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Bobby Lime's avatar

Fascinating article, and it gives me new material to listen to.

I've never understood Elvis' thralldom to Parker as anything other than the awe and respect, if not liking, which anybody in Elvis' position in 1954 would have had for a conman who had been able to pull off what Elvis must have regarded as close to miraculous. It was a significant loss artistically, at least in terms of his music, that Elvis, for whatever reason, didn't dump Parker as soon as he could after Beatlemania hit. I doubt he had it in him to be the great actor he wanted to be, but with his musical instincts as solid as they were, he could have avoided the whole lamentable post 1970 jump suit follies. I had the same idea as George Harrison had long before I knew it was Harrison's idea, that Elvis didn't need the jump suits, he was Elvis, why, as Harrison said, didn't he just appear in "a black shirt and jeans and sing, 'That's All Right, Mama'?"

He never needed Parker after 1956. Every time I watch video of Elvis' first appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, I marvel at Elvis' confidence. It amounts to audacity. There he is, 21 years old, and unlike The Beatles eight years later, he didn't have three other guys to lean on for nervous support. He was The Show, and was undeniably to the manor born.

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Glenn Cook's avatar

Really enjoyed this and completely agree with your take. He had to do something to abate the mold that the movie soundtracks brought, and I’ve always thought this period was ripe to be examined in the way you did.

Came to this from your July 2023 essay (also excellent) and will go to the one on the 1960-64 material next. Thanks for your work on this.

Also, if you get the chance, read this piece I wrote: “My Grandmother, Elvis, and Me.”

https://open.substack.com/pub/glenncook/p/my-grandmother-elvis-and-me?r=727x&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

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