so was it true?
Guzzo
8,611 Posts
Y'all know the Chuck D. Line "Elvis was a hero to most, but he never meant shit to me cause he's straight out racist..."
so I've always been curious was Elvis known to be really racist, or was this just a lyric set up to show that white guy was doing black music and that was considered racist?
and I'd like proof too. I don't wanna call Chuck D a liar but I can't remember hearing much about Elvis being racist matter of fact I thought he had a strong relationship with the black community in Memphis
enlighten me
so I've always been curious was Elvis known to be really racist, or was this just a lyric set up to show that white guy was doing black music and that was considered racist?
and I'd like proof too. I don't wanna call Chuck D a liar but I can't remember hearing much about Elvis being racist matter of fact I thought he had a strong relationship with the black community in Memphis
enlighten me
Comments
Guzzo, this thread is designed to start shit, isn't it?
For shame!
I do realize that a lot of race posts here get bad and if this starts shit I apologize ahead of time. But I think this is going to be pretty tame (At least I hope it will be)
that thing looks dangerous
But for real I do not know. Not a big Elvis fan, honestly I'm rather indifferent to him.
http://www.snopes.com/music/artists/presley1.asp
seems multicultural to me
If Elvis never took R&B from the African American would R&B be as big? I'm sure some other caucation would have but who would it have been? Maybe in the skeme of things it helped out African Americans in the long run? I mean you never know, if not for Elvis maybe we as a society would have been set back 5-10 years, things happen for a reason... Just my thoughts....
But I'm not really concerned about that underage girl banger right now. I am intrigued by that ladder. Tell us more about it, what it dew?
It's a telescopic ladder that goes up to like 16 feet! It's incredible. Costs a couple hundred, but that was when it came out. You can cop them at Home Depot.
Seriously like, keep one of these in the trunk of your car, just in case you have to climb something. That's what I used to do.
So the beef comes down to the fact that Elvis' co-opting of R&B makes more money today decades after his death than any original artists from the 50s ever made.
Trivia: The Sweet Inspirations backed him during his comeback phase.
Brother you don't even know the HALF.
whoah, does this tie into that CRAZY uninhibited night you once had after that big gig?
Which one dude? Seriously though...
The Memphis DJ was Dewey Phillips (Flip Phillips was a jazz saxophonist), who was not Sam Phillips brother.
you mean was.
or do you?
While Elvis-bashing goes in and out of fashion(was he racist? was he a fraud?), I for one will always be a big Elvis fan. No one is the be-all-end-all, and Presley himself, a complex but fairly soft-spoken,polite dude, would have been the first to say that he was really just a kid from Tupelo who loved to entertain, end of story. He may have bit a lot of cats style, White and Black, but it's how he blended all that diffuse shit together that made it his own and made him phenomenally successful. Timing is everything, and Elvis had timing on his side most of his career.
Let the haters hate, Elvis needs no apologists.
I like Elvis, even the over-exposure that one undoubtedly encounters here doesnt affect my liking him at all. cop this:
its a double LP comp of the 1969 American Studio sessions, the session that spawned "In the Ghetto", "Suspicious Minds", and other hits. But it has a version of Percy Mayfield's "Stranger in my own hometown" that kills. It came out in the 80s and is easy to cop for cheap..along with the Sun studio stuff, it is my favorite Elvis era. Good shit.
Someone dig up that mag and post the quote plaese.
I really need one of these.
i don't get it though. how's it work? seems like it would collapse as you clim.