By: Arjan Deelen - June 19, 2001 Source: Arjan Deleen
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Arjan van Deelen Scotty Moore
On
March 28th, 1998, Scotty and D.J. performed at an
Elvis convention here in Europe. That same evening,
I interviewed them both in Scotty's hotel room.
Actually, it wasn't easy to find good questions, as
Scotty's That's All
Right Elvis and Peter Guralnick's Last Train To
Memphis describe the early years in wonderful
detail. Nevertheless, the interviews were quite
interesting in many ways. Especially Scotty is very
straightforward and outspoken, and his viewpoints
shed a new light on various issues for me.
Q: Why did you decide to do an autobiography?
A: I have a daughter in Memphis that knew
the guy that wrote the book. She kept after me about it, and I finally told her
that if she'd shut up, I'd do the book.
Q: Do you think Elvis was musically active
before 'That's All Right'?
A: In an amateurish way, yes. He was
listening to bands, going to the Gospel all-night singings and so forth. He was
definitely singing and playing, but not professionally.
Q: How many days are there between your first
meeting with Elvis and the recording of
A: 'That's All Right'? According to some
it's a matter of months, while others say it all happened within a week.. It's
a matter of one day, really. I met him on Sunday, and we went in the studio
Monday night. That was when 'That's All Right' was cut. But that was an
audition, it wasn't meant as a session.
Q: You also tried 'Harbor Lights' and that
kind of stuff...
A: Yeah, those were just things
that...everybody would try and think of a song. We'd try and play it, and Sam
would record it. We'd listen to it and go on to something else.
Q: In an interview you said that Elvis'
relation-ship with you was like that of an older brother.
A: Basically, yeah.
Q: What kind of things did you discuss?
A: Good God, it's been 47 years ago.. he
was full of questions about a lot of things.
Q: I've read that he looked up to you because
you'd been in Korea and so forth, while he'd only been in and around Memphis...
A: Yeah, I'd been in the navy four years.
He was just curious and he'd ask questions about different things. But he did
that with Bill and D.J. too.
He had a mind that...he was quick to grasp .......
Q: Eager to learn.
A: Yeah.
Q: What kind of music did you listen to on
the car radio during those early tours?
A: Jazz when Elvis was with us. There was
a late night radio-show Out of New Orleans. It was around mid-night. (to D.J.:)
Was that Moon glow Martin?
D.J.: Yeah, Moon glow Martin. (Scotty
continues:) He had about three or four hours of jazz. Played all the big bands,
trio's and stuff, and you could pick that program up almost all over.
Just about anywhere in the country.
Q: About eight years ago, ABC produced the
television-series 'Good Rockin' Tonight', about the early years on the road. Was
it reasonably accurate?
A: Some of it was, and some of it was
absolutely made up. The network wanted it to be a sort of 'Dukes of Hazzard'.
We'd stop at a service-station to get gas, the place would get robbed and we'd
chase them. We didn't do that! (laughs)
Q: Is it true that you, Elvis and Bill jammed
with Lowell Fulson in a club in Houston?
A: Yeah. I can't tell you the name of the
club, but we actually did. It was an all-black club, and we played a couple of
numbers with him.
Q: Is that where Elvis got 'Reconsider Baby'
from?
A: No, he already knew it. When I first
met him it seemed like he knew every song that'd ever been recorded. Pop, R&B,
country...you name it.
Q: How did you come up with new songs for
studio-sessions and live-shows in those days?
A: Some of the stuff at Sun was just a
matter of... Sam, myself, Bill and Elvis would just think of a song and say: 'Do
you know that one?'. We might run it three times and see. If it didn't feel like
anything happened, we'd go on to something else. Of course, when he went to RCA,
the publishing companies would bring in stacks and stacks of demos.
Q: Freddie Bienstock.
A: Yeah, him mostly.
Q:
In December 1955 Hill & Range published the songbook 'Elvis Presley Album of
Jukebox Favorites', which included songs like ‘That's The Stuff You Gotta
Watch', 'Tennessee Saturday Night' and 'Always late With Your Kisses'. Were any
of those songs ever performed live or in the studio?
A: No, they would put in filers, songs
from their own catalogue.
Q: I have read that Elvis sang the
Platters-hit 'Only You' live in 1955/56. Was it performed on more than one
occasion?
