OPINION
Published on August 17, 2011 By Big Fat Daddy In Misc

 

Late summer around the Monterey Penninsula is best described as "sultry".  The mornings are cool and foggy and a damp sea smell permeates everything;  the air is heavy and feels thick.  As the sun burns the fog away, the temperature climbs into the high seventies to low eighties.  The fog melts and the air becomes thinner and easier to breathe, but still feels slightly damp.  The sun is bright and not quite strong enough to sting the bare skin;  but warming.  As the sun starts sinking into the ocean, the heavy air and sea smell return.

 

It was an afternoon typical of August.  Not uncomfortable but very warm, the sun was high and bright, the air still carried the sea smell and weight from morning.  I was pulling into the parking lot at the main PX at Fort Ord.  I was looking for a slot to slip into when the news came on.  It was a Tuesday and it must have been around noon, I remember being in a hurry.  The radio station broke into the song that was playing with a news bulletin...Elvis Presley was dead.  I sat there for a moment trying to soak it in.  I had often said that I couldn't picture a fifty-year-old Elvis trying to rock.  But I didn't even realize that he had already turned 40...

 

I had been an Elvis fan from his beginning.  I was living in San Diego in 1955 when some of the local radio stations were changing from the pop music of Patti Page, Eddie Fisher, Ernie Ford and the like to the new rock-a-billy sounds of Eddie Cochran, Bill Haley and of course, Elvis.  I was eight years old and the rock sound just hit me right.  I watched Elvis on TV, saw his movies, listened to him on the radio, bought his records, and in 1961, I saw him in person at the Arizona Memorial Concert in Block Arena at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.  He made a dozen or so movies in the early sixties and each movie produced an album with one or two hit songs on it...I had them all.  Somewhen in the middle sixties, probably helped along by the British Invasion and basic training, I kinda drifted away from Elvis.  His movies were bleh and so was his music.  "In the Ghetto" sealed the deal for me;  the man who destroyed the morals of teens in the fifties singing to raise our social consciousness in the late sixties?  

 

I felt sad the first time I saw the films of a fat, sweaty, jump-suited Elvis forgetting the lyrics and lying on the stage to sing.  I have compiled my own cassette tapes to play in my truck (pre-MP3 days) and on one side of one I labeled  it "Young Rockin' Elvis" and on the other side "Young Bluesy Elvis" (If you haven't heard some of the early Elvis blues renditions, you should find some and give them a listen, he had one of the best blues voices ever)...I don't have a "Fat, busting-out-of-his-jumpsuit Elvis" tape...the Las Vegas years just ruined whatever was left of the  boy.

 

But in spite of all that, I just never really thought of a dead Elvis.  I was sad that day, and sadder.  still that there was so much more that the Boy From Tupelo could have been, but wasn't. 

 

Someone honked behind me and I found a place to park but I didn't get out of the car.  The radio started playing back-to-back Elvis songs and I forgot why I was there to begin with.  I just pulled out and went back to work.  Seemed like everyone I talked to that afternoon felt pretty much the same;  it was a blue day.  For me and fifty million fans who couldn't be wrong.  August 16, 1977...thirty-four years ago today


Comments (Page 1)
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on Aug 17, 2011

I came along later, and started listening to music just in time for the Beatles, so I never got into Elvis.  But a lot of friends did.  I was not aware of the day he died, but my friends were. I did like his early music, but not really enough to buy any of his stuff.  An occasional spin on the radio was enough.  Now my wife's best friend, who is barely old enough to remember him alive, is one of "those".  A shame she was not born 10 years earlier.

on Aug 17, 2011

Thanks for reading, Doc...Lots of folks were seduced by the Brits and left the early rockers behind.  I was at an age where I got to straddle that.  Believe it or not, I had the leather jacket, engineer boots, and the greased back pompadour from about '58 through about '61 or '62, when the Beachboys taught us all how to dress.

on Aug 18, 2011

Big Fat Daddy
when the Beachboys taught us all how to dress.

