A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 33: “Mystery Train”, by Elvis Presley
Episode Date: May 20, 2019Welcome to episode thirty-three of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. This one looks at “Mystery Train” by Elvis Presley. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more... information, and a transcript of the episode. (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andrew Hockey
Episode 33
Mystery Train
By Elvis Presley
We talked a few weeks back
about how Elvis Presley got started
in the music business
But of course
Elvis was important enough to rock and roll
that we're not going to stop there.
Today, we're going to look at the rest of his career at Sun Records,
and at how and why he ended up leaving Sun for a major label,
with consequences that would affect the whole of music history.
We're going to tell a tale of two parkers.
The first Parker we're going to talk about is Junior Parker,
the blues musician who had been.
one of the Beal Streeter's with Johnny Ace, Bobby Blue Bland and B.B. King.
Junior Parker had been working with Howling Wolf for a while, before in 1952 he formed his own band,
the Blue Flames, which should not be confused with all the other Flames bands we've talked about.
For some reason, there is a profusion of flames that we'll be dealing with well into the 70s.
Ike Turner discovered them
and initially got them signed to modern records
though as with many modern records acts
they were recording mostly in Sam Phillips's studio
Turner contributed piano
to the Blue Flames's first single
You're My Angel
but after that one single
Parker and his band
started recording directly for Sun Records
The first single they recorded for Sun
was a minor hit, but wasn't particularly interesting.
Feeling good was basically a John Lee Hooker knockoff.
Well, the old folks boogey and the chilling too.
No, nobody boogey like me and you,
we're going to bug it, we're going to bug it directly.
Now you know,
But it's their second night I've been laying down.
I heard Mama and Papa talk.
I heard Papa tell Mama.
And then I heard Mama got up a shit told me.
But it's their second single for some we want to talk about here and both sides of it.
The A side of Junior Parker and the Blue Flames's second Sun single is one of the best blues records son ever put out.
Love My Baby.
That record was one that Sam Phillips, a lot of great records,
considered among the greatest he'd ever made.
Talking to his biographer Peter Goralnik about it,
decades later, he said,
I mean, you tell me a better record that you've ever heard,
and Goralic couldn't.
But it was the B-side,
that made an impression.
The B-side was a song called Mystery Train.
That song actually dates back to the old folk song, Worried Man Blues, which was recorded in
1930 by the Carter family.
The Carter family were
along with Jimmy Rogers, the people who defined what country music is.
Everyone in country music followed from either the Carter's or Rogers,
and we'll be seeing some members of the extended Carter family much later.
But the important thing here is that AP Carter, the family patriarch,
was one of the most important songwriters of his generation,
but he would also go out and find old folk songs
that he would repurpose and credit himself with having written.
Worried Man Blues was one of those,
and those lyrics, the train arrived 16 coaches long,
became part of the floating lyrics that all blues singers could call upon,
and they became the basis for Junior Parker's song.
That song
Train I ride
16
Coaches long
Carrey
My Bramon
That song's composition
was credited
to Parker
and to Sam Phillips
Phillips would later claim
that he made
three major changes
to the song
and that these were
why he got the co-writing
credit
The first was to give the song
the title
Mystery Train
which has been a big part of the song's appeal ever since.
The second was to insist that the number of coaches for the train should be 16.
Parker had been singing 50 coaches long,
and the final one was to suggest that the band start the song slowly
and build up the tempo like a train-gathering steam.
Parker and his Blue Flames also backed Rufus Thomas on Tiger Man,
a song that Elvis would later go on to perform in the 60s, and would play as a medley with mystery train in the 70s.
I'm the king of the jungle they call me the tiger man.
I'm the king of the jungle they call me the tiger man.
And you cross my path, you've got your own life in your hand.
But the Rufus Thomas connection proved a signifier of what was to come.
Don Roby was still annoyed with Sam Phillips over Bearcats,
the track that Phillips had produced for Thomas as an answer to hound dog,
and Roby would take pleasure in poaching Phillips as artists for his own label.