A: Yes, I think so.I remember doing it,
but I don't remember any dates. We did it some, but not very much.
Q: And 'Rock Around The Clock'?
A: We tried that a few times, that was
really in the very early days. I don't think it ever got recorded on tape, live
or anything.
Q: They recently found Louisiana Hayride
recordings of 'Hearts Of Stone' and 'Little Mama'.
A: Who is "they"?
Ernst Jørgensen from RCA. I
remember 'Hearts Of Stone', but I don't remember the other song.
Q: It's a Clovers song, and there's steel and
piano on it.
A: We used the other guys on there some.
Steel players, drummers...
Q: Floyd Cramer also played at the Hayride,
didn't he?
A: Yeah, but I don't remember him playing
anything with us at the Hayride. He played some club dates with us. There's
another guy that I do remember playing piano with us, and his name is Leon Post.
See, it was a big stage with different acts, and they all intermingled. It was
like a big family. It was like: "Hey c'mon, play with me on that song" - you
know, that kind of thing. That's how we ended up with piano and steel sometimes.
Q: Can you remember if you, Elvis and Bill
performed on Roy Orbison's television-show on KOSA in Odessa, Texas in 1955?
A: We may have, I don't know. I don't
remember it.
Q: Did Elvis talk about his contemporaries?
A: We talked about every sucker that we
heard on the radio!. That was just natural.
Q: Who did you admire from that era?
A: Not too many! (laughs)
Q: How did the first session alter Elvis came
out of the army go?
A: That was in March '60. It was an
all-night session to cut a full album. It felt just like any other: a session is
a session.
We went on the train the next day to go to Miami to do the Sinatra show.
Q: It's been rumored that Elvis hated 'Stuck
On You'.
A: (DJ.:) I don't blame him!
Q: Were you surprised by his change of style
with songs like 'It's Now Or Never'?
A: No, I liked those. 'Suspicion', 'It's
Now Or Never'... they were fun to do.
Q: Did you pitch any songs to Elvis?
A: just
Q: Jumping a few years ahead to the NBC Special in
'68, was it planned that Elvis would take your
guitar?
A: No. He was watchin', he looked at the
look on my face, seeing if I was agitated by his playing or not!
(laughs).
Q: Did you get any directions from the
producers?
A: It was a jam session, that's all we
did. The director said: "There's the stage. Don't worry about the cameras, just
do what you want to do".
Q: So the songs were not selected by the
producers?
A: No, it was just whatever came into
Elvis' mind, whatever he felt like doing.
Q:
How would you rate Elvis as a guitarist?
A: Fair. He had a good sense of timing
and rhythm. He didn't know a whole lotta chords, but those he knew, he really
could use 'em. And he'd play a little bass, a little drums...He had rhythm in
his voice, he just had a natural thing about that. He could hear a song, and he
knew what he could do with that song. And nobody else could do it. They're still
imitating him today but they just can't do it. They just don't have whatever it
is that Elvis had.
Q: Do you keep up with new releases?
A: No, in fact I'm kind of hacked off by
all these what they call "alternate takes". They're not alternate takes, they're
outtakes - throwaway stuff that was supposed to hit the garbage can. All that
does is show us working on a song, mistakes and all, 'till we finally reach the
point: "That's a master".
Q: You're not too happy with it being
released?
A: No, I'm not. In fact, we got the Union
after them now 'cause they're saying it's part of the session, and the Union is
saying: "No, it's new material you're putting out".
Q: Fans are looking at it from a different
angle. They simply enjoy hearing Elvis singing a song with a different phrasing,
or in a different arrangement.
A: Oh sure, the fans will eat it up, but
that's not the point. You think Rembrandt would enjoy all his throwaway drawings
being out on the market? He went for the master, and when he found it, that was
it. It's an invasion of privacy as far as I'm concerned. Not only Elvis', but
all of us, everybody working with him. But I can see the fans' point. And
anything that they haven't heard him do is gonna make money for the record
company But I don't think Elvis would appreciate it if he was here. If he was
here, he'd do something about it. The only reason they're getting away with it,
is that he's not here!
This interview was conducted
in Denmark 2001 by Arjan Deelen. © Arjan Deelen 2001. Arjan has kindly given elvis.com.au to publish this interview
on the Internet.
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