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Thursday, August 16, 2012
ELVIS PRESLEY IS STILL DEAD
It's the fortieth anniversary of the passing of the King, and I remember that day in 1977 like it was yesterday.
I had just barely turned twelve and was quite immersed in the history and music of rock 'n' roll, and although I had listened to a lot of Elvis Presley I just didn't get what the big deal was. I'd seen the footage of his appearances on THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW, suffered through a few of his (mostly) wretched flicks thanks to THE 4:30 MOVIE,
heard the mothers of some of my friends describe how crazy and "naughty" he made them feel when they were teens, and witnessed the general public mention him with a reverence usually reserved for the Pope or some shit.
This across-the-board worship didn't sit well with me at all since I considered Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and Jerry Lee Lewis to each be far superior in terms of both musical output and sheer showmanship — to say nothing of being balls-out crazy in the case of the latter two — and I scoffed at Elvis' Las Vegas career, a period described so eloquently in the film HEARTBREAK HOTEL (1988) as him "kissing the ass he used to kick," so I simply had no use for an icon that I felt was an overrated, bloated has-been in a Captain Marvel Jr. suit.
Think I'm kidding? Google Elvis Presley and Captain Marvel Jr. and see what you discover!
On the day Elvis died you would have thought the world had come to an end. The news was crammed with endless footage of beer-gutted, toothless trailer bunnies, their beehives practically touching the sky, bawling at the entrance to Graceland like they'd just seen their most beloved child shot through the head by a nude-from-the-waist-down Ronald McDonald with a bloody penis. Again, I just did not get it. This was the summer of 1977, the summer of STAR WARS and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND, a golden era twenty years after the heyday of the now-deceased hillbilly whose famous sneer sometimes made him look like a stroke victim. His music was now obsolete, dethroned by disco and the anti-monarchy vitriol of the Sex Pistols and things could only get better, right?
Well, all of that just goes to show you how little I knew in my twelve-year-old arrogance. The STAR WARS series would eventually turn to utter horseshit, the Sex Pistols fizzled out after one album — two, if you count the soundtrack to THE GREAT ROCK 'N' ROLL SWINDLE — and disco, which started out annoyingly enough, would collapse under its own weight and played-out repetition (to say nothing of all that cocaine), and not long after that MTV would start the countdown to the death of not only rock 'n' roll, but pop music in general.
It wasn't until my college years that I reevaluated my opinion of Elvis and finally got why he was culturally important. For better or worse, the guy brought black music to the masses, had a look and a style that were totally unlike anything that white America was ready for at the time — or maybe it was ready and needed the boy from Tupelo to kick down the front door — he could sing his ass off, and he irritated the shit out of parents everywhere while sending their innocent young daughters into fits of panty-drenching ecstasy, all of which is, as we now know, the very definition of what a rock star is supposed to do. Elvis Presley invented that shit. Let us review:
Sure, Chuck Berry was a born guitar-slinger who hauled underage white girls across state lines in order to violate the Mann Act.
You're goddamned right Jerry Lee Lewis performed as if someone had hooked a high voltage power cable up his asshole just before he took a break to fuck his thirteen-year-old cousin.
Yeah, Little Richard looked like the first contact ambassador from the Planet of the Flaming Hairdressers and shrieked like a Capuchin monkey on a fistful of Stud City animal stimulants.
And not one of them would have made it onto the popular airwaves if Elvis hadn't blazed a trail of "unwholesome, race music filth" before them, and for that I could haul his mouldering corpse from the cold, cold earth and kiss him full upon his maggot-drooling lips.
The King relaxes between takes on the set of the stag reel masterpiece HOUND DOG HUMP (1958).
