, now close friends, stood behind him. Then, when Elvis and the group got lukewarm results with their first shows in Las Vegas, his group stood behind him. And when Elvis was nearly banned for his ‘overly sexual’ dance moves on the Milton Berle show, this band followed him through it, to his return and humiliation on the Steve Allen show (Elvis was required to sing “Hound Dog”, the song who’s dance moves got him in trouble, to a real hound) and later with his big comeback to popularity on the Ed Sullivan show. Even when Elvis’s popularity eclipsed the personas of the rest of the group, they stood behind him.

This group were in his movies and backed Elvis up until 1958. Then, after a pay disagreement with Elvis’s manager, the Colonel, Elvis and his original band parted ways, except for the Jordanaires who continued to back him up until 1970.

But Elvis still needed a group of friends to help guide him. With childhood friends such as Red and Sonny West and George Klein, these men became known as the Memphis Mafia, Elvis’s personal escort of friends, who stayed with him for the rest of his life.

And if you’re wondering about what happened to his original group, Scotty, Bill and D.J., it worked out better than you may have worried. Scotty and D.J. continued their friendship with Elvis and worked with him on his ’68 Comeback Special, when he was returning back to public performing, during the informal, sit-down portion of the show. Only Bill completely severed ties with Elvis, dieing suddenly in 1965.

Elvis’s Lessons:
Ø Make friends, a couple will do, that have positive mindsets and similar interests to you. Then go through a couple memorable occasions with them. Life will change but your friendships will provide stability.
Ø When friendships break up, as they might, it’s not an excuse to go friendless and remain hurt. Be like Elvis; move on and make more and different friends. Everybody is unique and has something to offer and as a result will impact your life positively in different and unique ways (if they’re good friends − those who impact you negatively are generally not true friends).

P.S. If you're interested in seeing Elvis singing "Hound Dog" to a Hound on Steve Allen's show, check this out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xypX3lsF2nE