Elvis Presley

Highly Appreciated

ELVIS PRESLEY
 
 
Elvis Presley  (January 8, 1935 – August 16, 1977) was an American singer and actor.  Regarded as one of the most significant cultural icons of the 20th century, he is often referred to as “the King of Rock and Roll”, or simply, “the King”.  A native of Tupelo, Mississippi, his music career began in Memphis, Tennessee in 1954,  recording at Sun Records with producer Sam Phillips, who wanted to bring the sound of African-American music to a wider audience.  Presley’s first RCA single, “Heartbreak Hotel”, was released in January 1956 and became a number-one hit in the United States.  In 1958, he was drafted into military service; he resumed his recording career two years later but devoted much of the 1960’s making Hollywood movies and their accompanying soundtrack albums.  In 1968, following a seven-year break from live performances, he returned to the stage in the acclaimed televised comeback special Elvis, which led to an extended Las Vegas concert residency and a string of highly profitable tours.  Commercially successful in many genres, including pop, blues and gospel, he is the best-selling solo artist in the history of recorded music, with estimated record sales of around 600 million units worldwide.  (More from Wikipedia)
 

Also included on Ear-Piercing Punk is a wacky version of “Jailhouse Rock” by Dean Carter, who also performs the scorching “Rebel Woman”.  The album opens with a great version of “I’m a Hog for You Baby” by the Groupies; that might be the coolest Leiber/Stoller (i.e., Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller) song of them all – “Jailhouse Rock” (a big hit song for Elvis Presley, not to mention a movie, Jailhouse Rock) is another of their many, many classics.
 
(April 2011)
 
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The term “rockabilly” – the word is an amalgamation of rock and hillbilly (an early term for country music) – was thrilling to me even before I actually knew what it meant.  It was one of the earliest forms of rock and roll and the first to be played primarily by white musicians, going all the way back to “Rock Around the Clock” by Bill Haley and His Comets.  The roster of rockabilly stars over the years starts of course with The KingElvis Presley, along with Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis and most of the other artists at Sun Records in the 1950’s, plus Wanda JacksonEddie Cochran and others.  There was also a rockabilly revival in the early 1980’s led by the Blasters and the Stray Cats.  To this day, when a band wants a rawer sound, they will incorporate rockabilly into their music.
 
Charlie Feathers is known as the “king of rockabilly” and is the co-author of one of Elvis Presley’s earliest hit songs, “I Forgot to Remember to Forget”. 
 
In 1956Sun Records was able to show off by hosting an impromptu jam session by the Million Dollar Quartet, having a genuinely stupendous line-up:  Elvis PresleyCarl Perkins, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis (Sun-signed artists all, though Elvis was by now at RCA).  
 
As to the Quartet, Elvis was drafted into the Army in 1958; when he returned to music two years later, his recordings were quite different and continued to evolve over time. 
  
Meanwhile, Carl Perkins was beginning to slip into obscurity and was in danger of being known only as the songwriter and original performer of one of Elvis’ signature songs, “Blue Suede Shoes” (though I prefer Carl’s version of “Blue Suede Shoes" myself).   However, the Beatles gave Perkins’ career new life when they covered several of his songs early on, notably “Honey, Don’t”.  
 
Wanda Jackson became the “queen of rockabilly” when Elvis Presley himself encouraged her to sing rockabilly when she toured with him in 1955-1956, but she began moving toward pure country when she had an early hit song with the title track “Right or Wrong” on her 1961 album Right or Wrong.  Near the end of the arc of her rockabilly career, she recorded one of the songs on my All-Time Top Ten, the sublime Funnel of Love with her hot new band, the Party Timers that featured a young Roy Clark.  This was yet another song that was introduced to me on a Born Bad CD.
  
