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ELVIS PRESLEY - STORY OF A SUPERSTAR

When Elvis Presley died on 16th August, 1977, radio and television programmes all over the world were interrupted to give the news of his death. Eighty thousand people attended his funeral.

The streets were jammed with cars, and Elvis Presley films were shown on television, and his records were played on the radio all day. In the year after his death, 100 million Presley LPs were sold.

Elvis Presley was the first real rock and roll star. A white Southerner singing blues laced with country and country tinged with gospel,* he brought together American music from both sides of the color line and performed it with natural hip-swiveling sexuality that made him a teen idol and a role model for generations of cool rebels. He was repeatedly dismissed as vulgar, Incompetent and a bad influence, but the force of his music and his image was no mere merchandising feat. Presley signaled to mainstream culture that it was time to let go.

Elvis Presley was born on January 8th, 1935, in Tupelo, Mississippi. His twin brother, Jesse Garon, died at birth. His parents were very poor and Elvis never had music lessons, but he was surrounded by music from an early age. His parents were very religious, and Elvis regularly sang at church services. In 1948, when he was thirteen, his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee. He left school in 1953 and got a job as a truck driver.

In the summer of 1953 Elvis paid $ 4 and recorded two songs for his mother's birthday at Sam Phillips' Sun Records studio. Sam Phillips heard Elvis and asked him to record That's All Right in July 1954. 20,000 copies were sold mainly in and around Memphis. He made five more records for Sun, and in July 1955 he met Colonel Tom Parker, who became his manager in November. Parker sold Elvis's contract to RCA Records. On January 10th, 1956, Elvis recorded Heartbreak Hotel, and a million copies were sold. In the next fourteen months he made another fourteen records, and they were all big hits. In 1956 he also made his first film in Hollywood.

In March, 1958, Elvis had to join the army. He wanted to be an ordinary soldier. When his hak was cut thousands of women cried. He spent the next two years in Germany, where he met Priscilla Beaulieu, who became his wife eight years later. In 1960 he left the army and went to Hollywood where he made several films during the next few years.

After a live performance on March 25, 1961, Presley left the concert stage and spent the next eight years making movies. With a few exceptions, the soundtrack music was indisputably poor. But by the mid-Sixties Presley was earning $1 million per movie plus a large percentage of the gross. Each of the movies had a concurrently released soundtrack LP, nine of which went gold.* Meanwhile, the younger rock audience heard Presley disciples like the Beatles more often than they heard Presley himself.

By 1968 many people had become tired of Elvis. He hadn't performed live since 1960. But he recorded a new LP From Elvis in Memphis and appeared in a special television programme. He became popular again, and went to Los Vegas where he was paid $750,000 for four weeks.



In 1972 his wife left him, and they were divorced in October, 1973. He died from a heart attack. He had been working too hard, and eating and drinking too much for several years. He left all his money to his only daughter, Lisa Marie Presley. She became one of the richest people in the world when she was only nine years old.

With the exception of three dates in Canada in 1957 and an impromptu performance while on leave in Paris in 1959 Presley never performed outside the U.S. Through it all, his records continued to sell. During his career, Presley earned 94 gold singles,* three gold EPs* and over forty gold LPs.*

Based on: The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia; Streamline English


Date: 2015-12-11; view: 2306


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