Elvis Presley: A Life From Beginning To End | Full Biography DD

Intro He was an iconic singer and film actor.   He was charismatic and talented, and literally  shocked the world of music with a new sound.   Thousands of American teenagers  dreamed about his hairstyle.   And other thousands envied  his popularity among girls.   Today we will talk about the “king  of rock and roll” Elvis Presley, who,   thanks to his desire and personal ambitions,  got out of poverty and became a legend.

How did he achieve such overwhelming success? Why did they want to put him in jail?   And why didn’t Elvis live a long life? You are on the Biographer channel, sit back   and let’s get started! Childhood   Elvis Aaron Presley was born on January 8, 1935,  in Tupelo, Mississippi.

His parents, Vernon Elvis   and Gladys Love Presley, lived in a shotgun house  that Vernon built for the birth of the child.   Elvis wasn’t the family’s only expected child,  his twin brother Jesse Garon Presley, who was   born half an hour before Elvis, was stillborn.  His father was of German, Scottish and English   descent, and his mother, Gladys, was of  Scotch-Irish with French Norman ancestry.

There were working-class families  and native Cherokees in the clan.   Elvis’ granddaughter Riley Keough confirms that  her great-great-grandmother Gladys was Cherokee   Inset voice-over quote: “I had one great grandma who was creek and   one who was full blood Cherokee” (Riley Keough) Gladys was the head of the small Presley family.

Elvis grew close to his parents from childhood,  and over time formed a particularly close bond   with his mother. Family, that consisted of  grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins   ​​lived next to each other in Tupelo. The family did not live richly, Vernon changed   one odd job for another, not particularly showing  his ambitions.

The family often had to rely on   government food aid or help from neighbors, but  the parents struggled to provide everything for   their son, who was the meaning of their lives. They lost their home when Elvis was 3 years old,   in May 1938. Vernon was found guilty of  forging a check issued to him by a landowner   and occasional employer.

He was sentenced to 3  years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary at   Parchman and Gladys and Elvis moved in with  relatives. Vernon spent eight months behind bars,   after which he was released on the condition  that he would maintain good behavior.   Elvis entered the first grade at East Tupelo  Consolidated School in September 1941. The   teachers considered him “average”.

By 1943, from  the age of eight, Elvis was spending many Saturday   nights at the Tupelo Courthouse, from where WELO  broadcast “Saturday Jamboree”. It was an amateur   program that had a live audience. It numbered  up to 150 people. Anyone could sing or play on   the program, and Elvis did it repeatedly. “Old  Shep” was just one of the many songs he sang.   At the end of the Second World War, where  the boy’s father helped build a POW camp,   Vernon bought a new four-room house  on Berry Street, East Tupelo.

Elvis entered the fifth grade during that  period. At the beginning of the school term,   his teacher Mrs. Grimes asked her students  if any of them wanted to say a prayer.   Elvis stood up and said one, then immediately  began to sing “Old Shep”. Mrs. Grimes was very   impressed. “He sang it so sweetly,” she once  said.

The teacher took him to the headmaster,   Mr Cole, Elvis sang “Old Shep” again. Mr. Cole was  no less impressed. That was a few weeks before the   Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show in Tupelo.  Elvis was immediately selected to participate.   Elvis sang for the public on October 3, 1945, on  Children’s Day at the annual Mississippi-Alabama   Fair and Dairy Show in the central square.  That was his first public performance.

Ten-year-old Elvis stood on the chair  by a microphone and sang “Old Shep”   at a youth talent show on WELO radio.  It is said that Elvis took second place by   putting on his glasses and standing on a chair to  reach the microphone in front of several hundred   people. He wore glasses for a short time in fifth  grade.

Elvis was supposed to receive free tickets   to all the attractions of the fair and five  dollars for second place, however, according   to his flashbacks, he took fifth place, and on  the same day, instead of a prize, he received   a spanking from his mother, for participating  in one of the most “dangerous” attractions.   Gladys bought her son his first guitar  at the Tupelo Hardware Store for $7.

90   for Elvis’s eleventh birthday on January 8 next  year. According to the owner of the store, FL   Bobo, Elvis wanted either a rifle or a bicycle,  but his mother only had the money for a guitar,   so she persuaded Elvis to buy it.  He received basic guitar lessons from   two of his uncles and a new pastor at the family  church over the next year.

Presley recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “I took the guitar, and I watched people,   and I learned to play a little bit. But I would  never sing in public. I was very shy about it.”   Just eleven months after buying  the house on Berry Street,   the family “sold it and moved to Tupelo, in a  small alley next to the fairgrounds, right across   from the black quarter of the city Shake Rag”.

Elvis went to sixth grade at Milam Junior High   School. He was invited to sing the song at the  request of teacher Mrs Camp. She recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “He was so good the children   just got quiet and pleased with him” (Mrs Camp) He began bringing his guitar to school daily the   following year.

He played and sang at lunchtime  and was often teased by his classmates as a   “cheesy” kid playing hillbilly music. Presley was a fan of the Mississippi Slim show   on the Tupelo WELO radio station. Mississippi  Slim was his first musical hero. Slim’s younger   brother, who was one of Presley’s classmates and  often took him to the radio station, described   Elvis as “Crazy about music”.

Slim told Presley  even more new things about playing the guitar,   demonstrating the technique of playing chords. He was allowed to sing twice live on the station,   hosted by Mississippi Slim when Elvis  turned 12. However, for the first time,   the boy had serious stage fright and was unable to  appear in the scheduled performance. Nevertheless,   he appeared on the air and performed the song  with the support of the musician a week later.

