1) Make Me Know It; 2) Fever;
3) The Girl Of My Best Friend; 4) I Will Be Home Again; 5) Dirty, Dirty
Feeling; 6) Thrill Of Your Love; 7) Soldier Boy; 8) Such A Night; 9) It Feels
So Right; 10) Girl Next Door Went A-Walking; 11) Like A Baby; 12) Reconsider
Baby; 13*) Stuck On You; 14*) Fame And Fortune;
15*) Are You Lonesome Tonight?; 16*) I Gotta Know;
17*) A Mess Of Blues; 18*) Itʼs Now Or Never.
General verdict: Problematic — not because Elvis «goes pop»,
but because he doesnʼt always go the very best pop out of all possible
alternatives.
This has always been the trickiest question in Elvis
history — did the King «go bad» right upon his return from the army, immediately
becoming irrelevant and even retrograde just as the world stepped into the new
decade? Or did he simply «mature», making a switch to a slightly more adult
audience — perfectly expectable, given that his original millions of young fans
werenʼt growing any younger, either — and it wasnʼt until somewhere around the
middle of the decade, with Beatlemania and the psychedelic revolution all
around, that he really became an outdated conservative relic?
Half a century ago, the typical answer from
most rockʼnʼrollers was that they pretty much stopped paying attention to Elvis
after his discharge — indeed, no textbook history of rockʼnʼroll will quote ʽStuck
On Youʼ or ʽFeverʼ, and no post-ʼ50s song will be surrounded with the same
level of admiration as a ʽHeartbreak Hotelʼ or a ʽHound Dogʼ or a ʽJailhouse Rockʼ,
let alone the legendary Sun tracks. But as the public taste gets more and more
fed up with rambunctious fun and rebellious aggression, mellowing out and
drifting towards sentimental melodic pop, the Kingʼs legacy is getting its own
re-evaluation, and these days, while most people certainly recognize a big
difference in style between the 1950s and Elvis
Is Back!, the album is commonly looked upon as a step forward in the artistʼs development, rather than a regression.
I have nothing against Elvisʼ brand of
soft-rock — when he is at his best in this genre, as he was on songs like ʽDonʼt
Be Cruelʼ or even ʽTeddy Bearʼ, it would be insane to deny the hooks, the fun, and
the sexy cuteness of the atmosphere. But at the same time, I do not like to
engage in too much revisionism: there was a dang good reason why Elvis Is Back! was originally a major
disappointment even to some of those Elvis fans who were growing up with him,
and that reason was simple enough — the album shifted Elvisʼ musical paradigm
not just in an «unwanted» direction, but towards a dead end. Elvis Is Back! does not merely
disappoint in the titillating department, being the first Elvis album to
contain almost nothing that could cause the ire of The Greatest Generation; it is
also the first Elvis album where it seems like nothing fresh is being invented,
no breakthroughs planned or carried out by accident.
It is somewhat telling that the only song on
the album that is vaguely reminiscent of the old school is ʽDirty, Dirty Feelingʼ,
an ultra-short rocker from the Leiber-Stoller archives that was originally
considered for King Creole and
discarded. It is fast, it sounds a bit like the Coasters with its funny bass
backing vocals and faint echoes of yakety-sax, it features an ecstatic guitar
solo (the only ecstatic guitar solo
on an album where Scotty Moore is essentially relegated to the status of a
submissive team worker), and it is nowhere as exciting as even most of the manʼs
second-rate rockʼnʼroll tracks from the old days; even so, it sticks out like
crazy among the generally toothless content of the album, almost feeling like a
consolation prize thrown out to hardcore purists so they could find at least
one decent reason to buy the LP.
That said, as far as «pure pop» albums go, Elvis Is Back! is certainly not all
bad. Nobody could seriously knock ʽFeverʼ, which Elvisʼ voice and the
bass-heavy «mystical» arrangement make every bit as HOT as Peggy Leeʼs version
on which it was based — really, those two deserve each other — and nobody could
resist the head-spinning seduction of ʽSuch A Nightʼ, which you will always
prefer over the Driftersʼ version if
you are looking for a more testosterone-heavy delivery than Clyde McPhatterʼs (no
objective reason why you should, but if you are, you will; not to mention, of
course, the outdated production values and sound quality of the original,
whereas Elvisʼ version still sounds perfectly modern). The fast tempo and
quirky vocal harmonies of ʽGirl Next Door Went A-Walkingʼ are fun, too, though
the song, unlike the musically similar ʽAll Shook Upʼ and ʽI Need Your Love Tonightʼ,
is more openly soaked with sentimental sap.
Somewhat less understandable is Elvisʼ sudden
passion for slow soulful blues — ʽIt Feels So Rightʼ and Lowell Fulsonʼs ʽReconsider
Babyʼ (on which the King even plays lead guitar, though, predictably, he never
takes a proper solo); throw in the contemporary B-side ʽA Mess Of Bluesʼ and
you really begin to suspect something. The renditions are not bad, per se, but
these songs are, by nature, more suitable for Chicago blues players than the Nashville
crowds, and, honestly, Boots Randolph does a much better job with ʽYakety Saxʼ
than with his extended blues solo on ʽReconsider Babyʼ. Honestly, the blues is
one genre that Elvis never subjugated properly — he was neither a convincing
blues singer, nor could he surround himself with great blues players.
