1) Trouble / Guitar Man; 2) Medley: Lawdy Miss Clawdy / Baby What You Want Me To Do / Heartbreak Hotel / Hound Dog / All Shook Up / Canʼt Help Falling In Love / Jailhouse Rock / Love Me Tender; 3) Where Could I Go But To The Lord? / Up Above My Head / Saved; 4) Blue Christmas / One Night; 5) Memories; 6) Medley: Nothingville / Big Boss Man / Guitar Man / Little Egypt / Trouble / Guitar Man; 7) If I Can Dream.
General verdict: The famous «out of the frying pan and into the fire» Comeback Special — like watching a paralyzed man trying to relearn to walk, with mixed success.
And here it is, folks — The Comeback Special in
all its glory, though the original LP, faithfully reproducing most of the
material from the broadcast of December 3, 1968, certainly pales in scope next
to The Complete edition from 2008,
with 4 CDs covering the entirety of the sessions for the special. Were I a big
fan of The Special, I would have certainly looked that one up. Unfortunately,
Iʼm not, and never have been, and here is why.
There are clearly no doubts as to the fact that
the Elvis Special was the first Elvis-related project in years which the King
actually enjoyed — or that it was a major turning point in his career, marking
the transition from a life dominated by movies to a life once again dominated
by live performances and regular studio recordings. One question, however,
which I very rarely see thrown around, seems quite obvious to me: if this
program, and whatever steps followed it, are regarded as a «comeback» for
Elvis, then why the hell did this comeback last for just a few years? Why did
it quickly evolve into a pompous Vegasy ritual for affluent middle-aged ladies?
Why the drugs, the obesity, the deteriorating quality of both recorded material
and live performances? Was there really a «comeback» in the first place, or?...
Upon first glance, what the enthralled
audiences saw in that TV studio in mid-ʼ68 (and millions of people later
witnessed during the broadcast) was a freshened up, rejuvenated, exhilarated Elvis,
dressed in imposing black leather, surrounded by his trusty bandmates,
thrusting his hips like there was no tomorrow, performing a smorgasbord of his
classic hits, real rockʼnʼroll stuff, none of all that recent movie crap — just
look at the track listing. A few gospel classics thrown in for good measure, a
good old Christmas song, great ballads like ʽCanʼt Help Falling In Loveʼ and
ʽLove Me Tenderʼ. Scottie Moore himself back in top form and soloing like
crazy! Like itʼs 1957 all over again, or something like that.
Alas, it was all for naught in the long run. If
you want to see a real comeback —
well, maybe not a «comeback» per se, but a set of authentic, credible,
exciting, relevant live performances
from the rockʼnʼroll pioneers, look no further than the Toronto RockʼnʼRoll
Revival festival from 1969, with Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and Jerry Lee
Lewis performing next to younger and hipper artists (including some odd guy
called John Lennon, among others) and proudly holding their own ground, just doing
their old thang and submitting themselves to the all-powerful God of
RockʼnʼRoll. Next to those fairly ferocious performances, the Elvis Comeback
Special most certainly pales in comparison because it was, first and foremost,
a SuperStar Show, a Celebration of Celebrity. Instead of being about
rockʼnʼroll, it was all about King Elvis — although the greatest irony of it
all was that King Elvis himself may
have very well thought that it was really all about rockʼnʼroll after all.
The very setting of the show — a tiny lighted
square grid, surrounded on all sides by adoring fans, within the space of which
the King would be promenading his leather-clad hips — ironically resembles a
locked cage, with a captive, if not fully tamed, tiger walking from one end to
another and back again. The performances themselves are rowdy and spirited, but
the format is rather ridiculous: most of the songs are actually snippets, bound
together in lengthy medleys, as if the aim of the show was to remind the
population of how many classic hits this wonderful man has had in his previous
life, rather than just let everybody have a good time. Even the leather, truth
be told, looks rather silly — remember that in the Fifties Elvis had no need
whatsoever to borrow the rebellious Gene Vincent look in order to succeed, and
it certainly has not become a natural
look for him in the next decade, either; no wonder that «leather-clad Elvis» so
quickly gave way to the «jumpsuit Elvis» once he returned to live performing
fulltime.
