Студопедия
Случайная страница | ТОМ-1 | ТОМ-2 | ТОМ-3
АрхитектураБиологияГеографияДругоеИностранные языки
ИнформатикаИсторияКультураЛитератураМатематика
МедицинаМеханикаОбразованиеОхрана трудаПедагогика
ПолитикаПравоПрограммированиеПсихологияРелигия
СоциологияСпортСтроительствоФизикаФилософия
ФинансыХимияЭкологияЭкономикаЭлектроника

The result of Mr. Guralnick's meticulous research is not only the most 51 страница



443--444 James Page, a Press-Scimitar reporter: Memphis Press-Scimitar, December 21, 1957.

444 He left for Nashville that same night: Nashville Tennessean, December 22, 1957; also

Nashville Banner, December 21, 1957.

1957·

444--445 Gordon Stoker came out: Interview with Gordon Stoker, 1993.

445 How were things going?: Interview with T. Tommy Cutrer, 1990.

445 Jimmie Rodgers Snow, too, came by: Interview with Jimmie Rodgers Snow, 1993.

446 On 'TUesday, December 24, Elvis wrote: Memphis Commercial Appeal, December 28,

446 He concluded by Wishing Alan Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 14.

446--447 Jimmie Rodgers Snow arrived: Interviews with Jimmie Rodgers Snow, 1990, 1993.

446--447 an increasing dependence on pills and alcohol: Interview with Jimmie Rodgers

Snow, 1990; Jimmy Snow, I Cannot Go Back, pp. 57-58ff.

447 "She just couldn't cope": Interview with Lillian Fortenberry. 1988.

447--448 "I was working for my father": Interview with Alan Fortas, 1990.

450 Elvis had read the book: Both Alan Portas and George Klein spoke in separate interviews

of Elvis' unusual preparations for the role.

450 He got together with his new friend Kitry Dolan to run lines: May Mann, Elvis and the

Colonel, pp. 47ff.

450 "You just didn't have a lot of fooling": Interview with Jan Shepard, 1992.

451 "I almost hesitate, I creep up to the sentence": BBC interview with Walter Matthau, as

quoted in Gerry McLafferty, Elvis Presley in Hollywood.

45 1 In Carolyn Jones' observation "he was always": Joseph Lewis, "Elvis Presley Lives," Cosmopolitan,

November 1968.

45 1 Jones suggested: Interview with Cliff Gleaves, 1991.

45 1 One Sunday when he was feeling blue: Interview withJan Shepard.

45 1 It was in the fourth night: Memphis Press-Scimitar, January 14, 1958.

452 He saw Pat Boone: Interview with Jan Shepard.

453--454 Toward the end of February: Ibid.

454--455 "Hal Wallis loved locations": Interview with Alan Fortas.

455--456 He wasn't worried about the army: Vernon Scott, "Elvis at Home, Awaits Clippers,"

New York World-Telegram, March 15, 1958.

N O T E S '" 5 2 9

4S6 the Colonel had a big bunch of balloons: Interview with Trude Forsher, 1993.

4S6 Elvis posed politely for pictures: Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 21.

4S6 He was met by a Commercial Appeal reporter: James H. White, "Elvis Back in Town,

with Sideburns Clipped and the Army on His Mind," Memphis Commercial Appeal, March 15,

1958.

" P R E C I O U S M E M O R I E S "

4S9 On Monday he met Dewey: Memphis Press-Scimitar, March 18, 1958.

4S9 "no fewer than twelve beautiful girls": Alan Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 22.

4S9 "I screwed everything in sight": Larry GeUer and Joel Spector, "If I Can Dream, "

p. 236.

1993·

4S9 He had "fed them": Memphis Press-Scimitar, March 18, 1958.

4S9--460 "It was just 'So long' ": Interview with Scotty Moore, 1989.

460 he was dreading the artny: BBC interview with Anita Wood.

460 To Barbara Pittman, who had known him: Interview with Barbara Pittman, 1989.

460 ("Girls come and go"): Memphis Press-Scimitar, March 24, 1958.

460 "We puUed in to the drive-in": Interview with George Klein for Elvis in Hollywood,

460 "he got in and out": Vince Staten, The Real Elvis: Good Old Boy, p. 139.

460 "Overnight," he said, "it was all gone": 1972 interview.