The preoccupation with doo-wop and crooner ballads
is much more understandable, but it is also the kind of material that requires
a very high tolerance level for cheap sentimentalism, and, personally, I do not
much care if I never ever hear ʽI Will Be Home Againʼ or ʽThe Thrill Of Your Loveʼ
or ʽSoldier Boyʼ ever again, regardless of how professionally they are crafted
or how much extra refinement Elvis places in his crooning deliveries. Perhaps
most importantly, they are just boring as songs — mainly recycling the old
chords and transitions; ʽSoldier Boyʼ, for instance, is reminiscent of the
earlier and superior ʽI Want You, I Need You, I Love Youʼ. The fact that so
much of this stuff was validated by Elvis himself clearly shows that his
passion for breaking the mold was pretty much gone by 1960.
Just like before, of course, Sixtiesʼ Elvis has
to be judged first and foremost by the singles rather than LPs — in this case,
modern CD editions of the album usually come packed with the appropriate bonus
tracks, and of these, ʽStuck On Youʼ, the manʼs first post-army single, is the clear highlight, with a vocal hook
that will most definitely get stuck
on you. It even has this shade of defiant attitude — "you can shake an
apple off an apple tree, but youʼll never shake me" — just to remind the
world who is really back and has no
plans of disappearing. Even so, I still remember my big hit singles compilation
from childhood where ʽStuck On Youʼ came directly after ʽI Got Stungʼ and I had
this weird subconscious feeling of something
broke down in between the schizophrenic ballsiness of the former and the
restrained coolness of the latter, not even aware yet of the substantial shift
in between the two.
If it is any consolation, I must also add that ʽI
Gotta Knowʼ, a rare case of pre-Invasion British influence (the song was first
recorded by Cliff Richard, though it was written by an American songwriter), is
the one Elvis song that, for some reason, sank the strongest hooks into my
brain when I first heard it — the verse and chorus melody are infectious to an
almost terrifying degree here. It should have been a Buddy Holly song, I think (the
bridge is just 100% Buddy), but somehow fate has decreed otherwise. It is also
totally cuddly and inoffensive and sappy and stupid, and my brain loves it to
death, so what can I do?
As for the case of Elvis outsinging Caruso and Pavarotti,
it is impossible to protest against the immaculate musical structure of ʽO Sole
Mioʼ, but... well, maybe a symbolic difference between Elvis and the Beatles
was that the latter, in the end, did not
officially record ʽBesame Muchoʼ, whereas the former did officially put out ʽItʼs Now Or Neverʼ. It is always possible
to argue that Elvis did have the
vocal chops for the song, whereas the Beatles did not, but from a social
perspective it was still kind of an early proto-Vegasy gesture, fairly telling
of things to come. The recording itself is as perfect as they come — amazing
backing vocals, great metronomic rhythm, perfectly adjusted vocal overtones and
flourishes, wonderful dynamics between quiet and loud — but I listen to it
about as often as I listen to The Three Tenors (and I do like listening to each of the three individually, but preferably
in the context of a wholesome Verdi opera).
In the end, I am not joining the crowd that
says this was the beginning of a new musical life for Elvis, deserving equal
respect with his previous one; sticking to the old guns, I prefer to view this
as «the beginning of the end» — but fully understanding that the end took quite
a bit of time, and that Elvisʼ artistic decline was gradual rather than sudden.
From this perspective, Elvis Is Back!,
especially taken together with all the singles, is still a must-have, and at
least the next few pre-Beatles years would still bring us plenty of good
material. But no revisionist willing to claim that Elvis Is Back! is just as artistically strong as Elvis Presley shall ever find understanding
with me. Sonically superior, perhaps —
it was Elvisʼ first stereo mix, after all — but thatʼs about it.
"This has always been the trickiest question in Elvis history"
ReplyDeleteThere is a third possible answer. Already before he joined the army his sales went down, so the product needed a new marketing strategy. In other words: Elvis sold out due to the companies he worked for. After all he was what Andy Cairns sung in 1998:
And don’t pull the trigger
’Cause I’m just a singer
Tonight, baby, I’m the gormless jester
A fake smile and a phoney gesture
But I lack the evidence to confirm that sales had gone down in 1958 already.
A fair review but surely I can't be the only person who thinks the version of Reconsider Baby is ace , especially the drum sound & the geetar solo , it feels so right to me . 10 of these tracks plus 15 Sun recordings are in my car NOW , so yes Elvis very definitely is back
ReplyDeleteYou might not be the only one, of course, but there is no "geetar solo" on Reconsider Baby, there's a sax solo. Elvis himself plays a few mildly competent lead licks between verse lines, that's all. Definitely no Scotty Moore.
DeleteI guess you are right George , the guitar I was grooving to was 3.03 to 3.37 very prominent on headphones but not a solo . Floyd Cramer on piano not a blues player but a player if ever there was one.
ReplyDeleteO sad-o mio.
ReplyDeleteAgree with the comment on Floyd Cramer - "On the Rebound" is a classic - but this is a "Missed Chances, but not by much" album. Tell you what though - it's good fun whilst it's on!
ReplyDeleteGS - You're way too hard on this album. The bluesy material goes down a treat with me - you can hear every musician (Elvis included) really digging down deep in their playing, but never 'showing off' with it - which is such a rare thing. Throw out 'Soldier Boy' by all means (beats me why that wasn't reserved for GI Blues, in any case). But otherwise, stick 'Stuck On You' and 'Fame And Fortune' at the front, then play rest of original album, and you've got yourself a great little experience ...
ReplyDelete