At the age of 13, in November 1948, he and  his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, 80   miles northwest of Tupelo, and lived in downtown  boarding houses for much of the next year. Thus,   the family changed about 10 dwellings. Youth and career   Elvis continued his eighth-grade  studies at Humes High School in Memphis.

Elvis’ musical horizons were expanded during  that period. He had many opportunities to get   close to music due to the radio, the  church, music stores, and nightclubs.   In addition, Elvis played in a band with  four other boys from Lauderdale Courts.   Elvis began to pay special attention to his  appearance during that period.

He let his hair and   sideburns grow longer than usual and began to wear  extremely colorful clothes that made him stand   out, especially against the background of the  conservative, conformist Deep South of the 50s.   Elvis wore trousers every day, at a  time when everyone at school wore jeans.   He wore a coat and tied a scarf like an  ascot tie, like some kind of film star.

People looked at him with surprise. But the guy  already knew what he wanted to strive for.   Inset: https://youtu.be/aNYWl13IWhY?t=16  (0:13 – 0:18)   The life of the Presley family at that time  had not yet improved. Vernon and Gladys were   changing jobs one by one. Elvis moonlighted to  feed himself and his parents.

Together they went   to the Assembly of God Church. Elvis continued  to sing along with the guitar, went shopping on   Beale Street, and actively absorbed the black  blues and gospel music that sounded around him.   At night, he regularly attended white and black  gospel performances in the city center.   Interestingly, Elvis managed to get  married when he was 13 years old!   As an impulsive teenager, he was so in love  with Magdalene Morgan that he secretly forged   his parents’ marriage certificate, by  inscribing himself and Magdalena on it.

They met at the First Assembly of God Church.  Elvis set September 11 as the date of “marriage”,   which would surprise Magdalene 50 years  later when she found out about it.   Elvis loved comics, especially “Capt. Marvel Jr.”.   His cousin Harold Loyd recalled that in high  school in Memphis, they exchanged comics:   Inset voice-over quote: “Sometimes I would borrow some from him.

He would let me have them because he knew I  would return them in good shape” (Harold Loyd)   His schoolwork took a backseat as Elvis’  passion for music became overwhelming in 1952.   The range of A, B, and C grades during his  freshman year at Humes degenerated so much   that he became a C student.

When his music teacher  told him he couldn’t sing, he brought his guitar   the next day and sang the recent hit “Keep Them  Cold Icy Fingers Off Me” to prove the opposite.   Most of his free time, Elvis  spent in cinemas and music stores.   At night, together with his parents, he attended  gospel singing sessions at Ellis Auditorium,   where he noticed interesting stage movements  from the most charismatic performers.

Gospel singing contained the spirituality  and physicality that became the basis of the   musical style of the young Elvis Presley, however,  when he sang, and played the guitar at parties,   he was much more likely to perform Dean  Martin, Bing Crosby or Perry Como pop music.   Elvis signed up for military service in January  1953.

Then, according to the conscription system,   young people in good health had to be free from  the age of 18 for 2 years of military service.   Elvis entered the Humes’ annual Minstrel Show,  a couple of months before graduating from high   school, on April 9, 1953. He performed the song  “Till I Waltz Again with You” by Teresa Brewer.   Elvis really shocked students, parents and  teachers by singing and playing the guitar in   his performance.

He later recalled: Inset voice-over quote:   “I wasn’t popular in school… I failed  music—only thing I ever failed. And then   they entered me in this talent show… when I  came onstage I heard people kind of rumbling   and whispering and so forth, ’cause nobody  knew I even sang. It was amazing how popular   I became in school after that.

” (Elvis) That performance greatly contributed to the   reputation of the future singer. Presley, who  had received no formal musical training and   could not read music, learned and played by ear.  During that period, he frequented music stores,   which had jukeboxes and listening booths. By  the last year of school, Elvis knew all the   songs of Hank Snow and adored the records of other  country artists such as Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubb,   Ted Daffan, Jimmie Rodgers, Jimmie Davis, and  Bob Wills.

One of Elvis’ favorite performers,   southern gospel singer Jake Hess, significantly  influenced his style of singing ballads.   He was a regular participant on the monthly  All-Night Singings downtown. Whenever possible, he   attended blues concerts, in the segregated South,  only on evenings reserved exclusively for white   audiences.

And of course, he listened to regional  radio stations like WDIA-AM that played “racing   records”: spirituals, blues, and the modern,  backbeat-heavy sound of rhythm and blues. Local   African-American musicians such as Arthur Crudup  and Rufus Thomas inspired some of Presley’s future   work. Graduating from school was the starting  point in the high world of music for Elvis,   where he had long dreamed and hoped to get.

First success   Elvis got a job at the M. B. Parker Machinists  garage for $33 a week after graduating from Humes   High School on June 3, 1953, which can hardly  be considered an attribute of a future legend.   But soon everything fell into place. Presley  registered at the office of Sun Records,   in August 1953.

He wanted to pay for a few minutes  of studio time to record a double-sided record:   “My Happiness” and “That’s  When Your Heartaches Begin”.   He later claimed that he wanted to give  the record to his mother for her birthday,   even though a nearby general store had a much  cheaper amateur recording service. He probably   chose Sun Records hoping to get noticed.

The  studio administrator, producer Marion Keisker,   repeatedly asked the guy which of the performers  he looked like – to which Elvis replied:   Inset voice-over quote: “I sing all kinds. I don’t   sound like nobody.” (Elvis) Marion remembered Elvis at their first   meeting as “shy, a little woebegone, cradling his  battered, beat-up child’s guitar”.

The boss of   the studio, Sam Phillips, called Marion after  the recording was completed with a request to   write down the name of that guy, to which she  herself replied: “Good ballad singer. Hold.”   During the recording, Elvis asked Marion Keisker  if she knew any bands that were looking for a   singer, but the answer was disappointing.

