
Scotty and Elvis
Aboard the Mystery Train
by Scotty Moore with James L. Dickerson
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Pub Date Jul 02 2013 | Archive Date Jul 10 2013
University Press of Mississippi | American Made Music Series
Description
The true life story of Elvis’s original
guitarist, the masterful Scotty Moore
When Elvis
Presley first showed up at Sam Phillips’s Memphis-based Sun Records studio, he
was a shy teenager in search of a sound. Phillips invited a local guitarist
named Scotty Moore to stand in. Scotty listened carefully to the young singer
and immediately realized that Elvis had something special. Along with bass
player Bill Black, the trio recorded an old blues number called “That’s All
Right, Mama.” It turned out to be Elvis’s first single and the defining record
of his early style, with a trilling guitar hook that swirled country and blues
together and minted a sound with unforgettable appeal.
Its success launched a
whirlwind of touring, radio appearances, and Elvis’s first break into movies.
Scotty was there every step of the way as both guitarist and manager, until
Elvis’s new manager, Colonel Tom Parker, pushed him out. Scotty and Elvis would
not perform together again until the classic 1968 “comeback” television
special. Scotty never saw Elvis after that.
With both Bill Black and Elvis gone, Scotty Moore is the only one left to tell the story of how Elvis and Scotty transformed popular music and how Scotty created the sound that became a prototype for so many rock guitarists to follow. Thoroughly updated, this edition delivers guitarist Scotty Moore’s story as never before.
Scotty Moore, Nashville, Tennessee, is the sole survivor of the Sun Records sessions of July 1954 during which Elvis Presley, Bill Black, and Scotty Moore, with Sam Phillips at the engineering sound board, blended country and blues into a new art form that would shake up American culture for decades to come. James L. Dickerson, Jackson, Mississippi, is a freelance author and journalist who has published dozens of books.
Advance Praise
Everyone else
wanted to be Elvis—I wanted to be Scotty."
—Keith Richards
“At the heart of Jimmy Page is the 14-year-old playing skiffle and trying to figure out Scotty Moore licks in his bedroom.”
—Billy Corgan
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781617037917 |
PRICE | $25.00 (USD) |