461--462 He showed up at the draft board: Memphis Press-Scimitar, March 24, 1958; additional

sources are Alan Fortas' Elvis: From Memphis to Hollywood; Levy's Operation Elvis; and Elvis

the Soldier by Rex and Elisabeth Mansfield.

461 not before Anita got special pertnission: New York Post, March 24, 1958.

461 The picture of him in Life: Life, April 7, 1958.

46 1--462 "Elvis recaUed that in the days": Memphis Press-Scimitar, March 24, 1958.

462 The artny provided a box lunch: New York Post, March 24, 1958.

463 refusing only to sign autographs: New York}01Irnal-American, March 25, 1958.

463 "Start a loan company": Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 51.

463 He spotted a phone booth: Ibid., p. 52.



463 "No, sir. If I wore a string tie": Ibid., p. 54.

464 Hy Gardner wrote a column: New York Herald-Tribune, March 28, 1958.

464 After being chased for more than two hundred miles: Levy, Operation Elvis, pp. 61-63.

464--46S At Fort Hood things were under substantiaUy: Ibid., pp. 59ff.

46S recruit instructor Sergeant Bill Norwood, who befriended him: Albert Goldman, Elvis,

pp. 278-279·

46S--466 "I didn't ask for anything": 1972 interview.

466--467 a Waco businessman named Eddie Fadal: Interview with Eddie Fadal, 1993.

466 Elvis approached Rex Mansfield: Mansfield, Elvis the Soldier, pp. 16-18.

467 Someone turned on a tape recorder: This has been available on a number ofboodegs

over the years, starting off with An Evening with Elvis (Memphis Flash 92447).

468 "The treatment which I received": Mansfield, Elvis the Soldier, pp. 20-21.

469 "WeU, I know the papers had us engaged, married": Memphis Press-Scimitar, June 3,

1958; UPI reports, June 3; Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 69.

469 He went with his parents: UPI report, June 14, 1958.

469 "[Elvis] tried to throw me every way": Jerry Hopkins interview with Ray Walker

(MVC/MSU).

530 c-... N O T E S

470 By the time that Rex returned: Mansfield, Elvis the Soldier, pp. 22-23.

470 Anita, too, had returned by now: Levy, Operation Elvis, p. 71; "Anita Wood Reveals Why

Elvis and I Couldn't Marry," fan magazine article excerpted in Bill DeNight et al., eds.,

Elvis Album; and UPI report, June 14, 1958.

470-472 Elvis brought his parents over: Interview with Eddie Padal.

471 ("I just can't see myself over there"): Goldman, Elvis, p. 280.

472 A OJ named Rocky Prisco: Bill E. Burk, "Rocky Road Led to Meeting Elvis," Elvis

World 20, June 1991.

472 Vince Edwards and Billy Murphy detoured: Interview with Vince Edwards, 1990.

472--473 She called her doctor in Memphis: Interview with Dr. Charles Clarke, 1989. Dr.

Clarke's account of his forcefulness with army authorities is supported by news clippings of the

time.

474 She was in better spirits: UPI report, August 14, 1958.

474 "we got off the elevator": Interview with Lamar Fike, 1988.

474 When reporters came to the house at mid morning: UPI report, August 14, 1958.

474--475 "Tears streamed down his cheeks": Memphis Press-Scimitar, August 14, 1958.

475 "When Mama was feeling bad": UPI report, August 14, 1958.

475--476 Hundreds of fans had assembled: This account of Gladys' "waking" draws on

news accounts, Goldman's Elvis, and Elaine Dundy's Elvis and Gladys, as well as interviews

cited.

475 When Dr. Clarke arrived at the house: Interview with Dr. Charles Clarke.

475 "Elvis was in a daze": Fortas, Elvis, pp. 91-92.

475 Junior picked up Eddie Fadal: Interview with Eddie Padal.

476 "They couldn't get him to stop": Dundy, Elvis and Gladys, p. 325.

476 In the evening Sam and Dewey Phillips: Colin Escott and Martin Hawkins, Good

Roclein' Tonight: Sun Records and the Birth of Roc Ie 'n' Roll, p. 90.

476 "Come on in, Little": BBC interview with Anita Wood.

477 "When I went in the room": Interview with Dixie Locke, 1990.

477 "All we have now are memories": Memphis Press-Scimitar, August 16, 1958.