During  the first months of his musical development,   he knew that he wanted to become a singer,  but did not know how exactly to do it. So   he just hung around Memphis Recording  Service studios for a few months.   It wasn’t until January 1954 that Presley  recorded his second personal album,   “I’ll Never Stand in Your Way” and “It  Wouldn’t Be the Same Without You”,   …but that didn’t help him become a professional  artist.

Elvis failed an audition for the local   vocal quartet Songfellows after  being told he couldn’t sing.   Elvis changed work due to instructions from  his former boss to cut his hair in April.   He got a job as a truck driver at Crown  Electric for a good salary of $40 a week.   His friend Ronnie Smith, who was also a music  enthusiast with whom they played several shows,   was already in a real professional band at the  age of 16.

That group was led by Eddie Bond,   who had been playing in Memphis for several  years and was now in need of a vocalist. Ronnie   suggested Elvis for the position, but after a  couple of songs Presley failed, Bond rejected him,   advising to keep driving the truck. He  said that he would “never be a singer”.   Fate literally gave the guy  a second chance at that time,   he found out that Sun Records boss  Sam Phillips was looking for a new,   amazing sound. He needed a performer who could  bring to a wider audience the sound of black

musicians who were very popular. Sam bought a  demo of Jimmy Sweeney’s ballad “Without You”,   believing that it would suit a teenage  singer, so he invited Elvis to the studio.   Phillips did not like his performance, but he  asked Presley to sing as many songs as he knew.   He was so impressed with what he heard that he  invited two local musicians, guitarist Winfield   “Scotty” Moore and double bassist Bill Black,  to compose and record something with Elvis.

The musical session that took place on the evening  of July 5, until late night, was completely   unsuccessful. Presley picked up his guitar and  played Arthur Crudup’s 1946 blues number “That’s   All Right” when everyone was about to stop  trying and go home. Moore recalled that:   Inset voice-over quote: “All of a sudden, Elvis just started singing this   song, jumping around and acting the fool, and then  Bill picked up his bass, and he started acting   the fool, too, and I started playing with them.  Sam, I think, had the door to the control booth

open … he stuck his head out and said, ‘What are  you doing?’ And we said, ‘We don’t know.’ ‘Well,   back up,’ he said, ‘try to find a place to  start, and do it again.” (Winfield Moore)   Phillips immediately started recording,  because that was the sound he was looking for.   Popular Memphis DJ Dewey Phillips played  “That’s All Right” on his Red, Hot, and Blue   show three days later. The listeners began to  call, wanting to know, “who was that singer.

”   There was such interest that Dewey Phillips  played the record on repeat for the remaining two   hours of his performance. He interviewed  Presley live and asked him what high   school he went to clarify his color to many  callers. Many of them assumed he was black.   Over the next few days, the trio with Elvis  recorded Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky”,   in a bluegrass style, again in a distinctive  style, using an artificial echo effect that   Sam Phillips called “slapback”. Thus  was released a single with “That’s All

Right” and “Blue Moon of Kentucky”. Eddie Bond asked Ronnie Smith to find out   if Elvis wanted to sing with him now after  the record became a hit in Memphis. Elvis   politely declined the invitation. Presley, Moore and Black performed in   public for the first time at the Bon Air  club on July 17, Elvis still performed   with his first guitar.

The trio played at  the Overton Park Shell at the end of the   month. That performance became special because  of Elvis’ eccentric dance. He performed “Rubber   Legs” for the first time, but soon it would be  his most recognizable, “signature” movement.   The combination of high from the beat and  nervousness playing in front of a large crowd had   Presley shaking his legs during the performance,  his wide pants accentuated those movements,   causing the girls in the audience to scream.

Inset voice-over quote:   “During the instrumental parts, he would back off  from the mike and be playing and shaking, and the   crowd would just go wild” (Winfield Moore) Black, being a born showman,   screamed as he played his bass, delivering double  strikes that Presley later recalled as “a really   wild sound, like a drum in  the jungle or something.

”   Soon after, Moore and Black left their old band,  the Starlite Wranglers, to play regularly with   Elvis, and DJ/promoter Bob Neal became the trio’s  manager. They often played Eagle’s Nest from   August to October and returned to the Sun Studio  to record new material. Presley quickly became   more confident on stage.

According to Moore: Inset voice-over quote:   “His movement was a natural thing, but he was  also very conscious of what got a reaction.   He’d do something one time, and then he would  expand on it real quick.” (Winfield Moore)   Elvis appeared in the Louisiana Hayride in  November 1954. It was the main and freer rival   of the Grand Ole Opry, where the musician appeared  only once in October and was notified that he was   not suitable for that program.

At the same time,  the Shreveport show aired on 198 radio stations in   28 states. Elvis again had a nervousness attack,  and although at first, the listeners reacted with   restraint, the more energetic second set caused  an enthusiastic response from the audience.   Shortly after the show, Hayride hired Presley for  a full year of performances on Saturday nights.   After trading his old guitar for $8 and  seeing it immediately go to the rubbish,   Elvis purchased a Martin guitar for a  hefty $175 (that’s $1,800 in 2022).

Elvis’ new contract with Bob Neal went into effect  on January 1, 1955, and over the next few months,   a smiling photo of Elvis, Neil, and Sam  Phillips commemorating the event appeared   in various periodicals and fanzines.  And the trio went to play in new places,   including New Orleans, Louisiana;  Houston, Texas and Texarkana, Arkansas.

