1) Jailhouse Rock; 2) Treat Me Nice*; 3) I Want To
Be Free; 4) Donʼt Leave Me Now; 5) Young And Beautiful; 6) (Youʼre So Square) Baby
I Donʼt Care; 7) Poor Boy*; 8) Let Me*.
General verdict: Short,
but essential — the culmination (or, at least, the beginning of the culmination)
of the Elvis + Leiber/Stoller teamwork.
Although, for some reason, the soundtrack to Jailhouse Rock never got expanded to the
status of a full-blown LP, it is still well worth making a brief stop for this
short 5-song EP — if only because both the movie and the title track were such
iconic landmarks in the Elvis legend. The movie, despite the clichéd plot,
still remains as one of the few genuinely watchable Elvis films, and the title
track... well, just one more great result of the Elvis + Leiber & Stoller
collaboration. Unlike ʽHound Dogʼ, ʽJailhouse Rockʼ does not really bite: its
main melody is a fairly harmless, comical piece of boogie, and the maniacal
energy of its vocals is rowdy, but not aggressive — it is, after all, the
manifesto of jailbirds who just want to have some fun, not beat up the warden
or anything. But still, it is a call for fun from the other side of the bars — already the opening beat brings on
associations with truncheons hitting against polished steel — and this
definitely takes us at least one step further than, say, ripping it up on a Saturday
night.
Recent assessments of ʽJailhouse Rockʼ often
tend to dwell on the homoerotic connotations of the tune (and especially the
movie sequence), of which there are plenty, but I think that the prison theme
in general is more essential here — Leiber and Stoller always liked subtly playing
around with issues of social justice, and if they could infuse the music of the
countryʼs most popular rockʼnʼroll performer with such a subject, even in a purely
comical manner, how could they have bypassed the chance? Up until then, the
jail theme was largely the domain of old bluesmen and weathered country-western
performers; ʽJailhouse Rockʼ introduces it to the prom-party-oriented genre of rockabilly,
and in such a way that it would be impossible not to take notice — the
production is right in your face, without the slightest traces of echo on the Kingʼs
voice and Scottyʼs simple boogie rhythm guitar downtuned and distorted just
enough to make the song join the long queue of pretenders for the «proto-metal»
sound. Such a friendly atmosphere, but still enough to piss off your parents —
and this right at the very moment when theyʼd nearly come to terms with the man
for all his Christmas and gospel offerings.
This is not to demean the quality and
importance of the other songs here — if anything, the short length of the EP
guarantees its consistency. There is ʽTreat Me Niceʼ, which has easily the best
combination of piano and quirky percussion on any Elvis record, and a hilarious
blend of Elvisʼ bass mumble and The Jordanairesʼ backing vocals — always a
touch of ecstasy when his "if you donʼt behave..." rockets out of
this confusing vocal soup. There is ʽBaby I Donʼt Careʼ, on which Elvis himself
plays bass — and although the bassline is as simple as you could predict, it
still somehow ends up making the song. There is ʽI Want To Be Freeʼ, a song which
does for Elvis pretty much the same thing as ʽHelp!ʼ would do for The Beatles —
formulaic love song on the surface, subtle and painful cry for assistance at
the bottom: the way he modulates that "I want to be FREE, FREE, FREE - EE
- EE... I want to be free, like the bird in the tree" goes from aching to
hysteria and back to yearning pain in an amazing emotional somersault. (Did he
ever perform the song live? I donʼt think so — I donʼt think the Colonel would
have approved). There are also two more ballads by Aaron Schroeder that are not
as good as the Leiber/Stoller material, but there is still enough first-rate
vocal acrobatics on ʽDonʼt Leave Me Nowʼ to pardon its rather generic doo-wop characteristics.
On a technical note, Jailhouse Rock did make it to CD on its own, expanded with a bunch
of alternate takes (not essential — for instance, the movie version of ʽJailhouse
Rockʼ with backing vocals from the «inmates» somewhat smoothes out the punch of
the single version) and also throwing on the earlier EP Love Me Tender, with four songs from Elvisʼ first movie. It is a
bit amusing to be reverted to that year-old sound and hear how different it was
— though, allegedly, Love Me Tender was
a cowboy movie, accounting for the generally C&W nature of the soundtrack.
ʽPoor Boyʼ, ʽLet Meʼ, ʽWeʼre Gonna Moveʼ — rowdy campfire material, all of
them, and produced in such an intimate manner that you can almost feel yourself
sharing a drink with the King after a hard day of rodeoing or whatever.
"If you can recognize a cover version, it ain't worth shit"
ReplyDeleteSo written by George as part of his take on 'Angel Station' by Manfred Mann's Earth Band (old site, of course).
And I agree.
So, there: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiDC9t-RF1k
I can't listen to Elvis' version without having this little gem in mind. Recognizable - yes, but somehow real shit, too.
Maybe it's OT, but I think it's worth it.
Enjoying your thoughts on Elvis's records so far. I can't wait until you get to Elvis Is Back! which is my personal favorite. He showed he still had it and then some after coming back from the Army and is a perfect blend of his 50's stuff and a more mature, grounded look of things to come.
ReplyDelete