Eileen wrote (in selected passages on the first page of this thread, with emphasis added):
I've heard a [negatively meant] Ray Charles quote to the effect that "Elvis sang everything the same".... it does seem he had a point, post-Sun anyway. Not being creative myself I struggle to put words to my thoughts. Elvis did seem to a) mostly copy what he heard and b) perform a song one way once he settled upon his rendition. He didn't much explore what could be done with a song, nor his skills as a musician (once he became established), nor attempt songwriting. Whatever that type of musical/creative expression would be it didn't seem to be a need for him, or at least one he continued to explore. Perhaps because once he was beyond the equal footing of Elvis/Scotty/Bill there wasn't much of a partnership opportunity where he felt safe or inspired to do this - afterwards most everyone involved was in his service to some degree. For Elvis that seemed to make it riskier to go out on limb, given his insecurity. Or perhaps due to his view of himself as more of a hired hand, so to speak.
An article I read called Elvis "the human jukebox" - not perjoratively, as I recall. That might be a fairly accurate summary of his musical talents. His ear for a melody, sense of rhythm, ability to express himself vocally, and his beautiful voice.... I believe he was linguistically gifted in some respects however don't know the proper jargon at all. It's a different talent (or set of talents) than what Charles meant. Personal gifts rather than self-expression via the act of creation. ...
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I don't think that's what (Ray Charles) meant. I think he meant.... what I said - that Elvis didn't make significant stylistic changes in the vast majority of his renditions, particularly the b) I mentioned.... the Elvis' rendition of I Got A Woman, for instance, was essentially the same every time Elvis sang it. He didn't do a country rendition in 1974 vs. a blues rendition in 1972 vs. a rock rendition in 1970. Once Elvis settled upon a particular feel and phrasing for a song that's generally where it stayed. At best he'd speed up a track out of boredom or show timing...
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He apparently didn't have a need to create in that way - to really make something different and new himself out of what was. There was no burning desire to see how he might re-fashion this thing. As you said yourself, twice, he could imagine no reason to change it - vs. folks who climb mountains just because they're there.
This likely also explains why Elvis wasn't looking for material between sessions nor instructing his employees to do so. Why? He didn't HAVE to create something until he was scheduled to be inside the studio, and then not until he was actually there. He just didn't have the need. He was seemingly just as satisfied, maybe more so, to sit in his piano room singing his nth rendition of an old gospel song.
...
(LIketheBike) used ... terms here that I've been (that word again) struggling with. I'm thinking that Elvis used music as a vehicle of expression, not particularly as a medium of creation.
Many highly creative people use multiple mediums because they have an intense desire to express themselves via creation of something. Many singers also paint and write and design. They just have to create something, something from nothing. Whereas with Elvis it just seems that the very act of singing, singing anything whereby he could express himself, was his thing.
Interpretation... that's one of the words I've been needing... a few months ago I mentioned on a Prince board that interpretation was such a devalued talent, and has been for years. Some of the comments folks have made in the thread speak more to Elvis as an interpreter I think....
Eileen, lest we get too far outside of your original comments, I've taken the liberty of posting the above. I'm not going to repeat my comments
about the creativity of Howlin' Wolf (etc.) but to also note that your comment seem to downplay the role of the entertainer/ singer as itself
an act of creation. A bluesman like Sonny Boy Williamson, for one example, created a persona (in part hard-won and an accident of birth) but also a performing act that itself was so highly unique that it was a form of genius.
Elvis, too, had a deceptively "easy"
persona. "Oh, he's just being 'Elvis,'" one might say.
No, I dare say creating a charismatic
and engaging
persona was itself a craft for such acts.
(It's also what
I find lacking in otherwise genius performers like John Lennon or Bob Dylan who make up these deficits with their wordplay, songwriting and
ability to put across a song with an instrument.) Only the ROLLING
STONE school of thought reduces Elvis and his rockabilly and blues
ilk to be some kind of
intuitive, natively born entertainers but otherwise seen
as undeveloped...
It seems to me you are taking way too narrow a view of Elvis' creating through his voice, and you are dismissing his well-known need to repeatedly do a take until it had the right "feel" or "sound." As Jorgensen,
Guralnick and others have made plain, in so many cases, Elvis was effectively the producer.
I appreciate your rather brave comments in this "pro-Elvis" arena, but
I take issue with the notion that Elvis wasn't creative. Only a limited
definition of a musical "creator" would exclude Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, B.B. King or Frank Sinatra with such a criteria.