THE
BEATLES: John, Paul, George & Ringo talk about Elvis Presley
February10, 1964 Elvis Presley sends a congratulatory telegram to the Beatles
February10, 1964 Elvis Presley sends a congratulatory telegram to the Beatles
PAUL We met Elvis Presley at the end of our stay in L.A. We'd
tried for years to, but we could never get to him. He was our greatest idol,
but the styles were changing in favor of us. He was a pretty powerful image to
British people. You'd look at photos of him doing American concerts, and the
audience would not even be jumping up and down. We used to be amazed, seeing
them sitting in the front row - not even dancing.
JOHN
LENNON : When I first heard
"Heartbreak Hotel," I could hardly make out what was being said. It
was just the experience of hearing it and having my hair stand on end. We'd
never heard American voices singing like that. They'd always sung like Sinatra
who enunciated well. Suddenly, there's this hillbilly hiccupping with echo and
all this bluesy background going on. We didn't know what the hell Presley was
singing about or Little Richard or Chuck Berry. It took a long time to work out
what was going on. To us, it just sounded like great noise.
PAUL We tried many times to meet Elvis, Colonel Tom Parker, his
manager would just show up with a few souvenirs, and that would have to do us
for a while. We didn't feel brushed off we felt we deserved to be brushed off.
After all, he was Elvis, and who were we to dare to want to meet him? But we
finally received an invitation to go round and see him when he was making a
film in Hollywood.
GEORGE HARRISON Meeting Elvis was one of the high-lights of the tour. It was
funny, because by the time we got near his house we'd forgotten where we were
going. We were in a Cadillac going round and round along Mulholland, and we'd
had a couple of "cups of tea" in the back of the car. It didn't
really matter where we were going - it's like the comedian Lord Buckley says,
"We go into a native village and take a couple of peyote buds, we might not
find out where we is, but we'll sure find out who we is." Anyway, we were
just having fun, we were all in hysterics. (We laughed a lot. That's one thing
we forgot about for a few years - laughing. When we went through all the
lawsuits, it looked as if everything was bleak, but when I think back to before
that, I remember we used to laugh all the time.) We pulled up at some big gates
and someone said, "Oh yeah, we're going to see Elvis," and we all
fell out of the car laughing, trying to pretend we weren't silly, just like a
Beatles cartoon.
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The
Beatles sit down on the floor right in front of Elvis, in a semi-circle,
and they look up and they are just staring at him. There's this dead
silence in the room until Elvis says, 'Well, what-the-hell, if you guys
aren’t going to talk to me I’m going to my bedroom'. And then everyone
started to laugh and that broke the ice.
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JOHN It was very exciting, we were all nervous as hell, and we
met him in his big house in L.A. - probably as big as the one we were staying
in, but it still felt like "big house, big Elvis." He had lots of
guys around him, all these guys that used to live near him (like we did from
Liverpool, we always had thousands of Liverpool people around us, so I guess he
was the same.) And he had pool tables! Maybe a lot of American houses are like
that, but it seemed amazing to us. It was like a nightclub.
RINGO STARR I was pretty excited. We were lucky because it was the four
of us and we had each other to be with. The house was very big. We walked in,
and Elvis was sitting down on a settee in front of the TV. He was playing a
bass guitar, which even to this day I find very strange. He had all his guys
around him, and we said, "Hi, Elvis." He was pretty shy, and we were
a little shy, but between the five of us we kept it rolling. I felt I was more
thrilled to meet him than he was to meet me.
PAUL He showed us in. He just looked like Elvis - we were
all major fans, so it was hero worship of a high degree. He said, "Hello,
lads - do you want a drink?" We sat down and watched telly, and he had the
first remote any of us had ever seen. You just aimed it at the telly and - wow!
That's Elvis! He was playing Charlie Rich's "Mohair Sam" all evening
- he had it on a jukebox.
JOHN He had his TV going all the time, which is what I do; we
always have TV on. We never watch it - it's just there with no sound on, and we
listen to records. In front of the TV, he had a massive amplifier with a bass
plugged into it, and he was up playing bass all the time with the picture up on
the TV. So we just got in there and played with him. We all plugged in whatever
was around, and we played and sang. He had a jukebox, like I do, but I think he
had all his hits on it. But if I'd made as many as him, maybe I'd have all mine
on.
PAUL That was the greatest. Elvis was into the bass, so there I
was, "Well, let me show you a thing or two, El..." Suddenly he was a
mate. It was a great conversation piece for me. I could actually talk about the
bass, and we sat around and just enjoyed ourselves. He was great. Talkative.
Friendly and a little bit shy. But that was his image. We expected that, we
hoped for that.
JOHN At first we couldn't make him out. I asked him if he
was preparing new ideas for his next film and he drawled, "Ah sure am. Ah
play a country boy with a guitar who meets a few gals along the way, and ah
sing a few songs." We all looked at one another. Finally Presley and
Colonel Parker laughed and explained that the only time they departed from that
formula - for Wild in the Country - they lost money.
PAUL She came in, and I got this picture of her as a sort of a
Barbie doll - with a purple gingham dress and a gingham bow in her very beehive
hair, with lots of makeup. We all said hello, and then it was, "Right,
lads, hands off - she's going." She didn't stay long. I can't blame him,
although I don't think any of us would have made a pass at her. That was definitely
not on - Elvis's wife, you know! That was unthinkable - she didn't need to be
put away quite so quickly, we thought.
GEORGE I don't remember even seeing Priscilla. I spent most of the
party trying to suss out from the gang if anybody had any reefers. But they
were uppers and whiskey people. They weren't really into reefer smoking in the
South.
JOHN It was nice meeting Elvis. He was just Elvis, you know? He
seemed normal to us, and we were asking about his making movies and not doing
any personal appearances or TV. I think he enjoys making movies so much, we
couldn't stand not doing personal appearances, we'd get bored - we get bored
quickly. He says he misses it a bit. We never talked about anything else - we
just played music. He wasn't bigger than us, but he was "the thing."
He just wasn't articulate, that's all.
PAUL It was one of the great meetings of my life. I think he
liked us. I think at that time, he may have felt a little bit threatened, but
he didn't say anything. We certainly didn't feel any antagonism. I only met him
that once, and then I think the success of our career started to push him out a
little, which we were very sad about, because we wanted to coexist with him,
RINGO I saw him again. I remember one time I got really angry with
him because he just wasn't making any music. He'd stopped everything and was
just playing football with his guys. So I said, "Why don't you go into a
studio and give us some music here? What are you doing?" I can't remember
what he said - he probably just walked away and started playing football again.
JOHN Up until Elvis joined the army, I thought it was beautiful
music and Elvis was for me and my generation what the Beatles were to the '60s.
But after he went into the army, I think they cut "les bollocks" off.
They not only shaved his hair off but I think they shaved between his legs,
too. He played some good stuff after the army, but it was never quite the same,
it was like something happened to him psychologically. Elvis really died the
day he joined the army. That's when they killed him, and the rest was a living
death.
The
Beatles performed their last concert in Candlestick Park, San Francisco on 29th
August 1966. In this exclusive excerpt from the book The Beatles Anthology
recounts what it was like to come face-to-face with their idol Elvis
Presley