Elvis, along with many up-and-coming artists like  Minnie Pearl, Johnny Horton, and Johnny Cash,   sang the praises of Louisiana Hayride’s sponsor,  doughnut maker Southern Maid Donuts. Presley had   a lifelong love of doughnuts, receiving a  box of them with hot icing in exchange for   a radio promo tape. Unfortunately, that  Elvis commercial was never released.

Soon, Presley made his first television appearance  on KSLA-TV’s Louisiana Hayride, and his regular   Hayride appearances, constant touring, and  well-received record releases made him a   regional star from Tennessee to West Texas. That brought to him the attention of Colonel Tom   Parker, whom Bob Neal considered the best promoter  in the music business.

Parker invited Presley to   perform at Hank Snow’s February country tour. Elvis’ fourth singles “Baby Let’s Play House”   and “I’m Left, You’re Right, She’s  Gone” were released on April 10.   That release was considered especially successful  for a young artist. In May, Presley toured the   south daily, which led to Colonel Parker writing  to Bob Neal at the end of the month that he wanted   to participate in promoting Elvis’ career.

Elvis went to Texarkana on June 5 after another   show. Elvis’ pink and white Cadillac catches  fire and burns out about halfway to Texarkana,   in Fulton, Arkansas. Elvis’ mother, Gladys,  would always remember waking up from a deep   sleep with the feeling that something was  wrong. Others remembered Elvis sitting on   the side of the road and being devastated  watching his dreams go up in smoke.

Elvis bought a new pink 1955 Cadillac Fleetwood  Sixty with a black top to replace the burnt   one a month later. A removable wooden roof  rack was used for the band’s instruments.   Thanks to a neighbor, Elvis repainted the car in  pink, which he developed for Elvis – he called it   “Elvis Rose”.

Presley gave that Cadillac to his  mother, thus turning it into perhaps the most   famous car in the world. Gladys always  proudly referred to it as “her” car.   Elvis was very fond of that car. One November,  Johnny Cash joined Presley’s show and was amazed   to see that Elvis took the time to handwash  his car thoroughly after driving it in the rain   and through the mud on the way to Texarkana.

By the way, would you like to know more about   the difficult life of Johnny Cash? We always  consider the wishes in the comments. Write,   whose biography you would like to know. Worldwide popularity   Sun had already made ten  releases of “Elvis Presley,   Scotty and Bill” by August. A drummer  joined the trio on the last recordings.   Some songs like “That’s All Right” were written  in a language that one Memphis journalist called   “R&B idiom of negro field jazz” and other  songs like “Blue Moon of Kentucky” were “more   in the country field” but ” there was a curious  blending of the two different musics in both”.

That mix of styles prevented Presley’s music from  receiving radio airplay. According to Bob Neal,   many country-music disc jockeys wouldn’t play  his music because he looked so much like a black   artist, none of the R&B stations would pick him  up because “he sounded too much like a hillbilly.”   It was called rockabilly when that mix gained  popularity.

Elvis was already being called “The   King of Western Bop”, “The Hillbilly Cat”,  and “The Memphis Flash” at that time.   The audience had never heard such music  before, and they had never seen anyone   before who played like Elvis Presley. Elvis  almost always overshadowed all the headliners   even in the first days.

Wherever he went,  Elvis caused a big stir, girls were screaming,   fainting and chasing him all over the South. Presley renewed Neil’s management contract in   August of that year, appointing Colonel  Parker as his special adviser. The band   maintained an extensive touring schedule during  the second half of the year. Neil recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “It was almost frightening,   the reaction that came to Elvis from the teenaged  boys.

So many of them, through some sort of   jealousy, would practically hate him. There were  occasions in some towns in Texas when we’d have to   be sure to have a police guard because somebody’d  always try to take a crack at him. (Bob Neil)   Almost every major and independent record company  was asking about him by the summer of 1955.   Elvis Presley was named the most promising  male artist of the year at the Country Disc   Jockey Convention in early November.

Several  record companies were interested in signing a   contract with him. Elvis told them about  his imminent transition to RCA, although   the colonel had yet to complete the deal. Three  major labels made offers worth about $25,000.   Parker and Phillips made a deal with RCA Victor  to purchase Presley’s contract from Sun, including   all material, for an unprecedented $40,000! The musician, at the age of 20, could not yet   sign the contract himself, so his father  did it for him.

Parker arranged with the   owners of Hill & Range Publishing, Jean and  Julian Aberbach, to create two organizations,   Elvis Presley Music and Gladys Music, to process  the material Presley had recorded. The songwriters   had to give up one-third of their regular fees in  exchange for Elvis performing their compositions.   RCA Victor began to heavily promote Presley  by December and re-released many of his older   recordings before the end of the month.

Elvis held his first recording session for RCA   at their Nashville studio two  days after his 21st birthday,   on January 10 of next year. RCA Victor brought in  guitarist Chet Atkins and three backing vocalists,   including Gordon Stoker of the popular Jordanaires  quartet, to expand the sound in addition to   Presley’s usual support of Moore, Black, Fontana  and Hayride pianist Floyd Cramer in concert.

Among   the songs recorded during that session was the  unusual and slightly dreary “Heartbreak Hotel”.   The single sold over 300,000 copies in its  first three weeks of release. Soon, it would   hit No. 1 on the Billboard Pop Singles Chart for  eight weeks, as well as No. 1 on the Country Chart   and No. 5 on the R&B Chart.

It became Elvis’  first single to sell over a million copies,   earning Elvis his very first gold award. In the meantime, Parker brought Presley to   national television by inviting him to the  CBS stage show in New York, which included six   appearances in two months. After the first show,  Presley stayed in town to record at RCA Victor   Studios. Those New York sessions recorded “Blue  Suede Shoes” and seven other songs.

“I Forgot to   Remember to Forget”, originally released back in  August last year, reached the top of the Billboard   National Country Singles Chart in February.