I was in California for them, but they were too bubble gum for me.  I was more a Zepplin and Moody Blues guy.  I started listening during the British Invasion (and of course the Blues indicates I liked some), but my favorites were mostly what you would call heavy metal then (now it is just classic rock). Doors, Guess Who, Hendricks, Creedence.

Oh, and Soul!  Loved it before the rappers killed it.

on Aug 18, 2011

The Beachboys hit the scene in southern California in 1961, they ruled (they were followed by dozens of "surfer" oriented groups quickly) until the Invasion started, they fought the good fight for a few years more, then sort of faded into  drug-induced haze,

on Aug 18, 2011

Oh, and as far as the "bubble gum" goes...at his death, Carl Wilson was cited by several sources (Including Rolling Stone, if I remember correctly) as one the very best, and most under-rated, rock guitarists ever.  Not being argumentative, Doc, just a big fan.

on Aug 19, 2011

Big Fat Daddy
Not being argumentative, Doc, just a big fan.

Not a problem.  I do not mean to impugn any of the Beach Boy's talents, just commenting on their sound.  They were top of their genre, I just was never into it.  If "bubble gum" is an offensive term, I will try to think of something not so offensive.  It was just the sound that I found kind of shallow.  If you listen to the Moody Blues - you understand what I am saying.  The Beatles (early years) were the same (shallow sound).  Their middle years were their best.  I guess I am more a 70s rocker than 60s, although most of my groups got their start in the 60s.

on Aug 19, 2011

The "thinness" of the early Beachboys and Beatles, compared to the "Wall of Sound" out of Motown and other labels later, was  a rebirth of the "guitar bands" of the fifties and reflected that earlier sound just pumped up a little.   We didn't have all that filled out sound around back then.  In fact, one of the saddest men in the record business it the exec who turned down the Beatles in '62 because guitar bands were a thing of the past.  Both groups evolved with the times...Paul M credits the Beachboys "Pet Sounds" album as the inspiration for SGT Pepper.  We're okay, Doc, I'm just older than you, that's all.

on Sep 07, 2011

Trying to embed does not always work.  See next comment in Joeuser.  It does not seem to be working in the forums.

on Sep 07, 2011

[video]

on Sep 07, 2011

I've approached it from every way I know how and it still won't work.

on Sep 08, 2011
on Sep 08, 2011

Doc:  That was an amazing video!!  Love them dogs, they're so ugly they're...well....ugly!  Music was pretty good, too.

on Sep 09, 2011

Big Fat Daddy
Doc:  That was an amazing video!!  Love them dogs, they're so ugly they're...well....ugly!  Music was pretty good, too.

It was one of those emails you get from everyone.  Watching it, I thought of you and this article, so I was hoping to embed it.  As for bulldogs, yea, they are kind of lovable.

on Sep 10, 2011

I watched Elvis on tv when I was a little girl.  My dad, a musician had his own Elvis impersonation band years later.  lol

I heard about Elvis' death while sitting in the backseat of my Dad's Vega on a roadtrip from Marysville Ohio to Kentucky.  I couldn't believe it.  But even as a child I felt it.

I've never been a big Beatles fan.  Their music sounds like fingernails on a chalk board to me.  I want to hold my ears and run away screaming.  Hate it. 

on Sep 10, 2011

Tonya:  I made the trasition from fifties and early sixties style rock to the British Invasion style fairly easily, I spend as much time on the fifties channel as the sixties, seventies, and classic vinyl channels on my XM.  I just want something to make my toes wanna tap and urge me off the chair.  But it was Elvis that started me down that "rocky" road and he will always be the King to me.  When Lennon died in 1980, I understood what so many folks were feeling but I didn't feel it, when the Beatles broke up and John, never my favorite Beatle anyway,  started making solo albums he was just another arrogant Brit spouting socialist crap...I really didn't miss him.

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