1) Thereʼs Always Me; 2) Give Me The Right; 3) Itʼs A Sin; 4) Sentimental Me; 5) Starting Today; 6) Gently; 7) Iʼm Cominʼ Home; 8) In Your Arms; 9) Put The Blame On Me; 10) Judy; 11) I Want You With Me; 12) I Slipped, I Stumbled, I Fell; 13*) Surrender; 14*) I Feel So Bad; 15*) His Latest Flame; 16*) Little Sister; 17*) Good Luck Charm; 18*) Anything Thatʼs Part Of You.
General verdict: Awful LP, brilliant singles — rule of thumb for most artists, first time for the King.
Let us begin with the obvious — the title of
this album is a straight-out lie, since I have listened to all of its songs
quite a few time and, so far, found absolutely nothing for lovers of Wagnerian
opera, Fiftiesʼ post-bop, Russian folk music, or, hitting closer to home, even for
fans of Elvisʼ classic Sun-era or early RCA period. The only circumstance this
title might be, very crudely, hinting at is the novel, if odd, decision to
stratify all the material so that Side A of the LP could be exclusively
dedicated to sentimental balladry, whereas Side B would all consist of slightly
faster, slightly more danceable, but still always cuddly pop-rock. I have no
idea just how popular this approach might have been in the early Sixties (it
did reappear in the careers of subsequent artists, most notably Rod Stewart in
the mid-Seventies), but in this case, all it leads to is the fact that you will
have to force yourself to sit through almost exactly the same doo-wop
progressions six times in a row, wondering how on Earth could Elvis himself not
get bored in the process.
More significantly, though, Something For Everybody, a legitimate LP
that was neither a movie soundtrack nor a scattered collection of singles and
rarities from all over the place, is the first openly bad record in Elvisʼ
career. It is not just bad or boring, though — it is an astonishing drop down
in quality after all the cautious hopes that Elvis Is Back! had provided. While it was obviously disappointing
to all those whoʼd hoped to hear the King roar-and-roll once more, the
diversity of its material might have
led one to hope that the King was merely wishing to expand his horizons, and
try to do all sorts of stuff instead of locking himself into the hip-gyrating
formula. Not so with this miserable platter of largely inferior rewrites of
past glories — through the entire album, there is not one single idea that hadnʼt
already been explored previously.
Side A is particularly disappointing — the
songs, mainly provided by Nashville hacks, contain echoes of everything from ʽLove
Me Tenderʼ to ʽBlueberry Hillʼ to ʽOne Nightʼ without giving you a single
reason to memorize and cherish them. On top of these rotten, derivative
melodies Elvis croons in a buttery tone, never once letting through even a tiny
bit of that animalistic feeling which made the early balladeering classics so sublimely
sexy. And the only song that breaks away from the doo-wop or country waltz
formula is ʽGentlyʼ, an acoustic folk ballad of the kind youʼd expect on a Searchers
record, but even there you realize that the guys who wrote it for him were
obsessed with the idea of creating a slightly faster ʽLove Me Tenderʼ — which
they did, but then they forgot about all the ingredients that made ʽLove Me Tenderʼ
a standout (such as the bare-bones arrangement and the deep growl in the singerʼs
voice).
Side B is slightly
better because of the extra energy, but its guiding principles remain the same.
Even the hitherto trustworthy Aaron Schroeder disappoints, providing Elvis with
a blatant (and inferior) rewrite of ʽStuck On Youʼ called ʽIn Your Armsʼ — is
there any wonder that everybody remembers the former song and nobody could give
a damn about the latter? Likewise, ʽPut The Blame On Meʼ is a re-write of ʽA Mess
Of Bluesʼ, and ʽI Want You With Meʼ is a re-write of ʽAinʼt That Loving You Babyʼ
— not once in Elvisʼ entire preceding career had he stooped so low as to put so
many carbon copies of former glories in one basket. Not that the practice was
unusual for popular artists — repeating oneself as long as the stuff continued
to sell was quite the norm in jazz, blues, and pop from the 1920s — but Elvis,
of all people, had largely managed to avoid it in the previous decade, even if
you took into consideration all of his LPs and not just the hit singles. On Something For Everybody, the artist
simply lowers himself to the most common denominator. ʽI Slipped, I Stumbled, I
Fellʼ indeed — yet another rewrite, of ʽI Got Stungʼ this time, closes the
album on a gruesomely ironic note.
