1) Blue Hawaii; 2) Almost Always True; 3) Aloha
Oe; 4) No More; 5) Canʼt Help Falling In Love;
6) Rock-A-Hula Baby; 7) Moonlight Swim; 8) Ku-U-I-Po; 9) Ito Eats; 10) Slicinʼ
Sand; 11) Hawaiian Sunset; 12) Beach Boy Blues; 13) Island Of Love; 14)
Hawaiian Wedding Song.
General verdict: Arguably the point of no return — if you
have released something as corny as this album and this movie, you might as
well just go on releasing more of the same.
The easiest way to pulverize an album like Blue Hawaii in the modern age is to
state, with a fair amount of justice, that it represents a particularly
cringeworthy case of «cultural appropriation», namely, white manʼs clichéd
exotization of Hawaii as a paradise on Earth; in fact, the movie, which
depicted a syrupy melodrama that just happened to use Hawaii for decorations,
was just that kind of thing and had fairly few redeeming qualities. The music
is a slightly different matter: only a few songs directly deal with Hawaiian realities
(most notably ʽAloha Oeʼ, Hawaiiʼs cultural symbol, and ʽHawaiian Wedding
Songʼ), while others just use ukuleles, celestes, and occasional lyrical twists
to set up a «Hawaiian vibe» for the record.
But even if you know absolutely nothing about
Hawaiian history or traditions, Blue
Hawaii is a terrible experience. G.I.
Blues may have been meandering and inconsistent, Something For Everybody may have been completely
second-hand-derivative, and His Hand In
Mine may have been too sentimental for a true gospel classic, but none of
these three albums were as consistent in presenting Elvis Presley as a
lightweight, irrelevant joke act as Blue
Hawaii. From the first to the very last song, with but one obvious
exception, the album reads like somebodyʼs cruel parody on the King in all his
emplois — raunchy rocker, sentimental troubadour, seductive popster. With few
interesting original melodies to speak of, the emphasis is on «Hawaiian-style
arrangements» of the trusty old tunes — by which, of course, we mean lots and
lots and lots of cooing pedal steel, friendly campfire acoustic guitar, and
orchid-sweet vocals.
I can hardly find anything at all to say about
these songs: there are no specific atrocities to latch onto (well, maybe Elvisʼ
awful «native accent» on ʽIto Eatsʼ), they just donʼt work. ʽRock-A-Hula Babyʼ
and ʽSlicinʼ Sandʼ are the most energetic of the lot, but both are essentially
detoothed rockʼnʼroll pieces with nary an aggressive note in sight. ʽBeach Boy
Bluesʼ is blues in form, cabaret in spirit — a song with not an ounce of
genuine sentiment, just mindless and heartless entertainment for a Vegasy
crowd. The ballads are mostly typical Hollywood tripe, and ʽAloha Oeʼ sounds
more like a Christmas carol than a patriotic anthem (I think Iʼd rather take
the Lilo & Stich version over this one, thank you very much), but I am not
even sure that Elvis was much aware of the figure of Queen Liliʼuokalani when
he recorded it anyway.
In the middle of all this comes ʽCanʼt Help
Falling In Loveʼ, the albumʼs only acknowledged classic and a song that is hard
to forget even if you are not altogether wooed by its chivalrous
sentimentalism. It was, after all, a corporate rewrite of ʽPlaisir DʼAmourʼ,
meaning several melodic heads above everything else on here, and Elvis seems to
have poured more of his heart into it than into all the other songs on here
combined. The very fact that this (relative) gem finds itself in such
corrosively plebeian company is hilariously weird, though, a living testimony
to just how confused and confusing quality and content control was in those
young and innocent days of the pop music business. Unfortunately, it is the
only thing that separates Blue Hawaii
from the soon-to-come endless stream of interchangeably disposable soundtracks —
and it is not enough to deny Blue Hawaii, both the album and the
movie, the status of that particular historical landmark beyond which Elvis
could no longer be taken seriously.
Oh George, you've let me down! I thought once you got to Blue Hawaii you'd be ready to ackowledge a well-crafted collection of songs which, as you say, are corn-personified, but written & sung with enough craft and pizazz that it would have finished by winning you over. What would have been the oint of Elvis continuing to rehash the same edgy Lieber & Stoller rock for the rest of his career. He clearly wanted to move on (or the Colonel decided it for him, I'm no connaisseur of the ins and outs of his personal and recording life, I'm not a huge fan) and this 1962 film and album was so uplifting it's hard to criticize it for things it wasn't trying to do.