(May 2011)
 
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You can talk about your pioneers of rock and roll – Chuck BerryLittle RichardElvis PresleyJames Brown, just to name a few – and you can even bring up your British Invasion greats – the Beatlesthe Rolling Stonesthe Animalsthe Yardbirds, the Kinks, just to name another few.  All of them are already in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and deservedly so.  However, you can play a lot of more modern rock records all day long and not really discern more than a hint of their direct influence; no question it’s in the DNA, but actual Elvis Presley-style vocals or Chuck Berry guitar licks or James Brown wails are elusive. 

 

That is not so with Link Wray:  His influence is front and center on a good 50% of the records that I play, because he is credited with introducing the “power chord” on electric guitar to rock and roll, a technique whose effect is often enhanced by distortion. 

 
(February 2013)
  
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Sometime in the 1949 to 1952 period, Bill Haley and the Saddlemen were formed; this was the band that would later evolve into Bill Haley and His Comets.  This band recorded a cover version of “Rocket 88” on Holiday Records that was released on June 14, 1951, barely two months after the original release of this song by Ike Turner’s Kings of Rhythm (though this original record was actually credited to Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats). 

 

Now, Ike Turner’s “Rocket 88 is named by many rock critics and music historians as “the first rock and roll record”; what’s more, “Rocket 88” as recorded by Bill Haley and the Saddlemen is one of the very earliest recordings in what would later become known as “rockabilly”, the musical style pioneered by Elvis Presley and others.  

 

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There are others who helped pave the way for rock and roll as we know it that will have to wait for another time, such as Fats Domino, Pat Boonethe Everly Brothers . . . 

 

Hold on:  Pat Boone???  Ladies and Gentlemen, this little series of posts is all about Under-Appreciation; and if there is any 1950’s rock star – maybe any 1950’s musician, period – who is more under-rated today as a performer than Pat Boone (one of the original teen idols), I don’t know who it might be.  The “crime” that Boone is accused of – recording white versions of black R&B songs – is what almost every white rock and roll artist in the 1950’s was doing; heading that list is Elvis Presley.  And yet Pat Boone is the only one who gets much guff about it.  Pat Boone’s extremely clean-cut image works against his legacy in this regard, especially in retrospect. 

 

Pat Boone hit the top of the charts with his second single, “Ain’t That a Shame”, which came out in July 1955 – yeah, a little earlier than you expected I’ll bet.  For context, that was just two months after Chuck Berrys first single, “Maybellene” was released; and Elvis Presley wouldn’t hit #1 until early 1956

 

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Writing for Allmusic, rock critic Bruce Eder states his case well:  “Buddy Holly is perhaps the most anomalous legend of ’50s rock & roll – he had his share of hits, and he achieved major rock & roll stardom, but his importance transcends any sales figures or even the particulars of any one song (or group of songs) that he wrote or recorded.  Holly was unique, his legendary status and his impact on popular music all the more extraordinary for having been achieved in barely 18 months. . . .  In a career lasting from the spring of 1957 until the winter of 1958-1959 – less time than Elvis had at the top before the army took him (and less time, in fact, than Elvis spent in the army) – Holly became the single most influential creative force in early rock & roll. . . . 

 

Holly and the band weren’t afraid to experiment even on their singles, so that ‘Peggy Sue’ made use of the kind of changes in volume and timbre on the guitar that were usually reserved for instrumental records; similarly, ‘Words of Love’ was one of the earliest successful examples of double-tracked vocals in rock & roll, which the Beatles, in particular, would embrace in the ensuing decade.” 

 

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A native of Lubbock, TexasBuddy Holly initially began performing with his childhood friend Bob Montgomery under the name Buddy and Bob, calling their musical style “western and bop”; they were the opening act for Elvis Presley when he performed in the Lubbock area in 1955.  In February 1956, Holly was signed by Decca Records but found the recording environment confining, where he was allowed virtually no input.  Buddy Holly was dropped by the label in January 1957 but was still bound by his contract that forbade him to re-record any songs during his stint with Decca for five years, regardless of whether or not they had been released. 

