Whenever I can’t find something around the house I
usually try to find someone else to blame for losing it. It’s one of those
things. It’s always someone else’s fault isn’t it. Usually it’s sitting right
in front of my nose if I could be bothered to look for it. Through a similar
process the media can easily be blamed for the disappearance of artists, genres
or even whole aspects of culture. Something is hot property for a while then it
loses its mass appeal and it vanishes in front of your very eyes. It’s still
there, hasn’t been wiped off the face of the earth, you just need to look beyond
the obvious to find it - which is something most people can’t be arsed with.
Rock’n’roll disappeared for about five years once in this very way.
Rock history has it that when the empire was being forged
there was only one king of rock’n’roll, and that king was one Elvis Aaron
Presley. Never mind that rock’n’roll had been around for a good old time prior
to his discovery by down-home blues label Sun Records in Memphis. Thanks to
this special combination, an underground music played by a segregated race of
people in run down across-the-tracks clubs was suddenly on prime time TV and
the sight of a white guy playfully gyrating his hips seriously offended middle-WASP
America. So it is relayed in the book of Genesis in the bible of rock.
Most students of such tomes know the rest. By the end of
the fifties Elvis got drafted, Buddy Holly died, Jerry Lee Lewis turned into a
cousin-marrying pariah. The music biz came up with lame and tame crooners to
take their place and that nasty rock’n’roll thing was deliberately ignored in
the hope it would go away. Everything stateside returned to its pre-rock status
quo until the British invasion forced rock back into the media eye again in the
mid-sixties. Then rock musicians discovered LSD and things really went west
(literally). But I’m getting ahead of myself.
The lesson for the congregation today is that, far from
disappearing, rock in the early sixties survived and thrived back down in its
underground home while Elvis was being paraded around in his uniform and Pat
Boon was doing wimped-out Little Richard covers for the masses. And far from
just retreating back to its original source, it expanded into a new home in the
low-rent clubs of urban white America .
It’s a neglected chapter of rock history but its well worth digging into. The
original chitlin circuit that produced sensational early rockers like Little
Richard and Ray Charles kept on keeping on as it always had and would later in
the sixties provide the world with a certain James Marshall Hendrix. The urban
white clubs, on the other hand, dispensed with the soul and instead picked up
on the beat and the greasy/sleazy aspects of what rock brought to the table.
A taste of what this side of American culture was like
can be found in the recent and essential biography of Jerry Lee Lewis by Rick
Bragg. Dodgy managers, we-never-close hours, pills, booze, sex and violence.
The classic rock’n’roll stew. All in all, the perfect environment for the devil
to do his work. Depending on which part of the states you are talking about,
the adoption of sleazoid rock pushed country or jazz out, and the evening’s
entertainment often included the addition of stage shows featuring strippers
and/or stand up comedians. Jazz lived on through the addition of brass to the
standard rock line up, and the drums were pushed more up front giving things an
even more greasy big band sound. Think Las Vegas
and New Orleans , LA
and Houston .
Anywhere people splashed money, got loaded and looked for a good time. Salt Lake City ? Not so
much.
It would be difficult to point out any one artist to
represent all of this, since so much of it was going on under the radar. People
might record a single or three, but the action was centred so much on the live
show that the need to do hard work promoting a record was pointless.
There are a few compilation series that focus on this
forgotten chapter of rock’n’roll, and you need to check them out, so get
googlin’ (there are/were some great blogs around housing them). The Born Bad
series, featuring gems like “Funnel of love” by Wanda Jackson, covers the
rockabilly ground later popularised by The Cramps. Even better are the six Las
Vegas Grind volumes, focussing more of the sleazoid club sounds described
above. There are some real turkeys included amongst the gems, but that’s half
the fun. This is taken to even wilder extremes by the Wildsville! and
Wowsville! compilations that go beyond mere sleaze into certifiable madness.
Listen to this stuff and then even try to think of a modern equivalent.
Actually don’t bother – there isn’t any.
My little guys bring you a little teasin’ taste on “How
much is that bust of Elvis in the window?” on the album. If the above sounds
good to you, check it out. Just don’t forget your gigavator.
Find it on Amazon, I-Tunes, Spotify,
Deezer, Google Play and Bandcamp, or from any of the purveyors of fine
sounds listed on this site.
Or try before you buy on Soundcloud or Youtube.