Intro He was an iconic singer and film actor.   He was charismatic and talented, and literally  shocked the world of music with a new sound.   Thousands of American teenagers  dreamed about his hairstyle.   And other thousands envied  his popularity among girls.   Today we will talk about the “king  of rock and roll” Elvis Presley, who,   thanks to his desire and personal ambitions,  got out of poverty and became a legend.

How did he achieve such overwhelming success? Why did they want to put him in jail?   And why didn’t Elvis live a long life? You are on the Biographer channel, sit back   and let’s get started! Childhood   Elvis Aaron Presley was born on January 8, 1935,  in Tupelo, Mississippi.

His parents, Vernon Elvis   and Gladys Love Presley, lived in a shotgun house  that Vernon built for the birth of the child.   Elvis wasn’t the family’s only expected child,  his twin brother Jesse Garon Presley, who was   born half an hour before Elvis, was stillborn.  His father was of German, Scottish and English   descent, and his mother, Gladys, was of  Scotch-Irish with French Norman ancestry.

There were working-class families  and native Cherokees in the clan.   Elvis’ granddaughter Riley Keough confirms that  her great-great-grandmother Gladys was Cherokee   Inset voice-over quote: “I had one great grandma who was creek and   one who was full blood Cherokee” (Riley Keough) Gladys was the head of the small Presley family.

Elvis grew close to his parents from childhood,  and over time formed a particularly close bond   with his mother. Family, that consisted of  grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins   ​​lived next to each other in Tupelo. The family did not live richly, Vernon changed   one odd job for another, not particularly showing  his ambitions.

The family often had to rely on   government food aid or help from neighbors, but  the parents struggled to provide everything for   their son, who was the meaning of their lives. They lost their home when Elvis was 3 years old,   in May 1938. Vernon was found guilty of  forging a check issued to him by a landowner   and occasional employer.

He was sentenced to 3  years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary at   Parchman and Gladys and Elvis moved in with  relatives. Vernon spent eight months behind bars,   after which he was released on the condition  that he would maintain good behavior.   Elvis entered the first grade at East Tupelo  Consolidated School in September 1941. The   teachers considered him “average”.

By 1943, from  the age of eight, Elvis was spending many Saturday   nights at the Tupelo Courthouse, from where WELO  broadcast “Saturday Jamboree”. It was an amateur   program that had a live audience. It numbered  up to 150 people. Anyone could sing or play on   the program, and Elvis did it repeatedly. “Old  Shep” was just one of the many songs he sang.   At the end of the Second World War, where  the boy’s father helped build a POW camp,   Vernon bought a new four-room house  on Berry Street, East Tupelo.

Elvis entered the fifth grade during that  period. At the beginning of the school term,   his teacher Mrs. Grimes asked her students  if any of them wanted to say a prayer.   Elvis stood up and said one, then immediately  began to sing “Old Shep”. Mrs. Grimes was very   impressed. “He sang it so sweetly,” she once  said.

The teacher took him to the headmaster,   Mr Cole, Elvis sang “Old Shep” again. Mr. Cole was  no less impressed. That was a few weeks before the   Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show in Tupelo.  Elvis was immediately selected to participate.   Elvis sang for the public on October 3, 1945, on  Children’s Day at the annual Mississippi-Alabama   Fair and Dairy Show in the central square.  That was his first public performance.

Ten-year-old Elvis stood on the chair  by a microphone and sang “Old Shep”   at a youth talent show on WELO radio.  It is said that Elvis took second place by   putting on his glasses and standing on a chair to  reach the microphone in front of several hundred   people. He wore glasses for a short time in fifth  grade.

Elvis was supposed to receive free tickets   to all the attractions of the fair and five  dollars for second place, however, according   to his flashbacks, he took fifth place, and on  the same day, instead of a prize, he received   a spanking from his mother, for participating  in one of the most “dangerous” attractions.   Gladys bought her son his first guitar  at the Tupelo Hardware Store for $7.

90   for Elvis’s eleventh birthday on January 8 next  year. According to the owner of the store, FL   Bobo, Elvis wanted either a rifle or a bicycle,  but his mother only had the money for a guitar,   so she persuaded Elvis to buy it.  He received basic guitar lessons from   two of his uncles and a new pastor at the family  church over the next year.

Presley recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “I took the guitar, and I watched people,   and I learned to play a little bit. But I would  never sing in public. I was very shy about it.”   Just eleven months after buying  the house on Berry Street,   the family “sold it and moved to Tupelo, in a  small alley next to the fairgrounds, right across   from the black quarter of the city Shake Rag”.

Elvis went to sixth grade at Milam Junior High   School. He was invited to sing the song at the  request of teacher Mrs Camp. She recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “He was so good the children   just got quiet and pleased with him” (Mrs Camp) He began bringing his guitar to school daily the   following year.

He played and sang at lunchtime  and was often teased by his classmates as a   “cheesy” kid playing hillbilly music. Presley was a fan of the Mississippi Slim show   on the Tupelo WELO radio station. Mississippi  Slim was his first musical hero. Slim’s younger   brother, who was one of Presley’s classmates and  often took him to the radio station, described   Elvis as “Crazy about music”.

Slim told Presley  even more new things about playing the guitar,   demonstrating the technique of playing chords. He was allowed to sing twice live on the station,   hosted by Mississippi Slim when Elvis  turned 12. However, for the first time,   the boy had serious stage fright and was unable to  appear in the scheduled performance. Nevertheless,   he appeared on the air and performed the song  with the support of the musician a week later.

At the age of 13, in November 1948, he and  his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, 80   miles northwest of Tupelo, and lived in downtown  boarding houses for much of the next year. Thus,   the family changed about 10 dwellings. Youth and career   Elvis continued his eighth-grade  studies at Humes High School in Memphis.