 

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There were indications that Buddy Holly was beginning to eclipse even Elvis Presley in popularity, particularly in England but also in America.  For one thing, Buddy Holly and the Crickets toured the United Kingdom for a month in 1958 (they were only the second white rock band to do so), which Elvis never did, at least in those days.  Elvis Presley went into the Army in early 1958 – though his record company had plenty of future hits in the can, he was clearly no longer on the scene.  

 

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As important as he is in his home country, the influence of Buddy Holly among British musicians is incalculable.  Quoting Bruce Eder again:  “The group’s heavy use of rhythm guitar slotted right in with the sound of skiffle music, a mix of blues, folk, country, and jazz elements that constituted most of British youth’s introduction to playing music and their way into rock & roll.  Additionally, although he cut an exciting figure on-stage, Holly looked a lot less likely a rock & roll star than Elvis  tall, lanky, and bespectacled, he looked like an ordinary guy who simply played and sang well, and part of his appeal as a rock & roll star was rooted in how unlikely he looked in that role.  He provided inspiration – and a way into the music – for tens of thousands of British teenagers who also couldn’t imagine themselves rivals to Elvis or Gene Vincent in the dark and dangerous department. . . .  Additionally, although he played several different kinds of guitar, Holly was specifically responsible for popularizing – some would say elevating to mystical, even magical status – the Fender Stratocaster, especially in England.”  

 

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Just 10 days later, the Big Bopper was gone.  A briefcase was found in the wreckage that contained lyrics for 20 songs that he was working on.  His friend Elvis Presley sent a note of condolence and a guitar-shaped arrangement of yellow roses for the funeral procession. 

 

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Little Richard is another man who helped lay the foundations of rock and roll.  His hit songs – “Tutti Frutti”, “Long Tall Sally”, “Slippin’ and Slidin’”, “Jenny, Jenny”, “Ready Teddy”, “Keep a Knockin’”, “Good Golly, Miss Molly”, etc. – are so primal and so ingrained in the rock and roll milieu that it seems like they have always been there.  Little Richard (real name:  Richard Penniman) is sometimes unfairly dismissed as a one-dimensional shouter, but he brought a passion to his music – and a flamboyant personality to match – that made even Elvis Presley seem tame by comparison.  His short stature only exaggerated the vehemence of his performances. 

 

(June 2013/1)

 

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I did find this brief mention of the song on the Wikipedia article on The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan:  “Unlike the other material which Dylan recorded between 1961 and 1964, ‘Mixed Up Confusion’ attempted a rockabilly sound.  Cameron Crowe described it as ‘a fascinating look at a folk artist with his mind wandering towards Elvis Presley and Sun Records.’” 

 

(June 2013/2)

 

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In 1998, an organization called Native American Music Association & Awards was started in order to bring awareness of the contributions of Native Americans to music in all its forms; the Awards have been presented annually since that time.  The surprise at taking even a quick glance at their “Did You Know” roster at www.nativeamericanmusicawards.com/halloffame.cfm is the incredible number of stars of popular music who have Native American blood – the tribe or confederation name(s) are given in parentheses here and elsewhere in this post:  Elvis Presley (Cherokee), Jimi Hendrix (Cherokee), Hank Williams (Choctaw), Willie Nelson (Cherokee), Ritchie Valens (Yakui), Aaron Neville and the Neville Brothers (Choctaw/Cherokee), Loretta Lynn and her sister Crystal Gayle (Cherokee), Kitty Wells (Cherokee), Wayne Newton (Powhatan), Michael Jackson and the Jacksons (Choctaw/Cherokee), Link Wray (Shawnee), Richie Havens (Blackfoot), Robbie Robertson of the Band (Mohawk), Tina Turner (Navaho), Cher (Cherokee), Rita Coolidge (Cherokee), Eddie Van Halen of Van Halen (Native Hawaiian – Native Americans who are not among those often called Indians), Tori Amos (Cherokee), Toni Tennille of the Captain and Tennille (Cherokee), Billy Ray Cyrus and his daughter Miley Cyrus (Cherokee), Anthony Kiedis of Red Hot Chili Peppers (Mohican), LL Cool J (Cherokee), Beyoncé (Creole), etc.  