Phillips was soon reading in Cashbox magazine that Roby was grooming Little Junior Parker for big
things. Robey signed Parker to an exclusive contract, and even an unsuccessful $100,000 lawsuit from
Sam Phillips couldn't stop Roby from having Parker on his label. Junior Parker would go on to have a
distinguished career in R&B, having occasional hit singles until shortly before his death from a
brain tumour in 1971. Luckily for Phillips, he had to be able to be a brain tumor. He had to be able to be. He
had other artists he could work with, not least of them, Elvis Presley. But before we talk
more about Elvis, let's talk about that other Parker. Tom Parker was to become the most well-known
manager in the music industry, even though for most of his career he only managed one act. So today,
we're going to look at him in some detail, as he became the template for all the worst, most
grasping managers in the music business.
When we deal with Alan Klein or Peter Grant or Don Arden,
we'll be dealing with people who are following in the Colonel's footsteps.
It's difficult to separate fact from fiction in the case of Colonel Parker,
though there are biographies devoted entirely to doing so, with some success.
What we know for sure was that Parker was an undocumented immigrant,
to the United States, originally from the Netherlands,
who had taken the name Parker upon his arrival.
We also know that the same day that he disappeared from his home in the Netherlands
to travel to the US for the final time,
a woman was found bludgeoned to death in his hometown,
and we know that he was dishonorably discharged from the US Army as a psychopath,
and that there were rumors around his home.
town decades later that Parker was responsible for the murder. We also know that he desperately
hid his undocumented status long past the time when he would have been eligible for citizenship
and that he completely cut off all contact with his family, even though he had been close to
them before emigrating. Whether he was a killer or not, Parker was certainly an unsavory
character. As, to be fair, were most people involved in the business side of the music industry
in the 1950s. He had his start in the entertainment industry as a con man, and throughout his life
he loved to manipulate people, playing humiliating practical jokes on them. There weren't so much
jokes as demonstrations of his power over them. He was, by all accounts, a cruel man who loved to
heard people, except when he loved to be outlandishly sentimental towards them instead, of course.
Parker had started out as a Karni, working in travelling shows, doing everything from running a dancing
chicken show in which he'd put a hot plate under a chicken's feet, so it would keep lifting its
legs up and look like it was dancing, to telling fortunes, to being the person whose job it was
to tempt the geek to come back to the show with a bottle of whiskey
when he became too sickened by his job.
The geek, for those who don't know,
was a person in a carnival
who would perform acts that would disgust most people,
such as biting the head off live chickens,
to the amused disgust of the audience.
Usually a geek would be someone
who had severe mental health and substance abuse problems,
degrading himself as the only way to make enough money to feed his habit.
All this had taught Parker a lot.
It had led him to the conclusion that audiences were there to be ripped off
and that absolutely nothing mattered to them other than the promise of sexuality.
As far as Parker was concerned, in show business, it didn't matter what the show was.
What mattered was how you sold it to the audience.
and how much merchandise you could sell during the show.
In his time with the carnivals,
Parker had become extremely good at creating publicity stunt.
One that he did many times was to fake a public wedding.
He and a female staff member would pretend to be just two customers in love,
and they would get married at the top of the ferris wheel,
drawing huge crowds.
It was during World War II that,
Parker had moved into country music promotion. He first became involved in music when he got to know
Gene Austin, one of the biggest stars of the 1920s. Now ain't she sweet see her coming down the street
I ask you confidentially ain't she sweet ain't she nice look her over once or twice
Austin, I ask you confidentially ain't she nice?
Cast an eye in her direction.
Oh, me or my, ain't that perfection?
I repeat.
Don't you think that's kind of neat?
I ask you confidentially ain't.
Austin had been a huge star, but by the time Parker got to know him in the late 30s,
he was much less popular.
Parker helped him organise some shows.
According to some claims, Parker was his manager,
though other sources disagree.
But at this time, Austin had fallen on such hard times
that he would fill his car at a petrol station,
pay by cheque, and then tell them that his autograph was probably worth more than the money,
so why not just leave that cheque uncashed and frame it?