ReplyDeleteI disagree completely about the songs, largely very well-written and various in tone. And they don't all need to be specifically "Hawaiian", Elvis wasn't a native. Hawaii was already an (illegal!) appendage to the U.S.of A so a crossover musical mix is not unnatural. And anyway, I was an impressionable 12 year-old, recently returned from years spent in Europe, it was just what I needed before the onslaught of the Beatles two years later. Long live Blue Hawaii!
Small correction: wrote too fast, the songs are all related to place & time, it's a unified whole. If you can't like this kind of quality corn, how can one pretend to like Abba? Or, in your case, George, Purple Mountains?
DeleteYou cannot be serious. Purple Mountains is not "quality corn", and the music of ABBA is Beethoven and Tolstoy combined compared to the level of musical and emotional shallowness of Blue Hawaii. Not that there's anything wrong with shallow pop music - but only when it shows at least some traces of inventiveness. I can't remember a single tune here after three listens in a row (other than 'Can't Help Falling In Love', of course).
DeleteI'm as much of a fan of Abba as you are, George, it's one of the reasons I trust you almost absolutely (!), but to lift it to the heights of Beethoven and Tolstoy is a bit over the top, no? I'm not saying blue Hawaii is a pop masterpiece, but it is oddly addictive -- there must be a reason for that. Alaways thought you were a melody man, always inclined to forgive almost anything as long as the songs was anchored around a strong, inspired melody. Blue Hawaii is littered with what can only be termed beautiful, well-crafted melodies, full of terrific hooks.
DeleteWhat's not to like? (a rhetorical question, of course :-)) . . . and I admit my calling Puple Mountains corn was perhaps off the mark, was trying to make a cheap point!
No, I am not lifting Abba to the heights of Beethoven and Tolstoy - please check the phrasing more correctly. Nor do I see any terrific hooks in most of the songs on Blue Hawaii. 'Good Luck Charm' - there's a terrific pop hook for you, or 'I Gotta Know'. This here is mostly just mushy, totally predictable balladry or limp parodies on rock'n'roll numbers - sorry!
DeleteHaha, OK, I bow to your superior insights into these things, George, you may well be right. Guess I was just at the age (in 1962) when it made a disproportionate impression on me. But driving in my car these days, it sure does sound good, maybe just the kind of escapist pop corn that sounds reassuring when everything seems to be falling apart.
Delete"young and innocent days of the pop music business"
ReplyDeleteYoung, yes, but innocent - never. Think of Pat Boone making more money than the Afro-American artists he covered (only beginning to rebel when he was 63 ....).
The second-most commercially successful LP of the ’60s (behind only the soundtrack to West Side Story) is this iconic soundtrack, which comes as close to having a unifying concept as Elvis ever got, Christmas and Christ excepted. It kicks off with the lush celeste and pedal steel of the title track, which is a sweet Bing Crosby update, and after the kooky saxophone and clonking sounds of “Almost Always True,” the island mood remains sustained, complete with frantic ukulele intros. If your fantasies involve tropical adventure with a handsome tour guide — this lonesome beach boy — there is no better album. “Can’t Help Falling in Love” is the obvious peak, and even the quirky calypso moment “Ito Eats” wiggles into its place.
ReplyDeleteHello there, just thought for once I'd check in with a fellow contributor. Am well disappointed by the lack of support from others on this site re this "iconic" album, as you correctly call it. It's clearly not just another slapdash film soundtrack, and it's not the preferred Elvis album for a huge number of people for nothing.
DeleteWhat do you suppose makes it so difficult for George to appreciate on almost any level? He insists on melodies and good hooks, and he likes Abba, what leads him to rubbish this well-crafted album as he does? Any insights? Is he just such a purist that an artist is not allowed to stray out of his original core aesthetic?
Thanks for listening, OF RSS (?)
It’s an immaculately ideal soundtrack album. If I were George, I would rate this soundtrack 14/15 if he ever reviewed Elvis on his old site.
DeleteLargely agree with George. This just isn't to my taste, and is the first of a few signposts in Elvis's remarkable descent into irrelevance from 1962 to 1968.
ReplyDeleteThe only good thing to say about this one is that it's the first of many copy-cat records (that is, Elvis copying himself) to follow. And if George thinks this was bad, wait until he gets to the 'Paradise, Hawaiian Style' and 'Frankie & Johnny' soundtracks...
If further proof were needed of the weakness of American pop in the early-60s, pause to consider that this album sat at #1 longer than 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' would five years later.