All the more astonishing is the realization
that at more or less the exact same time that Elvis was recording this sorry
pile of glop, he was also putting out what was, quite inarguably, the finest
bunch of his Sixtiesʼ singles — and, arguably, one of the strongest bunches of
his singles ever. The only reason, in fact, to own this LP on CD is if you go
for the special extended edition from 1999, which adds ʽI Feel So Badʼ, ʽHis Latest
Flameʼ, ʽLittle Sisterʼ, and ʽGood Luck Charmʼ — magnificent tracks, each and
every one! Chuck Willisʼ R&B classic gets a shiny, but aggressive
production coat (Floyd Cramer hammers out the minimalistic piano riff with
perfect punkish precision), and Boots Randolphʼs lengthy sax solo is one of the
weirdest musical moments in Elvisʼ history. Schroederʼs ʽGood Luck Charmʼ is precisely
the song that ʽIn Your Armsʼ failed to be — in the same soft pop-rock style as ʽStuck
On Youʼ, but with a completely different melody and vocal hook (that ascending
resolution with "to have... to hold... tonight" and its high-low
vocal counterpoints is pop bliss). And the Doc Pomus / Mort Shuman team do a
wonderful job «poppifying» the Bo Diddley beat with ʽHis Latest Flameʼ — just a
tiny bit less of that syncopation and the tribal flavor is gone, replaced with
a less shocking, but more seductive maniacal pop energy, which, again, infects Elvis
to the point of completely getting into the performance and giving it all he
got.
Best of the lot, though, is the second Pomus / Shuman
composition — ʽLittle Sisterʼ, easily the
«dirtiest» Elvis song of the Sixties in just about everything: the music (that opening
riffage hits with all the grit and rambunctiousness of a Link Wray classic),
the lyrics, bordering on socially unacceptable in the modern era (we never
really learn how old the ʽlittle sisterʼ in question is supposed to be, but "you
been a-growinʼ and baby, itʼs been showinʼ from your head down to your toes"
is still the single creepiest line in any Elvis song), and the vocals, on which
Elvis really comes alive and finally, for once, reminds you of what was so «dangerous»
about him in the preceding decade. In the end, though, it is Hank Garlandʼs
guitar work that makes the song — and it doesnʼt even have a solo, just that
nagging little riff clinging to the coattails of each of Elvisʼ vocal lines. Just
a brilliant piece of work and one of my perennial favorites.
If anything, these singles clearly show that Elvis
was anything but spent in 1961 — but how on Earth could he have been recording
material of such amazing quality at the exact
same time with all those bad, bad, bad songs on the LP is something I still
cannot clearly understand. It is almost as if somebody was setting up an actual
thought-out strategy, with a special memo for all the songwriters in the house:
«LPs are supposed to be filler, so please, remember to only contribute the very worst of your results for the LP tracks of
Mr. Presley, but do not forget to contribute them regularly». And Mr. Presley, officially
deprived of the right to exercise free will or even retain a good sense of
taste, had no choice but to comply. A sad thing, really.
"If anything, these singles clearly show that Elvis was anything but spent in 1961"
ReplyDeleteThis doesn't make much sense, because a good voice totally can sing awful music. AfaIc Elvis' voice never was spent. It's the music he sang I criticize and I do so from the very beginning of his career. And know, my conclusions are, up to say 1958, not necessarily negative.
What I especially dispute is that there was some caesura in Elvis' career. That idea is based on the false assumption that Elvis had any influence on the quality of the music he sang.
George probably meant 'spent as an artist'.
DeleteAccording to Peter Gualnick's bio's on Elvis...They had trouble
ReplyDeletegetting songwriters to contribute as Tom Parker wanted full copyrights
forever on said material. A few good writers would submit for the rest of his career just to say Elvis did their song but 95% of the material was in house hack writers on a payroll.
5/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
ReplyDeleteUntil “Something for Everybody,” Elvis’s music had always weighed more heavily toward rhythm numbers over ballads. On this LP, though, Presley balanced the two styles evenly for the first time. Of the six ballads on side A, “There’s Always Me,” “Sentimental Me,” and “Starting Today” are among the most expressive love songs he ever recorded. Although “I’m Comin’ Home,” “Put the Blame on Me,” and “Judy” are all congenial pop numbers on the flip side, none of the six rhythm numbers could be classified as rock ’n’ roll. The clarity and beauty of Elvis’s voice was never better, but with this album in 1961, it seemed he had morphed completely into a mainstream pop singer.