To be clear: in the context of the time, the
Comeback Special was a massive
breakthrough for Elvis — and itʼs not like there isnʼt a lot of fun involved in
listening to this performance. When the King breaks into ʽHeartbreak Hotelʼ or
ʽHound Dogʼ, brief as those moments are, he must have felt as if he was
punching through a wall with each of these verses — he delivers them with the
grotesquely overworked abandon of a starved man who doesnʼt really care if he
dies on the spot from overeating, he just gonna do it, come hell or high water. When he half-accidentally,
half-intentionally butchers stuff like ʽLove Me Tenderʼ or ʽOne Nightʼ with
unfunny improvised lyrics, it is, too, the act of a drunken man on the night of
the lifting of Prohibition. But then he starts rambling on the current state of
music ("I like a lot of the new groups, you know..."), or patting his
bandmates on the back, or going all spasmodic on the surrounding fans, and this
is where you are reminded that the Comeback Special is a show, first and foremost, and has much more to do with Elvisʼ
personality cult than with the spirit of rockʼnʼroll.
No better reminder of that than the opening and
closing sequences — a burlesque medley of ʽTroubleʼ and ʽGuitar Manʼ in the
beginning, and a mini-musical about Elvis as a struggling artist at the end.
The songs are all good, but the arrangements are predictably Vegas-ified (oh
those stupid, stupid, stupid brass howls in the intro to ʽGuitar Manʼ!), and
the emphasis is always on the King-Is-Back thing rather than the music. It is
quite telling that they hired Steve Binder to direct it all — the man
previously known for directing the
T.A.M.I. Show in 1964, way back when this glitzy stylistics was actually
cutting edge and did not take the proper attention away from the artistry
(like, your eyes were probably still
glued to James Brown and the Rolling Stones rather than the vapid go-go girls
shaking it in the background). But what may have worked for all sorts of
audiences in 1964 could only work for very specific types of audiences in 1968,
when the «cutting edge» format would rather be describing something like The Rolling Stones RockʼnʼRoll Circus
than the Comeback Special.
Consequently, there are only three things I
genuinely like about it all. First, I like to see people happy, and Elvis here
was quite credibly happy, so I canʼt help but feel a little happy about him,
too — happy-sad, of course, realising that in the long run this was the first
step on the road that led him to even further humiliation and, ultimately, the
grave; but thereʼs something to be said and enjoyed about the short run as
well, after all. Second, being a big Scotty Moore fan, it is really great to
see him in close-up action on the stage (given how little footage of Elvis we
have from the Fifties and how it never ever focuses on his backing players),
and, by the way, it is sad that the original album omitted what was possibly
the most touching and thrilling moment inside their little boxing ring — the
performance of ʽThatʼs Alright, Mamaʼ by Elvis and his original band (minus
Bill Black, who passed away in 1965).
Third, the show and album conclude with ʽIf I
Can Dreamʼ, the song that marks Elvisʼ transition into the gospel-soul business
and whose quality and passion, in my opinion, trump just about every single
moment on From Elvis In Memphis — perhaps
because it was such a fresh take for the King at the moment: heʼd wrestled the
right to sing the song from the Colonel, who did not think it suitable for his
protegé (for a good reason — what would
make the Colonel care about his artist singing MLK quotations instead of
"old MacDonald had a farm"?), and he really gave it his all — there
is an out-of-control tear in his voice here that you never heard before even on
his gospel recordings, let alone all the cute pop songs. If there is one single
moment of complete honesty and genuine emotion here, ʽIf I Can Dreamʼ is it, and upon hearing it, you can
actually understand what he meant when he said "Iʼm never going to sing
another song I donʼt believe in" (even if I am really not sure that he
truly kept that promise).
In the end, it is absolutely no sin to enjoy Elvis ʼ68 and get caught up in the
excitement; it is simply important to realise that, while this was certainly an
important and glaringly obvious change in direction, the word «comeback» is not
a very good one to describe the event — not coincidentally, the word itself
made its first appearance in the Colonelʼs discourse when, soon after the show,
heʼd announced a «comeback tour» for Elvis. Sadly, a «comeback» to the values
that imbued and defined his classic years was really out of the question — like
demanding the victim of a serious stroke to «come back» to his original state
of health. The good thing about it is that it managed to give us Elvis, the
credible soul singer, for a few years. The bad thing about it is that it really
failed to give us back Elvis, the intoxicating rockʼnʼroller.