 

Tommy Allsup (Cherokee) was a member of Buddy Holly’s new band in 1959; he “lost” a coin flip with Ritchie Valens and was thus not on board the airplane that crashed on the day the music died  

 

(August 2013)

 

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On June 2, 1964the Soul Agents released their first single on Pye RecordsI Just Wanna Make Love to You b/w Mean Woman Blues.  Mean Woman Blues is also an oft recorded song; Elvis Presley included “Mean Woman Blues” in the soundtrack for his 1957 film, Loving You (his first starring role in a movie), and “Mean Woman Blues” was the flip side of Roy Orbison’s immortal “Blue Bayou” when the song was originally released in 1963.  In the U.K.Cliff Richard and the Shadows had released “Mean Woman Blues” in 1959

 

(May 2014)

 

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Why Me was recorded by many others, among them Johnny CashElvis PresleyGeorge JonesDavid Allan CoeMerle Haggardand Cliff Richard.  

 

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The Imperials (no relation to Little Anthony’s group) were started in 1963 by Jake Hess after he left the venerable Statesmen Quartet.  From 1966 to 1971the Imperials recorded with Elvis Presley and appeared on two of his gospel albums, How Great Thou Art and He Touched Me.  In 1969, Elvis hired the Imperials to perform with him as well after his previous background singers, the Jordanaires (also a gospel group) declined to accompany him to Las Vegas and other far-flung places. 

 

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I think of “Put Your Hand in the Hand” as the quintessential early Christian contemporary song.  The best known version is by Ocean (from Canada), who reached #2 on the charts with the song in 1971; others who have recorded the song include Elvis PresleyJoan BaezFrankie Laine, and Loretta Lynn.  

 
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The Ice Man Cometh by Jerry Butler proved highly influential; John Bush noted in Allmusic that the album “marks an excellent collaboration, the first time R&B production techniques reached a level of maturity and elegance capable of fully complementing one of the smoothest vocalists in soul history”.  In 1969Elvis Presley recorded one of the hits from The Ice Man Cometh, “Only the Strong Survive”.  

 

(July 2014)

 
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Move It” was an original song by bandmember Ian “Sammy” Samwell and was first released as the “B” side, with the “A” side being a cover of a song by American artist Bobby Helms called “Schoolboy Crush”.  “Move It” went to #2 on the UK charts in 1958 and is widely regarded as the first authentic British rock and roll song.  John Lennon has been quoted as saying (from Wikipedia):  “Before Cliff [Richard] and the Shadows, there had been nothing worth listening to in British music.”  Cliff Richard is the third top-selling singles artist in British history, behind only the Beatles and Elvis Presley

 

As Wikipedia notes:  “Over a career spanning more than 50 years, [Cliff] Richard has become a fixture of the British entertainment world, amassing many gold and platinum discs and awards, including three Brit Awards and two Ivor Novello Awards.  He has had more than 130 singles, albums and EPs make the UK Top 20, more than any other artist, and holds the record (with Elvis Presley) as the only act to make the UK singles charts in all of its first six decades (1950’s – 2000’s).  He has achieved 14 UK No. 1 singles (or 18, depending on the counting methodology) and is the only singer to have had a No. 1 single in the UK in 5 consecutive decades:  the 1950’s through to the 1990’s.” 

 

(November 2014)

 

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The first time we all saw hula dancing was on Elvis Presley movies and other Hollywood productions, and it was typically winsome girls wearing grass skirts and small tops and flowered necklaces who were swaying gently to slow background music of no particular distinction.  I remember hearing that there was more to hula than that, but it wasn’t until I got to appraise Hilton Hawaiian Village at Waikiki Beach (near Honolulu) that I actually saw how strong and athletic the dancing was (and how there were at least as many men dancing as women) and actually heard the drum-driven music that accompanies that dancing. 