Parker learned a valuable lesson from Austin
with whom he would remain friends for years
that lesson was that the stars come and go
and rise and fall in popularity
but managers can keep making money
no matter how old they are
Parker determined to get into music management
and given that he didn't actually like music himself
he decided to go for the music of the common people
the music that was selling to the same people
who'd been coming to the carnivals,
country music.
And so to start with,
he put on a show
by the up-and-coming star Roy Aikov.
In later years,
Roy Aikov would become,
for a time,
the single biggest star in country music,
and Hank Williams would say of him,
for drawing power in the south,
it was Roy Aikov, then God.
But in 1941,
he was merely very popular rather than a superstar.
And Parker had used his promotional knowledge
to make the show he promoted one of the biggest in Aikov's career thus far.
In particular, he'd tried a new trick that no one else had ever done before.
He'd cut a deal with a local grocery chain
that they would sell cut-price tickets
to anyone who brought in a clipping from a newspaper.
This meant that the show had, in effect, multiple box officers,
while the grocery chain paid for the advertising to increase their own footfall.
Having seen what kind of money he could make from country music,
Parker approached Akuf about becoming Akuf's manager.
Akuf was initially interested,
but after a couple of dates he was put off from working further with Parker,
because Parker had what Akuf thought, an unchristian attitude to money.
Acuff was playing dates for fixed fees, and Parker started insisting that as well as the fixed
fee, Akuf should get a percentage of the growth.
Aikov didn't want to be that grasping, and so he gave up on working with Parker.
Though as a consolation, Aikov did give Parker a stake in his merchandising.
Parker got the rights to market,
Acuff Flower in Florida.
But Aykof did more
than that. He pointed
Parker in the direction of
Eddie Arnold, a young singer
who was then working with Pewee
King's Golden West Cowboys.
He told Parker
that Arnold would almost certainly
be going solo soon,
and that he would need a manager.
Arnold was a fan of Gene
Austin, and so eagerly
linked up with Parker.
Parker quickly got Arnold's
signed to RCA Records as a solo artist,
and Arnold's second single, in 1945,
each minute seems like a million years,
reach number five in the country charts.
I have no record now of time.
Or you are all, it's on my mind.
I think of you both night and day,
each hour, each hour,
Eddie Arnold was to go on to become one of the biggest stars in country music,
and that was in large part because of the team that Tom Parker built around him.
Parker would handle the management.
Steve Scholes, the head of country and R&B at RCA, would handle the record production.
Parker got a deal with Hill and Range music publishers so that Arnold would perform songs they published in return for kickbacks.
and any songs that Arnold wrote himself would go through them,
and the William Morris Agency would handle the bookings.
Both Scholes and Arnold were given money by Hill and Range
for Arnold recording the publisher's songs.
Parker had Scholes in his pocket,
because he knew that Sholes was taking kickbacks
and could inform Sholes as bosses at RCA,
and Parker, in turn, took 25% of the $20,000 bride,
the Tillen Range paid Arnold, as Arnold's manager.
This whole team, put together by a mutual love of ripping each other and their artists off,
would go on to work with Parker on every other artist he managed,
and would be the backbone of his success in the industry.
Parker soon used his music industry connections to get an honorary Colonel's commission
from Louisiana Governor Jimmy Davis,
himself a former country musician.
And from that point until the end of his life,
Parker insisted on being addressed as Colonel,
even though in reality he was a draft dodger
who had deliberately piled on weight
during the Second World War
so he could become too fat to draft.
But Parker and Arnold eventually split up.
Parker was originally meant to be Arnold's exclusive manager,
but in 1953
Arnold found out that Parker was putting together a tour of other RCA acts
headed by Hank Snow
Arnold fired the Colonel
and the Colonel quickly instead became the exclusive manager of Hank Snow
Of course, Parker didn't leave his association with Eddie Arnold empty-handed.
He insisted on Arnold giving him a severance package of $50,000 because of how much money Arnold was making from the contracts that Parker had negotiated for him.
His association with Hank Snow would only last two years
and would break up very acrimoniously.
With Snow later saying,
I have worked with several managers over the years
and have had respect for them all except one.
Tom Parker was the most egotistical,
obnoxious human being I've ever had dealings with.
