1) Kissinʼ Cousins; 2) Smokey Mountain Boy; 3) Thereʼs
Gold In The Mountains; 4) One Boy, Two Little Girls; 5) Catchinʼ On Fast; 6) Tender
Feeling; 7) Anyone; 8) Barefoot Ballad; 9) Once Is Enough; 10) Kissinʼ Cousins;
11) Echoes Of Love; 12) Long Lonely Highway.
General verdict: The main problem about making a «hillbilly Elvis»
album for Elvis is that Elvis was never really a hillbilly in the first place. Or
maybe the main problem is just that the songs suck.
The Elvis camp response to the Beatles and British
Invasion in general was this oh so thrilling movie about the US government leasing
mountaintop land for use as a missile base, with Elvis facing a
not-so-incestuous choice between Batgirl and Dodge Rebellion Girl. I have not
seen the movie, but seems like he did choose Batgirl in the end, which is probably
the best thing about the whole experience (the worst thing is that Elvis
actually gets to play two roles — both himself and his cousin, for which the Colonel allegedly demanded two full salaries for his boy). Both the
movie and the soundtrack are often
regarded as one of the lowest points in Elvisʼ Sixties period, and while there
is definitely quite a bit of strong competition for that, it is indeed hard to
find any signs of redemption here.
Essentially, Elvisʼ role in this experience is
to play the stereotypical nonchalant hillbilly with the stereotypical hillbilly
attraction to oneʼs close relatives. The only way that you can really succeed
at this is if you play the whole thing as much tongue-in-cheek as possible, but
Elvis never had that great a sense of humor or irony, and there lies the rub —
even if many, if not most, of these songs were probably written as corny joke
tunes, Elvis delivers them with his deadpan face on, as if we were really supposed to emote over the fact
that "this one boy loves two little girls", or that he is "just
a Smokey mountain boy come back to the hills I love", or, most
importantly, that "weʼre all cousins, thatʼs what I believe, because weʼre
children of Adam and Eve" (!!).
Worse still, the soundtrack once again lacks
even a single unquestionably great tune, an anchor such as ʽReturn To Senderʼ
or ʽBossa Nova Babyʼ that could at least superficially steady and redeem the
surrounding wreck. The title track, coming from Fred Wiseʼs workshop, was chosen
as the lead single, but it is a rather poorly masked variation on Little Richardʼs
ʽThe Girl Canʼt Help Itʼ, with a bunch of other rockabilly clichés thrown in
for good measure, and although the band is notably tight and professional,
there is not an ounce of genuine rockʼnʼroll energy either in the playing or in
Elvisʼ singing — the man is very clearly bored out of his skull.
All the tracks are more or less evenly divided
into generic ballads, generic rewrites of older pop-rock classic (ʽOnce Is Enoughʼ
= an inferior ʽStuck On Youʼ), and hicky hillbilly stuff like ʽSmokey Mountain Boyʼ
and ʽBarefoot Balladʼ; youʼd think Elvisʼ Nashville team would feel right at
home with this material, but Elvis himself clearly does not, and there is no
believing him when he pleads to "give me a honk-tonk fiddle with a guitar
in the middle", because why should anybody give anybody something that he
absolutely does not need?
In the end, the only song here that may be
worth remembering is the final track, ʽLong Lonely Highwayʼ, which actually had
nothing to do with the movie but was tacked on to fill up the LP, selected from
the May 1963 sessions for an aborted LP. A Pomus-Shuman creation, it is nothing
special melodically, just a fast ʽGot My Mojo Workinʼ-style blues-rocker, but
at least it gives Elvis an excuse to flash his
mumbled-bass-to-uplifting-baritone dynamics, providing this totally uninspiring
record with a mildly inspiring
conclusion. Other than that, well... the only thing you really have to keep in
mind is that this album was released twelve days after ʽCanʼt Buy Me Loveʼ. Really,
that is the only thing you have to
keep in mind.
You are tough but fair, George. And you are a warrior for making your way through these soundtrack albums.
ReplyDeleteHe was able to survive 80s Rod Stewart. I'm sure this is child's play compared to that.
DeleteGeorge can survive Danzig Sings Elvis
Delete"a rather poorly masked variation on Little Richardʼs ʽThe Girl Canʼt Help Itʼ"
ReplyDeleteAs I love historical context, in 1964 The Animals also covered this classic. Perhaps that's something to keep in mind as well.
Then again Little Richard also sung Hound Dog as well as Elvis. Check YouTube.
Being children of Adam and Eve would make us sisters and brothers, not cousins. Which is probably more than the author bargained for, but I'm down
ReplyDeleteLilith has provided for something like cousins back then, I think.
DeleteIt gets worse. At least here there's a few fun songs that are guilty pleasures. Frankie & Johnny is where I started struggling to find more than one memorable song in his soundtracks.
ReplyDelete