Elvis’ musical horizons were expanded during  that period. He had many opportunities to get   close to music due to the radio, the  church, music stores, and nightclubs.   In addition, Elvis played in a band with  four other boys from Lauderdale Courts.   Elvis began to pay special attention to his  appearance during that period.

He let his hair and   sideburns grow longer than usual and began to wear  extremely colorful clothes that made him stand   out, especially against the background of the  conservative, conformist Deep South of the 50s.   Elvis wore trousers every day, at a  time when everyone at school wore jeans.   He wore a coat and tied a scarf like an  ascot tie, like some kind of film star.

People looked at him with surprise. But the guy  already knew what he wanted to strive for.   Inset: https://youtu.be/aNYWl13IWhY?t=16  (0:13 – 0:18)   The life of the Presley family at that time  had not yet improved. Vernon and Gladys were   changing jobs one by one. Elvis moonlighted to  feed himself and his parents.

Together they went   to the Assembly of God Church. Elvis continued  to sing along with the guitar, went shopping on   Beale Street, and actively absorbed the black  blues and gospel music that sounded around him.   At night, he regularly attended white and black  gospel performances in the city center.   Interestingly, Elvis managed to get  married when he was 13 years old!   As an impulsive teenager, he was so in love  with Magdalene Morgan that he secretly forged   his parents’ marriage certificate, by  inscribing himself and Magdalena on it.

They met at the First Assembly of God Church.  Elvis set September 11 as the date of “marriage”,   which would surprise Magdalene 50 years  later when she found out about it.   Elvis loved comics, especially “Capt. Marvel Jr.”.   His cousin Harold Loyd recalled that in high  school in Memphis, they exchanged comics:   Inset voice-over quote: “Sometimes I would borrow some from him.

He would let me have them because he knew I  would return them in good shape” (Harold Loyd)   His schoolwork took a backseat as Elvis’  passion for music became overwhelming in 1952.   The range of A, B, and C grades during his  freshman year at Humes degenerated so much   that he became a C student.

When his music teacher  told him he couldn’t sing, he brought his guitar   the next day and sang the recent hit “Keep Them  Cold Icy Fingers Off Me” to prove the opposite.   Most of his free time, Elvis  spent in cinemas and music stores.   At night, together with his parents, he attended  gospel singing sessions at Ellis Auditorium,   where he noticed interesting stage movements  from the most charismatic performers.

Gospel singing contained the spirituality  and physicality that became the basis of the   musical style of the young Elvis Presley, however,  when he sang, and played the guitar at parties,   he was much more likely to perform Dean  Martin, Bing Crosby or Perry Como pop music.   Elvis signed up for military service in January  1953.

Then, according to the conscription system,   young people in good health had to be free from  the age of 18 for 2 years of military service.   Elvis entered the Humes’ annual Minstrel Show,  a couple of months before graduating from high   school, on April 9, 1953. He performed the song  “Till I Waltz Again with You” by Teresa Brewer.   Elvis really shocked students, parents and  teachers by singing and playing the guitar in   his performance.

He later recalled: Inset voice-over quote:   “I wasn’t popular in school… I failed  music—only thing I ever failed. And then   they entered me in this talent show… when I  came onstage I heard people kind of rumbling   and whispering and so forth, ’cause nobody  knew I even sang. It was amazing how popular   I became in school after that.

” (Elvis) That performance greatly contributed to the   reputation of the future singer. Presley, who  had received no formal musical training and   could not read music, learned and played by ear.  During that period, he frequented music stores,   which had jukeboxes and listening booths. By  the last year of school, Elvis knew all the   songs of Hank Snow and adored the records of other  country artists such as Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubb,   Ted Daffan, Jimmie Rodgers, Jimmie Davis, and  Bob Wills.

One of Elvis’ favorite performers,   southern gospel singer Jake Hess, significantly  influenced his style of singing ballads.   He was a regular participant on the monthly  All-Night Singings downtown. Whenever possible, he   attended blues concerts, in the segregated South,  only on evenings reserved exclusively for white   audiences.

And of course, he listened to regional  radio stations like WDIA-AM that played “racing   records”: spirituals, blues, and the modern,  backbeat-heavy sound of rhythm and blues. Local   African-American musicians such as Arthur Crudup  and Rufus Thomas inspired some of Presley’s future   work. Graduating from school was the starting  point in the high world of music for Elvis,   where he had long dreamed and hoped to get.

First success   Elvis got a job at the M. B. Parker Machinists  garage for $33 a week after graduating from Humes   High School on June 3, 1953, which can hardly  be considered an attribute of a future legend.   But soon everything fell into place. Presley  registered at the office of Sun Records,   in August 1953.

He wanted to pay for a few minutes  of studio time to record a double-sided record:   “My Happiness” and “That’s  When Your Heartaches Begin”.   He later claimed that he wanted to give  the record to his mother for her birthday,   even though a nearby general store had a much  cheaper amateur recording service. He probably   chose Sun Records hoping to get noticed.

The  studio administrator, producer Marion Keisker,   repeatedly asked the guy which of the performers  he looked like – to which Elvis replied:   Inset voice-over quote: “I sing all kinds. I don’t   sound like nobody.” (Elvis) Marion remembered Elvis at their first   meeting as “shy, a little woebegone, cradling his  battered, beat-up child’s guitar”.

The boss of   the studio, Sam Phillips, called Marion after  the recording was completed with a request to   write down the name of that guy, to which she  herself replied: “Good ballad singer. Hold.”   During the recording, Elvis asked Marion Keisker  if she knew any bands that were looking for a   singer, but the answer was disappointing.