The reason Snow said this
was because the Colonel tricked Snow
out of the greatest business opportunity
in the history of the music business.
The two of them had formed a management company
to manage other artists,
and when Parker found another artist
he wanted to manage,
Snow naturally assumed that they were partners
right up until he discovered they weren't.
Since his first single,
Elvis Presley had been putting out singles on Sun
that largely stuck to the same formula.
a blues number on one side, a country number on the other,
and a sparse backing by Elvis, Scotty and Bill.
In general, the blues sides were rather better than the countrysides,
not least because the countrysides, after the first couple of singles,
started to be songs that were especially written for Elvis by outside songwriters,
and tended to be based on rather obvious wordplay, songs like,
I'm left, you're right, she's gone.
The blues songs, on the other hand.
The blues songs, on the other hand, were chosen from among Elvis's own favorites,
and songs that got kicked around in the studio.
This would set the template for his work in the future.
Whenever Elvis got to choose his own material and follow his own instincts,
the results would be good music.
Whenever he was working on music that was chosen for him by someone else,
even someone as sympathetic to his musical instincts as Sam Phillips,
the music would suffer, though at this stage,
even the songs Elvis wasn't as keen on sounded great.
By the time of Elvis's last Sun single,
he had finally made one more change
that would define the band he would work with
for the rest of the 50s.
He had introduced a drummer, DJ Fontana,
and while Fontana didn't play on the single,
session drummer Johnny Benaro played on it instead.
He would be a part of the core band from now on.
The trio of Elvis, Scotty and Bill had now become a singer and his backup band, Elvis Presley and the Blue Moon Boys.
The A-side of Elvis's fifth single for Sun Records was one of those country songs that had been written especially for Elvis.
I forgot to remember to forget.
That's a get hurt off of my mind.
I thought I'd never miss her,
but I found out somehow.
I think about her almost all the time.
That's a perfectly adequate country pop song,
but the B side, his version of mystery train, was astonishing.
It was actually a merger of elements from the A side
and the B-side of Junior Parker's single,
as Love My Baby provided the riff that Scotty Moore used on Elvis's version of Mystery Train.
Elvis, Scotty and Bill melded the two different songs together,
and they came up with something that would become an absolute classic of the rockabilly genre.
Well, that lone black train got my baby and gone.
The song was probably chosen because Sam Phillips was one of the credited songwriters.
As he was currently battling Don Robey in court over Junior Parker,
he naturally wanted to make as much money off his former artist as he could.
But at the same time, it was a song Elvis clearly liked,
and when he would still be performing live in the next.
1970s. This wasn't a song that was being forced onto Elvis. Indeed, Elvis almost certainly saw
Junior Parker live when he was playing with the Beal Streeter's. B.B. King would talk in later years
about the teenage Elvis having been one of the very few white people who went to see them,
and even allowing for later exaggerations, it's likely that he did see them at least a few
times. So this was one of those rare cases where the financial and artistic incentives perfectly
overlapped. But while he was recording for some, Elvis was also touring, and he was drawing
bigger and bigger crowds, and they were going wilder and wilder. And when Tom Parker saw one of those
crowds, he knew he had to have Elvis. He didn't understand at all,
why those girls were screaming at him.
He would never, in all his life, ever understand the appeal of Elvis's music.
But he knew that a crowd like that would spend money,
and he definitely understood that.
Parker worked on Elvis, and more importantly he worked on Elvis's family.
And even more importantly than that,
he got Hank Snow to work on Elvis's family.
Elvis's parents were big Hank Snow fans, and after being told by their idol how much the colonel had helped him, they were practically salivating to get Elvis signed with him.
Elvis himself was young and naive and would go along with whatever his parents suggested.
Carl Perkins would later describe him as the most introverted person ever to enter a recording studio, and he just wanted to.
to make some money to look after his parents.
His daddy had a bad back and couldn't work,
and his mama was so sick and tired all the time.
If they said the Colonel would help him earn more money,
well, he'd do what his parents said.
Maybe he could earn them enough money to buy them a nice big house,
so his mama could give up her job.
They could maybe raise chickens in the yard.
