Showing posts with label Elvis Presley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elvis Presley. Show all posts

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Presley’s 1st record, ‘My Happiness,’ auctions for $300,000


MEMPHIS, Tennessee — An acetate recording of the ballad “My Happiness,” the first song Elvis Presley ever recorded, sold at auction Thursday night for $300,000.

An undisclosed Internet buyer placed the winning bid at Graceland, the museum and tourist attraction that was Presley’s former home. The auction was held on what would have been the late singer’s 80th birthday.

The 78 rpm record, with its tattered yellow label, sold for $240,000. But the total buyer’s price includes a premium of 25 percent, or $60,000, that goes to the auction house, Graceland Auctions. Bidding for the record started at $50,000.

Other items in the auction included scarves worn by Presley at concerts, gold necklaces with the initials TCB (short for the slogan “Taking Care of Business”), prescription sunglasses made for Presley, and his first driver’s license.

But the big prize was the “My Happiness” record, which is highly valued because of its place in the career of Presley, who died in Memphis on Aug. 16, 1977. The acetate is in original condition and the record is playable.

Presley recorded the song in 1953 at Sun Records, the Memphis studio operated by Sam Phillips. Presley, then 18, paid $4 for the recording. As the story goes, Presley — whose family did not have a record player — left Sun and went to the home of friend Ed Leek to listen to it. But Presley left the record at Leek’s house.

Leek kept the record in a safe for six decades. After he and his wife died, their niece Lorisa Hilburn inherited it. Hilburn, of Rockledge, Florida, contacted Graceland, and it was offered for auction.

Hilburn said after the auction that she did not expect the record to sell for such a large amount. She has already “splurged” on an iPad, but plans to invest the rest of the $240,000, with some going to pay for college for her two sons.

“I’m very happy,” said Hilburn, who smiled widely after auctioneer Wendell Hanson banged his gavel and said “Sold!”

“There was adrenaline beforehand … but when it was over, I was numb,” she said. “It was surreal.”

Before he became the “King of Rock n’ Roll,” Presley was a shy young man who had moved to Memphis from Tupelo, Mississippi, with his parents. He liked to sing and one day summoned up the courage to walk into Sun Records.

Phillips was not there that day, so Presley was helped by Phillips’ assistant, Marion Keisker. Presley sang the ballads “My Happiness,” which was the A-side of the record, and “That’s When Your Heartaches Begin,” which became side B. Both are slow-moving and stop short of suggesting a singer ready to help open the way for the emergence of rock ‘n’ roll.

After the record was cut, Keisker wrote down Presley’s name and phone number and jotted a note that said he was a good ballad singer. In 1954, Presley recorded the more up-tempo “That’s All Right” at Sun Records. That song became Presley’s first hit, and it catapulted him to a successful career that included hit songs such as “Hound Dog” and “Suspicious Minds,” and to making popular movies such as “Jailhouse Rock.”

The story about the “My Happiness” recording is told to visitors who take the tour of Sun Records, now a museum. Along with Presley, Phillips also recorded music legends Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins at Sun.

Jayne Ellen Brooks, public relations director at Sun, says the “My Happiness” record is important because it gives fans the first glimpse of Presley’s impressive talent.

“This was a pop ballad song done by female singers, so as far as the song choice goes, it’s really interesting,” Brook said. “It sort of sums up Elvis, pre-fame.”

Before the auction, fans of Presley gathered outside Graceland in sub-freezing temperatures for a cake-cutting ceremony. Priscilla Presley, who was married to the singer, and their daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, attended the morning event.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Friday, March 16, 2012

Professor Springsteen's rock 'n' roll history lesson at SXSW


Austin, Texas (CNN) -- Anyone expecting outspoken rocker Bruce Springsteen to spend his keynote address here at the South by Southwest music conference talking about his new No. 1 album or the politically divided state of the country may have gotten a surprise.

Instead, Springsteen delivered a rousing, witty and personal history of his varied music influences -- from Elvis Presley to Bob Dylan to James Brown to Hank Williams -- punctuating his points by playing snippets of songs on a guitar. He also offered a little veteran advice for the thousands of young, unknown musicians who have descended upon Austin in the hopes of making it big.

"Stay hard. Stay hungry. Stay alive," he said in his familiar rasp. "And when you walk onstage tonight to bring the noise, treat it like it's all you have."

Springsteen is at SXSW to help launch "Wrecking Ball," his 17th studio album, which voices his frustrations over what he sees as a lack of accountability by government and financial leaders for the country's economic woes. Several members of his E Street Band were in the audience, and he and the band were scheduled to perform at a 2,000-seat theater Thursday night in Austin before kicking off a North American arena tour Sunday in Atlanta.

Thursday afternoon's event placed the current Rolling Stone cover boy in an unusual setting: Behind a podium in a packed convention hall -- and in the middle of the day, no less. Looking a little bleary-eyed, Springsteen took the stage 30 minutes late, carrying his notes on sheafs of paper, and immediately complained about the time.


"How important can this speech be if we're giving it at noon?" he asked. "Every decent musician in town is asleep. Or they will be when I'm done with this thing."

Springsteen began his talk by marveling at the thousands of bands, in almost every musical genre, who are playing Austin this week and how that would have been inconceivable to him as a young music fan. He then pointed out how fractured the music landscape has become and how hard it is for consumers with divergent tastes to gain critical consensus around an artist -- including himself.

In what may have been an allusion to today's manufactured pop stars, he argued that what matters most in music is "purity of human expression," not looks or labels or digital format.

"We live in a post-authentic world. Today authenticity is a house of mirrors," he said in his hourlong talk. "It's about what you're bringing [onstage] when the lights go down."

Springsteen then began recounting his personal journey through music, beginning when he first saw Presley on "The Ed Sullivan Show" at age 6. He managed to get his hands on a rented guitar, but his hands were too small to play it, so he just struck rock poses in front of the mirror. "I still do that," he said with a chuckle.

source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/03/15/showbiz/springsteen-keynote-sxsw/index.html?hpt=hp_c2