During  the first months of his musical development,   he knew that he wanted to become a singer,  but did not know how exactly to do it. So   he just hung around Memphis Recording  Service studios for a few months.   It wasn’t until January 1954 that Presley  recorded his second personal album,   “I’ll Never Stand in Your Way” and “It  Wouldn’t Be the Same Without You”,   …but that didn’t help him become a professional  artist.

Elvis failed an audition for the local   vocal quartet Songfellows after  being told he couldn’t sing.   Elvis changed work due to instructions from  his former boss to cut his hair in April.   He got a job as a truck driver at Crown  Electric for a good salary of $40 a week.   His friend Ronnie Smith, who was also a music  enthusiast with whom they played several shows,   was already in a real professional band at the  age of 16.

That group was led by Eddie Bond,   who had been playing in Memphis for several  years and was now in need of a vocalist. Ronnie   suggested Elvis for the position, but after a  couple of songs Presley failed, Bond rejected him,   advising to keep driving the truck. He  said that he would “never be a singer”.   Fate literally gave the guy  a second chance at that time,   he found out that Sun Records boss  Sam Phillips was looking for a new,   amazing sound. He needed a performer who could  bring to a wider audience the sound of black

musicians who were very popular. Sam bought a  demo of Jimmy Sweeney’s ballad “Without You”,   believing that it would suit a teenage  singer, so he invited Elvis to the studio.   Phillips did not like his performance, but he  asked Presley to sing as many songs as he knew.   He was so impressed with what he heard that he  invited two local musicians, guitarist Winfield   “Scotty” Moore and double bassist Bill Black,  to compose and record something with Elvis.

The musical session that took place on the evening  of July 5, until late night, was completely   unsuccessful. Presley picked up his guitar and  played Arthur Crudup’s 1946 blues number “That’s   All Right” when everyone was about to stop  trying and go home. Moore recalled that:   Inset voice-over quote: “All of a sudden, Elvis just started singing this   song, jumping around and acting the fool, and then  Bill picked up his bass, and he started acting   the fool, too, and I started playing with them.  Sam, I think, had the door to the control booth

open … he stuck his head out and said, ‘What are  you doing?’ And we said, ‘We don’t know.’ ‘Well,   back up,’ he said, ‘try to find a place to  start, and do it again.” (Winfield Moore)   Phillips immediately started recording,  because that was the sound he was looking for.   Popular Memphis DJ Dewey Phillips played  “That’s All Right” on his Red, Hot, and Blue   show three days later. The listeners began to  call, wanting to know, “who was that singer.

”   There was such interest that Dewey Phillips  played the record on repeat for the remaining two   hours of his performance. He interviewed  Presley live and asked him what high   school he went to clarify his color to many  callers. Many of them assumed he was black.   Over the next few days, the trio with Elvis  recorded Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky”,   in a bluegrass style, again in a distinctive  style, using an artificial echo effect that   Sam Phillips called “slapback”. Thus  was released a single with “That’s All

Right” and “Blue Moon of Kentucky”. Eddie Bond asked Ronnie Smith to find out   if Elvis wanted to sing with him now after  the record became a hit in Memphis. Elvis   politely declined the invitation. Presley, Moore and Black performed in   public for the first time at the Bon Air  club on July 17, Elvis still performed   with his first guitar.

The trio played at  the Overton Park Shell at the end of the   month. That performance became special because  of Elvis’ eccentric dance. He performed “Rubber   Legs” for the first time, but soon it would be  his most recognizable, “signature” movement.   The combination of high from the beat and  nervousness playing in front of a large crowd had   Presley shaking his legs during the performance,  his wide pants accentuated those movements,   causing the girls in the audience to scream.

Inset voice-over quote:   “During the instrumental parts, he would back off  from the mike and be playing and shaking, and the   crowd would just go wild” (Winfield Moore) Black, being a born showman,   screamed as he played his bass, delivering double  strikes that Presley later recalled as “a really   wild sound, like a drum in  the jungle or something.

”   Soon after, Moore and Black left their old band,  the Starlite Wranglers, to play regularly with   Elvis, and DJ/promoter Bob Neal became the trio’s  manager. They often played Eagle’s Nest from   August to October and returned to the Sun Studio  to record new material. Presley quickly became   more confident on stage.

According to Moore: Inset voice-over quote:   “His movement was a natural thing, but he was  also very conscious of what got a reaction.   He’d do something one time, and then he would  expand on it real quick.” (Winfield Moore)   Elvis appeared in the Louisiana Hayride in  November 1954. It was the main and freer rival   of the Grand Ole Opry, where the musician appeared  only once in October and was notified that he was   not suitable for that program.

At the same time,  the Shreveport show aired on 198 radio stations in   28 states. Elvis again had a nervousness attack,  and although at first, the listeners reacted with   restraint, the more energetic second set caused  an enthusiastic response from the audience.   Shortly after the show, Hayride hired Presley for  a full year of performances on Saturday nights.   After trading his old guitar for $8 and  seeing it immediately go to the rubbish,   Elvis purchased a Martin guitar for a  hefty $175 (that’s $1,800 in 2022).

Elvis’ new contract with Bob Neal went into effect  on January 1, 1955, and over the next few months,   a smiling photo of Elvis, Neil, and Sam  Phillips commemorating the event appeared   in various periodicals and fanzines.  And the trio went to play in new places,   including New Orleans, Louisiana;  Houston, Texas and Texarkana, Arkansas.

Elvis, along with many up-and-coming artists like  Minnie Pearl, Johnny Horton, and Johnny Cash,   sang the praises of Louisiana Hayride’s sponsor,  doughnut maker Southern Maid Donuts. Presley had   a lifelong love of doughnuts, receiving a  box of them with hot icing in exchange for   a radio promo tape. Unfortunately, that  Elvis commercial was never released.

