1) Speedway; 2) There Ainʼt Nothing Like A Song; 3) Your Time Hasnʼt Come Yet Baby; 4) Who Are You; 5) Heʼs Your Uncle Not Your Dad; 6) Let Yourself Go; 7) Your Groovy Self; 8) Five Sleepy Heads; 9) Western Union; 10) Mine; 11) Goinʼ Home; 12) Suppose.
General verdict: Just another typical later-period Elvis soundtrack — nothing to indicate that it would be his last, though if they had the good sense to involve Lee Hazlewood a bit more, I might even have regretted that.
Although Elvis starred in at least six more
movies after Clambake, Speedway would be the only one of these
and, consequently, the very last full-fledged Elvis soundtrack LP accompanying
a feature film (rather than a TV show or concert documentary). Doubtlessly,
this had to do with plummeting sales — with its miserable profits, the album
became the final nail in the coffin of the Elvis soundtrack album. Yet, once
again, in the overall context of Elvisʼ Sixties output, it is nowhere near as
boring and irrelevant as the 1965–66 stretch of embarrassments. Once again, we
are dealing here with a bizarre mixed bag — some nicely acceptable goodies
going hand-in-hand with true Kings of Corn.
The big deal about Speedway, the movie, was that it featured Nancy Sinatra as Elvisʼ
co-star; and while it would be unfair to all the truly great ladies of the
Sixties to regard Nancy Sinatra as a top tier artist for the decade, she had at
least two things going for her — a touch of tough, edgy class and collaboration
with Lee Hazlewood. Both of these things work wonders for us with the inclusion
into the soundtrack of one song that has absolutely nothing to do with Elvis —
the Hazlewood-written slow «country cabaret» tune ʽYour Groovy Selfʼ, delivered
by Nancy in her fairly trademark «half-empowered, half-stoned» hazy drawl,
oozing sardonic mid-Sixties cool in a way that would be totally unthinkable for
Elvis himself.
She does cross paths with Elvis on the Joy
Byers-written ʽThere Ainʼt Nothing Like A Songʼ, though «written» is a bit too
strong — most of the time, Byers takes old classics and tweaks them in slight
ways, this one being no exception: it is really just an updated, overproduced
take on ʽKing Creoleʼ, but at least the tempo is fast, the drums are crashing,
the guitar solo is tight, and Nancyʼs responses to the Kingʼs calls in the
final verse add a touch of diversity; I could never say, though, that there is
anything here even remotely recalling the kind of chemistry that Elvis had with
Ann-Margret. Too bad — with a bit more work, we could have gleefully enjoyed a
pair of hip boots walking all over the Kingʼs hillbilly chauvinist persona, but
perhaps the song- and screenwriters were taking conscious effort at this point
so as not to humiliate their star beyond reasonable limits.
They did a decent enough job on the title
track, another Vegas-rocker partially redeemed by some nice boogie piano and a
semi-inspired vocal workout; ʽYour Time Hasnʼt Come Yet Babyʼ, a pleasantly
upbeat acoustic ballad written by team newcomer Joel Hirschhorn in a style
vaguely reminiscent of Elvisʼ late Fifties material like; and ʽLet Yourself
Goʼ, another Joy Byers «composition» which is really just a Vegas-ization of
Willie Dixonʼs ʽLittle Babyʼ but thatʼs alright, weʼll take it for lack of
anything better.
On the downside, Ben Weisman and Sid Wayne
offer another fine, totally justified contribution for Elvisʼ Greatest Shit — that one song with the unforgettable title
ʽHeʼs Your Uncle, Not Your Dadʼ. Like any respectable, well-meaning,
law-abiding citizen of this planet, I did not doubt for a second that this was
going to be a song about good old incest before putting it on — so imagine my
disappointment when it turned out that the «uncle» in question was Uncle Sam,
and that the song itself was an «ironic» parody on a patriotic military march.
Honestly, what with the Kingʼs total inability to carry off anything ironic,
sarcastic, or plain humorous, Iʼd probably have preferred the song to be a sincere patriotic march — but then
again, perhaps we could do without patriotic marching altogether? (It doesnʼt
help much if you actually watch the choreography in the movie, either — the
most pitiful thing in the world is trying to look funny without having the
first idea of how to achieve a properly comedic effect).
Once again, the total number of new songs
(seven) was barely enough to fill up one side of the LP, so they had to quickly
scrape together some leftovers — unfortunately, three of them came from the
rotten factory of Bennett and Tepper, including ʽWestern Unionʼ from 1963 (yet another wretched attempt to recreate the
success of ʽReturn To Senderʼ, almost note-for-note) and the utterly generic
lullaby ʽFive Sleepy Headsʼ. Only Joy Byersʼ ʽGoinʼ Homeʼ is worthy of a bit of
attention — I cannot identify the exact folk / country source from which she
ripped off that one (probably something by Johnny Cash), but at least the King
sounds a bit more authentic and inspired on this one. Still, with even the
bonus tracks now incapable to bring up the value of the finished product, it is
easy to see why Speedway marked the
long-awaited end of Elvisʼ soundtrack business: even the trusty corporate
mafia were getting tired hacking out new material for the movies. For most of
his subsequent movies, they would contribute 2–3 new songs on average, and it
was fairly clear that it no longer truly made any difference if Elvis were to
sing anything in the movie or not. In fact, itʼs ridiculous that the machine still kept rolling on, by inertia, for
at least half a year after the comeback special. But hey, at least we got to
see the man getting it on with Mary Tyler Moore in Change Of Habit.
The title cut, "There Ain't Nothing Like a Song," "Let Yourself Go," "Your Groovy Self" and the last four songs are all quite stellar. The rest of the soundtrack album is forgettable.
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