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- <text id=94TT1630>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Books:Comet Over Tennessee
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 123
- Comet Over Tennessee
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A critic gives a splendid account of Elvis Presley's early years
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks
- </p>
- <p> He was not much given to argument. In most matters he was deferential
- to his elders and compliant with his peers. But where music
- was concerned, he liked getting his own way, and he knew with
- fearsome certainty what his own right way was. With music, he
- was fierce, always. With music, Elvis Aron Presley gave no quarter.In
- the eighth grade at Humes High in Memphis, Tennessee, 10 blocks
- from the public-assistance housing project where he lived with
- his mother and father, Presley pulled a C in music. He objected.
- As Peter Guralnick writes in his supple and altogether splendid
- new biography, Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley
- (Little, Brown; 560 pages; $24.95), for a boy who was "wary,
- watchful, shy almost to the point of reclusiveness," such a
- challenge to a teacher was a radical move, like a con calling
- out the warden or a parishioner talking back to the preacher.
- </p>
- <p> The teacher, a Miss Marmann, told him he couldn't sing. Presley
- demurred. It was just that she didn't appreciate his style of
- singing. To prove his point, he showed up in class the next
- day with his guitar and let loose with his version of Keep Them
- Cold Icy Fingers Off of Me, a 1947 hit by Fairley Holden and
- His Six Ice Cold Papas. Miss Marmann agreed with him on one
- point: she did not appreciate his style of singing.
- </p>
- <p> This was at the beginning of the 1950s. By 1954, when Presley
- was still in high school and the family was still living at
- Lauderdale Courts, he had a record on the radio. Nothing about
- icy fingers this time. That's All Right, Mama was a butane-bright
- and street-nasty version of an old blues number by Arthur ("Big
- Boy") Crudup; the flip side, Blue Moon of Kentucky, was a wild
- and beautiful version of a bluegrass waltz popularized by the
- country star Bill Monroe in 1946. No one had ever heard anything
- quite like it.
- </p>
- <p> Presley was funky and unbridled, passionate and rebellious,
- respectful of the maverick traditions his music sprang from
- but proudly, defiantly new. His singing tapped and trapped that
- mysterious, wondrous thing at the heart of American popular
- music. Sam Phillips, who recorded all Elvis' early sides for
- his seminal Sun Records, called that elusive core the place
- "where the soul of man never dies." Presley would never have
- put it in such high-flown terms. When That's All Right, Mama
- became a hit, he simply let himself be borne heavenward in the
- great celebrity updraft. hurry home, he wired his high school
- sweetheart, Dixie Locke, who was on a family vacation in Florida.
- my record is doing great. Two years later Variety declared Presley
- a millionaire.
- </p>
- <p> We all know this trajectory, and we have been, many of us, witnesses
- to this legend. But it is the particular and spectacular achievement
- of Last Train to Memphis that it holds both the making of the
- history and the beginning of the myth in a firm, simple and
- compassionate focus, concentrating on the four years from Elvis'
- first success to his entrance into the Army in 1958. (A planned
- second volume will chronicle the years, many of them melancholy,
- that followed.) Guralnick, an excellent music critic, concentrates
- on narrative here, and writes evocatively, empathetically, of
- Elvis' roots and dreams.
- </p>
- <p> This is a tender book. The outlaw Elvis, the performer one fan
- called "a great big beautiful hunk of forbidden fruit," the
- savvy, surly dreamer who once remarked to a reporter, "You can't
- be a rebel if you grin," is set forth here as a kind of perpetual
- lost boy who clung to the sure anchorage of his family and friends.
- But as the book closes, friends become salaried employees, and
- the hometown girls are outnumbered by stars flying in from Hollywood.
- Natalie Wood came to Memphis and lasted four days, stunned by
- the celebrity madness surrounding Elvis and disappointed by
- the young man who was the cause of it all. "He can sing," she
- told her sister afterward, "but he can't do much else."
- </p>
- <p> It could be that the cocoon of family that the Presleys drew
- around themselves was impermeable. "Though we had friends and
- relatives, including my parents," Presley's father Vernon recalled,
- "the three of us formed our own private world." Guralnick paints
- this world with perspective, respect and great decency; it is one of the
- book's triumphs. "Poor we were," the elder Presley says, "but
- trash we weren't. We never had any prejudice." Presley may have
- been easygoing, but when the country performer Ira Louvin called
- him "a white nigger," Presley stood up to him.
- </p>
- <p> So close were the Presleys that the singer may never have recovered
- from the death of his mother Gladys, who died of liver problems
- in 1958, just after Presley had gone into the service. Presley
- was more than bereft; he was cleaved. The open coffin finally
- had to be covered with glass because he still wanted to kiss
- and hug his mother, pleading with her to come back. It was a
- different Presley who went back to the Army, and then to serve
- in Germany. He seemed to be haunted ever after by her, as we,
- still and likely always, will be haunted by him.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-