It was only after the documents were signed,
that Snow realized that the contracts didn't mention himself at all.
His partner had cut him out, and the two-parted company.
Meanwhile, Sam Phillips was finding some more country singers he could work with,
and starting to transition into country and rockabilly, rather than the blues.
A couple of months before Mystery Train,
he put out another single by a two guitar and bass rockabilly act,
Hey Porter, by Johnny Cash and the Tenney.
see two. Hey, Porter, would you tell me the time? How much longer will it be to we cross that
Mason-Nixon line? At daylight, would you tell that engineer to slow it down? Or better still
just stop the train because I want to look around. Hey, Porter, hey Porter, what time did you say?
How much longer would it be to like and you see the light of days? We'll be hearing more from
Johnny Cash later, but right now he didn't seem to be star material.
Colonel Parker knew that if Elvis was to become the star he could become, he would have to move
to one of the major labels. Sun Records was a little nothing R&B label in Memphis. It barely
registered on the national consciousness. If Elvis was going to do what Tom Parker wanted
him to do, he was going to have to move to a big label.
big label like RCA records. Colonel Parker was in the country music business after all,
and if you were going to be anything at all in the country music business, you were going to work
in Nashville, not Memphis. Parker started hinting to people that Sam Phillips wanted to sell
Elvis's contract without bothering to check with Phillips. The problem was that Sam Phillips didn't
want to give up on Elvis so easily.
Phillips was, after all, a great judge of talent, and not only had he discovered Elvis,
he had nurtured his ability. It was entirely likely that without Sam Phillips,
Elvis would never have been anything more than a truck driver with a passable voice.
Elvis the artist was as much the creation of Sam Phillips as he was of Elvis Presley himself.
But there was a downside to Elvis's success, and it was one that every independent label dreads.
Sun Records was having hit, and the last thing you want as an indie is to have a hit.
The problem is cash flow.
Suppose the distributors want 100,000 copies of your latest single.
That's great, except they will not pay you for several months if they pay you at all.
And meanwhile, you need to pay the pressing plant for the singles before you get them to the distributors.
If you've been selling it in small but steady numbers and you suddenly start selling a lot, that can destroy your company.
Nothing is more deadly to the indie label than a hit.
And then on top of that, there was the lawsuit with Don Robey over Junior Parker.
That was eating Phillips' money.
money, and he didn't have much of it. But at that point, Sam Phillips didn't have any artists
who could take Elvis's place. He'd found the musician he'd been looking for, the one who could
unite black and white people in Phillips's dream of ending racism. So he came up with a plan. He decided
to tell Tom Parker that Elvis's contract would be for sale, like Parker wanted, but only for
$35,000. Now, that doesn't sound like a huge amount for Elvis's contract today, but in
1955, that would be the highest sum of money ever paid for a recording artist's contract.
It was certainly an absurd amount for someone who had so far failed to trouble the pop charts
at all. Phillips's view was that it was a ridiculous amount to ask.
for but if he got it he could cover his spiraling costs and if he didn't as seemed
likely he would still have Elvis as Phillips later said I thought hey I'll make him an
offer that I know they will refuse and then I'll tell them they'd better not spread
this poison any more I absolutely did not think Tom Parker could raise the
$35,000 and that would have been fine but he raised
raised the money, and damn, I couldn't back out then. He gave the Colonel an unreasonably
tight deadline to get him a $5,000 unrefundable deposit, and another unreasonably tight deadline
to get the other $30,000. Amazingly, the Colonel called his bluff. He got him the $5,000 almost
straight away, out of his own pocket, and by the deadline had managed to persuade Steve Scholes at
RCA to pay it back to him, to pay Sam Phillips the outstanding $30,000, and to pay Elvis a $5,000
signing bonus, of which, of course, a big chunk went directly into Tom Parker's pocket.
RCA quickly reissued I forgot to remember to forget and mystery train, while they were waiting
for Elvis's first recording session for his new label. With Elvis now on a major label,
Philips had to find a new rockabilly star to promote.
Luckily, there was a new young country boy who had come to audition for him.
Carl Perkins had definite possibilities.
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