 

It is much the same with surf music; there is no denying the talent and fun of the music by the Beach Boys and Jan & Dean (and former UARB the Rip Chords for that matter), but there is more to the surf sound than that. 

 

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The band heard a track called Walk, Don’t Run on an album by country guitar virtuoso Chet Atkins called Hi-Fi in Focus and decided that it would make a great single for the group.  The Ventures released “Walk, Don’t Run” on their Blue Horizon label in 1960; it rose to #2 on the charts, behind only “It’s Now or Never” by Elvis Presley.  With Howie Johnson as the group’s new drummer, the band put together their excellent first album, also called Walk, Don’t Run.  When Mel Taylor joined the Ventures on drums in 1962Nokie Edwards became the lead guitarist, with Bob Bogle moving to bass guitar. 

 

(December 2014)

 

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While he was in basic training in San AntonioMike Post provided early guidance to the legendary Texas garage rock band the Outcasts; he wrote and produced the band’s first single, “Nothing Ever Comes Easy” b/w “Oriental Express”.  He also recruited the Outcasts as the back-up band for performances by Jimmy Carlson (who was active in the New York folk music scene) and by Jimmy Hawkins (a long-time actor who later worked in Elvis Presley films and on The Donna Reed Show). 

 

(January 2015/1)

 

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Ron Silva and Steve Potterf of the Crawdaddys grew up as neighbors in Point Loma, California and began listening to records together in the ninth grade.  Silva recalls of those early days:  “After a while Steve started getting into the music I liked – Beatles, early Stones.  I remember sitting in his room playing guitars along to my dad’s Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley 45’s.”   

 

(January 2015/2)

 

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Glen Campbell quickly became highly sought after as a guitarist and played for a wide variety of artists in the 1960’sWikipedia lists recordings by Bobby Darin, Rick NelsonDean Martin, Nat King Colethe MonkeesNancy SinatraMerle HaggardJan & DeanElvis Presleyand Frank Sinatra

 

The statistics about the Wrecking Crew are staggering, with various members appearing on tens of thousands of recordings.  Hal Blaine is believed to be the most recorded drummer in history, while Tommy Tedesco is said to be the most recorded guitarist.  And their talents were not limited to records; again from Wikipedia:  “Tedesco’s credits include the iconic brand-burning accompaniment theme from television’s BonanzaThe Twilight ZoneVic Mizzy’s iconic theme from Green AcresM*A*S*HBatman, and Elvis Presley’s ’68 Comeback Special.” 

 

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I was also able to tour the Country Music Hall of Fame Museum, where I learned about the disparate forces leading to what is known as country music:  rockabilly from Elvis Presley on down (my favorite form of country and, by now, maybe my favorite form of rock and roll as well), yodeling masters (particularly Jimmie Rodgers, whose 1927 hit “Blue Yodel No. 1 (T for Texas)” was the first half-million-selling country song), honky tonk (the kind of music heard in early country music clubs, as personified by Hank Williams Sr.), mountain folk music (most importantly the Carter Family), Western music (often in the form of singing cowboys like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers – in fact, for many years the genre was called country and western), and Western swing (basically countrified big-band sounds).  I don’t know too much about the latter strand, and Jimmie Rodgers is a bit old-fashioned for my tastes (though I have a compilation CD that I sure hope turns up among those remaining to be cleaned up from Katrina); but I have learned enough about the other foundational musicians over the years and other early forms of country to become a major fan. 

 

(February 2015)

 

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Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller are another legendary songwriting duo, with Leiber doing the music and Stoller writing the lyrics.  They wrote rock standards like Hound Dog and Kansas City, as well as the Elvis Presley hits “Love Me”, Jailhouse Rock, “Loving You”, “Don’t”, and “King Creole”. 