Soon, Presley made his first television appearance  on KSLA-TV’s Louisiana Hayride, and his regular   Hayride appearances, constant touring, and  well-received record releases made him a   regional star from Tennessee to West Texas. That brought to him the attention of Colonel Tom   Parker, whom Bob Neal considered the best promoter  in the music business.

Parker invited Presley to   perform at Hank Snow’s February country tour. Elvis’ fourth singles “Baby Let’s Play House”   and “I’m Left, You’re Right, She’s  Gone” were released on April 10.   That release was considered especially successful  for a young artist. In May, Presley toured the   south daily, which led to Colonel Parker writing  to Bob Neal at the end of the month that he wanted   to participate in promoting Elvis’ career.

Elvis went to Texarkana on June 5 after another   show. Elvis’ pink and white Cadillac catches  fire and burns out about halfway to Texarkana,   in Fulton, Arkansas. Elvis’ mother, Gladys,  would always remember waking up from a deep   sleep with the feeling that something was  wrong. Others remembered Elvis sitting on   the side of the road and being devastated  watching his dreams go up in smoke.

Elvis bought a new pink 1955 Cadillac Fleetwood  Sixty with a black top to replace the burnt   one a month later. A removable wooden roof  rack was used for the band’s instruments.   Thanks to a neighbor, Elvis repainted the car in  pink, which he developed for Elvis – he called it   “Elvis Rose”.

Presley gave that Cadillac to his  mother, thus turning it into perhaps the most   famous car in the world. Gladys always  proudly referred to it as “her” car.   Elvis was very fond of that car. One November,  Johnny Cash joined Presley’s show and was amazed   to see that Elvis took the time to handwash  his car thoroughly after driving it in the rain   and through the mud on the way to Texarkana.

By the way, would you like to know more about   the difficult life of Johnny Cash? We always  consider the wishes in the comments. Write,   whose biography you would like to know. Worldwide popularity   Sun had already made ten  releases of “Elvis Presley,   Scotty and Bill” by August. A drummer  joined the trio on the last recordings.   Some songs like “That’s All Right” were written  in a language that one Memphis journalist called   “R&B idiom of negro field jazz” and other  songs like “Blue Moon of Kentucky” were “more   in the country field” but ” there was a curious  blending of the two different musics in both”.

That mix of styles prevented Presley’s music from  receiving radio airplay. According to Bob Neal,   many country-music disc jockeys wouldn’t play  his music because he looked so much like a black   artist, none of the R&B stations would pick him  up because “he sounded too much like a hillbilly.”   It was called rockabilly when that mix gained  popularity.

Elvis was already being called “The   King of Western Bop”, “The Hillbilly Cat”,  and “The Memphis Flash” at that time.   The audience had never heard such music  before, and they had never seen anyone   before who played like Elvis Presley. Elvis  almost always overshadowed all the headliners   even in the first days.

Wherever he went,  Elvis caused a big stir, girls were screaming,   fainting and chasing him all over the South. Presley renewed Neil’s management contract in   August of that year, appointing Colonel  Parker as his special adviser. The band   maintained an extensive touring schedule during  the second half of the year. Neil recalled:   Inset voice-over quote: “It was almost frightening,   the reaction that came to Elvis from the teenaged  boys.

So many of them, through some sort of   jealousy, would practically hate him. There were  occasions in some towns in Texas when we’d have to   be sure to have a police guard because somebody’d  always try to take a crack at him. (Bob Neil)   Almost every major and independent record company  was asking about him by the summer of 1955.   Elvis Presley was named the most promising  male artist of the year at the Country Disc   Jockey Convention in early November.

Several  record companies were interested in signing a   contract with him. Elvis told them about  his imminent transition to RCA, although   the colonel had yet to complete the deal. Three  major labels made offers worth about $25,000.   Parker and Phillips made a deal with RCA Victor  to purchase Presley’s contract from Sun, including   all material, for an unprecedented $40,000! The musician, at the age of 20, could not yet   sign the contract himself, so his father  did it for him.

Parker arranged with the   owners of Hill & Range Publishing, Jean and  Julian Aberbach, to create two organizations,   Elvis Presley Music and Gladys Music, to process  the material Presley had recorded. The songwriters   had to give up one-third of their regular fees in  exchange for Elvis performing their compositions.   RCA Victor began to heavily promote Presley  by December and re-released many of his older   recordings before the end of the month.

Elvis held his first recording session for RCA   at their Nashville studio two  days after his 21st birthday,   on January 10 of next year. RCA Victor brought in  guitarist Chet Atkins and three backing vocalists,   including Gordon Stoker of the popular Jordanaires  quartet, to expand the sound in addition to   Presley’s usual support of Moore, Black, Fontana  and Hayride pianist Floyd Cramer in concert.

Among   the songs recorded during that session was the  unusual and slightly dreary “Heartbreak Hotel”.   The single sold over 300,000 copies in its  first three weeks of release. Soon, it would   hit No. 1 on the Billboard Pop Singles Chart for  eight weeks, as well as No. 1 on the Country Chart   and No. 5 on the R&B Chart.

It became Elvis’  first single to sell over a million copies,   earning Elvis his very first gold award. In the meantime, Parker brought Presley to   national television by inviting him to the  CBS stage show in New York, which included six   appearances in two months. After the first show,  Presley stayed in town to record at RCA Victor   Studios. Those New York sessions recorded “Blue  Suede Shoes” and seven other songs.

“I Forgot to   Remember to Forget”, originally released back in  August last year, reached the top of the Billboard   National Country Singles Chart in February.

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