And as I got older I also found out about just what a twisted freak Elvis was in real life; all the creepy shit about his mother and her bizarre nickname of "Satnin," how he supposedly wouldn't fuck Priscilla anymore after she'd given birth to Lisa-Marie because her parts were now associated with motherhood (thereby driving her into the arms of Elvis' karate instructor), the escalating madness brought on by unimaginable excesses and prescription drug addiction, the deep-fried peanut butter and bacon and banana sandwiches, and all sorts of bizarro good ol' boy shit that the tabloid media still mines and we still devour, and probably always will. Plus, don't forget the religious-cult-like proliferation of Elvis impersonators and their oddball ilk, some of whom are actually legally empowered to perform marriage ceremonies, perhaps the ultimate white trash/kitsch statement.
But the crowning moment of Elvis lunacy can only be the time when the King, allegedly doped-up out of his mind on one of Dr. Nick's pharmaceutical cocktails, barged into the White House, presented President Richard M. Nixon with a gun in a beautiful wooden collector's case, congratulated him on what a great job he was doing running the country, and asked to be appointed as an honest to Christ agent of the D.E.A., an event which, thank God, got photographed for posterity.
I swear on my mother's eyes that I didn't cobble this together with Photoshop. Tricky Dick meets Captain Marvel Jr., for fuck's sake! I mean, you just can't make this kind of shit up.
So I salute you, Elvis Aron Presley. King of Rock 'n' Roll, karate black belt, master of every field of human endeavour — if you believe his movies, anyway — and total maniac. I will remember you this evening when I get home and spin the bootleg compilation ELVIS' GREATEST SHIT,
an incredible compendium of the King's all-time worst efforts, including "Song of the Shrimp," "There's No Room To Rhumba In A Sports Car," "Dominic the Impotent Bull," and his incredible rendition of "Old MacDonald Had A Farm," in which Elvis outlines how the animals on the farm had better stay in line or else he'll eat them in a variety of ways. I may also break out Turkish Elvis impersonator Emil Nargi's cover of "It's Now Or Never,"
but I'd really like to get my hands on this gem, perhaps the perfect album to play on this day of days:
Sadly, I don't have THE ELVIS PRESLEY SEANCE, so I may pop over to the local bodega and kick down a couple of shots in Elvis' honor.
THE KING IS DEAD! LONG LIVE THE KING!!!
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THE BOOK OF THE POP CULTURE DEAD
Sunday, August 05, 2012
IN MEMORIUM
Jennifer George (1976-2012), gone too soon.
It is with Stygian sadness that I mark the passing of my friend Jennifer George, who suddenly died just the other day and was not even forty. I am seldom at a loss for words but I am completely and utterly devastated by Jennifer's untimely
and unexpected departure from this plane. I've known her since she was one of my campers at Mahackeno, the excellent summer camp I worked at as a counselor during the 1980's, and I considered her in many ways to be like the daughter I always wanted, so I just don't know what to say. My heart goes out to her family and to those who also knew what a genuinely wonderful human being she was, but let us concentrate on the positive memories we have of her instead of the crushing sadness. In honor of that, I'd like to share the following true story:
When Jenny was twelve and displaying a budding interest in the first wave of British punk rock, I took her to what was supposed to be the final concert tour of seminal UK punk band The Damned ("last tour" my beige ass; they are still playing live gigs). That concert trip was done with full approval from her mom and her brother (who was a classmate of mine during high school, so he knew I wasn't a creep), and before we hit the show at the old Ritz, myself, my friend Gordon and Jenny stooped off at my favorite punk rock dive bar, Downtown Beirut, so Gordon and I could get a cheap pre-show beer or two. (don't look for it now, it's long defunct.) We all walked in and who did the bartender try to serve first? You guessed it, the six-foot twelve-year-old. Needless to say, I did not allow Jen any alcoholic beverages, which she was quite disappointed by, but that was made up for later when guitarist Captain Sensible performed the last third of the show wearing nothing but his red beret, sunglasses and a pair of Doc Martens, while the audience members made a concerted effort to nail him in his fully exposed junk with full cups of beer, hard candies, and any other projectiles that they could improvise. After the show and on the way home, Jenny made it clear that she'd had the time of her young
So I loved Jen as if she were my own flesh and blood and while I will certainly mourn her passing, I will never forget the sweetness and soul of her one in a million self. Requiescat en pace, wee George.
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