 

(April 2015/1)

 

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Dark Carnival was sort of a Detroit punk supergroup that was assembled by Detroit music promoter Colonel Galaxy, whose name was a nod to Elvis Presley’s longtime manager, Colonel Tom Parker. Bootsey X was the first bandmember to be recruited; others included his bandmate in the Ramrods, Mark Norton, plus (as listed in Wikipedia): “Gary Adams from the Cubes [who was also a sometime bandmember in the Lovemasters], Mike McFeaters from What Jane Shared, Jerry Vile from the Boners, Sarana VerLin from Natasha, Greasy Carlisi from Motor City Bad Boys, Robert Gordon and Art Lyzak from the Mutants, Joe Hayden from Bugs Bedow, Pete Bankert from Weapons, [and] Larry Steel from the Cult Heroes.
 
“Later, Dark Carnival saw some turnover, with the ‘big’ names signing on: Niagara from Destroy All Monsters, Ron [Asheton] and Scott Asheton from the Stooges, Cheetah Chrome from the Dead Boys, Jim Carroll even came in from New York.”
 
(March 2016)
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For some reason, over the years the 1970’s have gotten a reputation as a poor decade for music. (So do the 1950’s, for that matter, even though that is where rock and roll came from). It certainly cannot be because everything sounded the same. Most of the British Invasion bands were still active. The top American acts were still going strong as well – Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Carole King, Simon and Garfunkel, Linda Ronstadt, the Beach Boysthe Band, Johnny Cash, Frank Sinatraetc. – and major stars who arrived in the 1970’s include Elton John, Michael Jackson, Queen, ABBA, Billy Joel, Aerosmith, Bruce Springsteen, AC/DC, PrinceJames Taylor, and Tom Petty. Anyone who says they are a music fan has to be able to find someone, and probably several someones on that list that they like a lot.
(December 2016)
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Mick Farren starts his liner notes for Destroy All Music by noting:  “On August 16th, 1977, at least two events occurred of major rock & roll significance.  Elvis Presley died on his Graceland toilet, and the Weirdos cut three songs for Bomp! Records, ‘Destroy All Music’, ‘A Life of Crime’ and ‘Why Do You Exist?’.  The session – in a home studio in Tujunga – was produced by Craig Leonwho had overseen the Ramones’ first album.  It was a hot damp night in Los Angeles, and, by all accounts, the weather was much the same in Memphis
 
“Even the Weirdos copped to the fact that the death of Elvis was fractionally more important than their first record.  ‘The King Is Dead’ was scratched into the metal stamper of the Bomp release Destroy All Music that became a classic of late 1970’s L.A. punk, and prompted critic Mark Deming to call the band ‘one of the best and brightest American bands of punk’s first wave.’” 
 
(March 2017)
 
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Continuing the overview of Iggy Pop and his seminal proto-punk band the Stooges from earlier in the year, here is a band that (until the present century) left behind just three studio albums, with a total of only 23 songs.  By comparison, the Beatles’ Abbey Road album alone has 17 songs.  For those who are fans, that can be extremely frustrating – and I know that all too well as someone who writes about Under Appreciated Rock Bands who often (though not always) don’t have a recorded output that is even that large.  Iggy Pop started his prolific solo career quickly enough, but Iggy’s solo albums are as different from his work with the Stooges as Elvis Presley’s music after he got out of the Army is from his early rockabilly sides at Sun Records and RCA
 
(September 2017)
 
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In point of fact, ground-breaking music often doesn’t sell all that well.  For artists who catch the zeitgeist at just the right moment, like Elvis Presleythe Beatles and the Rolling Stones, the sky’s the limit.  Although they are household names now, however, none of the other rock and roll pioneers – Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Bo DiddleyBill Haley, etc. – made it nearly that big.  That will likely be the subject of a future UARB post. 
 
(December 2017)
 
Last edited: April 3, 2021