1) Kiss Me Quick;
2) Just For Old Time Sake; 3) Gonna Get Back Home Somehow; 4) (Such An) Easy
Question; 5) Steppinʼ Out Of Line; 6) Iʼm Yours; 7) Something Blue; 8) Suspicion; 9) I Feel That Iʼve Known You Forever; 10)
Night Rider; 11) Fountain Of Love; 12) Thatʼs Someone
You Never Forget.
General verdict: Some really bright pop moments, interspersed
with schlock as usual but still enough to make this LP into a relative
highlight of Elvisʼ Nashville era.
ʽPot luckʼ: «a situation in which one must take
a chance that whatever is available will prove to be good or acceptable». Whoever
thought of this title for Elvisʼ third proper LP in the 1960s must have been a
pretty acidic fellow, because at this point in the Kingʼs career, your chances
of falling upon a minor pop gem or a boring piece of derivative schlock were
split around, Iʼd say, 30-70 or something like that. Fortunately, despite the
half-ironic, half-cringeworthy title, Pot
Luck With Elvis was actually an improvement over Something For Everybody, let alone the increasingly corny
soundtracks — and not just because his team had the good sense to abandon the «ballads
on one side, pop-rockers on the other» principle, but also because they seem to
have briefly forgotten the much more troubling «good stuff for singles, bad
stuff for LPs» principle.
More precisely, Pot Luck happens to be dominated by the Doc Pomus / Mort Shuman
creative duo (4 songs out of 12, with another one co-written by Doc with Alan Jeffreys),
and with these guys in charge, you can be sure that not everything will consist of inferior retreads of older classics. Admittedly,
even some of these songs are not entirely original: for instance, the bridge
section of ʽGotta Get Back Home Somehowʼ sounds way too close to the bridge
section of ʽHis Latest Flameʼ — but the main body of the song is closer to a grand-style
country-western reimagining of ʽI Feel Badʼ, with martial drums and saxophones
really kicking it up. ʽNight Riderʼ, whose main melody is a sax-driven
variation on ʽWhatʼd I Sayʼ, is also a minor highlight, letting Elvis combine old
school hip-gyrating magic with an insinuating drawn-out invocation fit for some
jazz-pop diva like Peggy Lee.
Best of the bunch are two songs that were
inexcusably passed over as singles until two years later, when Terry Staffordʼs
own version of ʽSuspicionʼ began climbing the charts and the Elvis team
belatedly understood what a chance theyʼd nearly missed. ʽSuspicionʼ is a
classic of the early R&B genre, melodically similar to the likes of ʽStand By
Meʼ but really gambling it all away on the tempo-shifting hook in the chorus —
that closing "suspicion... why torture me?" bit with the
downward-sliding bass line that plumps you back into the verse melody is one of
this albumʼs two tastiest hooks. The second one, of course, being the triumphant
upward climb and smooth landing of the chorus to ʽKiss Me Quickʼ, which, based
on structural similarities, can be defined as an attempt to remake ʽItʼs Now Or
Neverʼ in a more playful, less sentimental manner — same rhythm, same
arpeggiated guitar, but a completely different resulting feel, and totally free
of accusations of Nashville boys stealing the Italian manʼs music this time. Delightful.
The presence of all these good-to-excellent
numbers on the record is enough to redeem its many continuing and predictable
flaws — such as the presence of ʽJust For Old Time Sakeʼ, a bland and boring
shadow of ʽAre You Lonesome Tonightʼ; ʽIʼm Yoursʼ, whose sugarized country
waltzing is such a far cry from the tasteful musical understatements of ʽBlue Moonʼ,
long gone by; and ʽFountain Of Loveʼ, a corny, generic Mexican-style serenade which
only lacks a sombrero and a bad Spanish accent to be complete.
However, the difference between corny and touching
is often very, very subtle, and while most of the ballads on this record are easily
dismissable, one should definitely not miss a hint at real human feeling in the
albumʼs closing number, ʽThatʼs Someone You Never Forgetʼ — even the songwriting
credits here should be enough to raise some eyebrows, being split between Elvis
himself and his bodyguard, Red West (one of the three that would be fired in
1976 for trying to shield the man from drug abuse). Allegedly dedicated to the
memory of Elvisʼ mother, it is a quiet, echoey acoustic ballad whose vocal
inflections are totally different from
Elvisʼ common style at the time — listen to that voice almost thinning out and
breaking up in the middle of each line, creating the impression of tearless
crying without any show-off-ey over-emoting; clearly, this is the mark of a
very special occasion, and the song might have, perhaps, been even more
effective without its backing vocals and angelic chimes.
Interestingly, the concurrent single at the
time was ʽSheʼs Not Youʼ, another Doc Pomus song (allegedly co-written with Leiber
and Stoller) which is not at all superior to either ʽKiss Me Quickʼ or ʽSuspicionʼ
— in fact, itʼs a fairly simplistic piece of slowed-down country-boogie with
nowhere near the hook potential of those other two songs. Somehow, quality
control was slipping in this respect, too, though the song still dutifully
climbed up to #5 on the charts. Still, better this way for all of us LP fans —
it is absolutely no fun, I tell you, to waste time on albums that are intentionally comprised of nothing but filler.
At least this time around, we do have ourselves a bit of actual pot luck.
Look at the picture on the sleeve. Elvis has become the ideal son in law.
ReplyDeleteTo me it looks more like he has successfully taken the first step towards becoming a sumo wrestler, weight and all, starting with the hair.
DeleteWith such a lot of albums from Elvis in the 60s, with most being regarded as garbage, I didn't pay attention to most of them. Now this one was a real surprise; it is thoroughly enjoyable. Thanks for diving into the pot luck to find the juicy bits, George.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I've never been able to get past Elvis's hair on this album's sleeve. In fact, I don't think Kareem Abdul Jabar could get over that mound... Of all the handsome shots of the King that were kicking around, and they picked *that* one...?
ReplyDeleteAs we all know, George isn't much of an Elvis fan. I feel sorry for him, as it's going to be a tough slog from now to at least 1966.
I agree with someone who pointed out that Elvis's recording career can be divided into 4 stages -- well, 5, if you count the brief Sun start -- roughly: 1) 1954-55: Sun Records at Memphis Recording Service; 2) 1956-1960 (RCA 1950s and immediate post-Army); 3) 1961-1965: disregard for proper singles and albums; recordings just for soundtracks; 4) 1966 to 1970: slow re-emergence from hibernation and then hits peak with American Studios recordings in 1969 and more good ones in 1970; 5) 1971-1976: sad decline into muzak with over-the-top arrangements.
Really, though, it doesn't clarify anything historically to review Elvis's recordings in terms of his "albums", since Elvis rarely got to have input into what his albums consisted of (the gospel and Christmas ones are exceptions). The Colonel didn't allow him to record ANY extra tracks while in the studio (because he said it would give RCA leverage over them in future negotiations), and so basically everything he did record was issued, regardless of its quality.
Finally, in 1969, The Colonel allowed Elvis to make a proper "album" that suited the times, and it was brilliant. But from 1970, it went back to "get as many tracks as we need in one cheap session and then release them all in various albums to save recording costs." Yeah, The Colonel made great financial deals for Elvis (read: for himself) consistently and he was very shrewd business-wise, but his extreme blindness to music-industry trends was Elvis's artistic downfall.
The next good Elvis album was the NBC TV Special...6 years later.
ReplyDelete