477 Every time they finished a song: Interview with J. D. Sumner, 1990; also interviews

with James Blackwood, 1988, 1991.

154·

477 The Reverend Hamill preached: Memphis Commercial Appeal, August 15, 1958.

477--478 "He went over to the casket": Interview with James Blackwood, 1991.

478--480 "I didn't mean to see him that night": Interview with Dixie Locke.

480 "He'd cry all day": Shelley Ritter interview with George Klein, 1993.

480 On Saturday he returned once again: Red West et al., Elvis: What Happened?, pp. 153-

480 "After a near emotional breakdown": Memphis Press-Scimitar, August 18, 1958.

480 his friends tried to cheer him up: Interview with Eddie Padal; Portas, Elvis, p. 93.

480-481 "He rolled his window down": Interview with George Biancet, 1989.

481 Toward the end of the week his dentist: Interview with Lester and Sterling Hofman,

1989.

482 It was, as Red described it: West et al., Elvis, p. 155.

482 Things were never again the same: Mansfield, Elvis the Soldier, p. 29.

482 ("Heavenly days, I just can't imagine it"): New Yorkjoumal-Ammcan, August 28, 1958.

482 Elvis and Eddie attended an r&b revue: Interview with Eddie Padal.

482 a Johnny Horton show in Temple: Interviews with Jerry Kennedy, 1990, and Eddie

N O T E S 􀃦 5 3!

Fadal; also 1993 interviews with Galen "Corncob" Christy, who promoted the show and played on

it, and Tillman Franks, who managed Johnny Horton and played bass in Horton's band.

Christy did not remember the exact date of the concert but thought it was just before he

went into the army himself, in mid September. His recollection was of asking Elvis how things

were going. " 'It's like prison: " said Elvis, who had met Christy at the 1955 OJ convention in

Nashville. "He said, 'I tried to go to church the other day, and I disrupted the church service.' He

thought that was not right: that a human being would disrupt the worship of the Lord."

483 The last weekend that he was at Fort Hood: Kitty Dolan, "I Shared Elvis' Love," TV and

Movie Screen, March 1959.

483 ':At two A. M. we said good night": May Mann, Elvis and the Colonel, p. 68.

483 he asked Eddie: Interview with Eddie Fadal.

483-484 The train took about an hour: Interview with George Klein, 1990.

484 One of his fellow soldiers gave Elvis a book: Elvis named the book, and the poem

"Should You Go First," at his pre-embarkation press conference. He said that he had read several

other poems, and I have taken the liberty of guessing which ones. He said that he preferred

poetry to short stories.

484 Charlie was 'bound and determined": Mansfield, Elvis the Soldier, p. 33; also interview

with Charlie Hodge, 1989.

484-487 It was a scene worthy of P. T. Barnum: The scene is fully audible in recordings of

the press conference - and visible to a degree as well in film clips. It is particularly well described

in Ren Grevan's "On the Beat," Billboard, September 29, 1958.

487 "Come on," said the Colonel: New York Journal-American, September 28, 1958.

487 "I think [' m talking for all the guys": Ibid.

487-488 "He was resigned": Interview with Anne Fulchino, 1993.

488 Why don't you come along, too?: In West et aI., Elvis: What Happened?, Red has Elvis

asking both him and Lamar at this point, but since he had already announced in the press conference

that Lamar would be accompanying him, this is my best guess at the acrual scenario.

Bibliography

R E F E R E N C E

Cotten, Lee. All Shook Up: Elvis Day-by-Day, 1954-1977. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Pierian Press, 1985.

--. Shake, Rattle &- Roll: The Golden Age of American Rock 'n' Roll. Vol. I, 1952-1955. Ann

Arbor, Mich.: Pierian Press, 1989.

Dellar, Fred, Roy Thompson, and Douglas B. Green. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Country

Music. New York: Harmony Books, 1977.

Elvis: Like Any Other Soldier. Reprint of the 1958 2nd Army Division Yearbook. Port Townsend,

Wash.: Osborne Productions, 1988.

F.B.I. Files for Elvis A. Presley. Released under the Freedom of Information Act.

Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration. Mississippi: The WPA Guide to

the Magnolia State. Golden anniversary ed. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1988.

---. The WPA Guide to Tennessee. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1986.

Gart, Galen, compo and ed. First Pressings: Rock History as Chronicled in Billboard Magazine. Vol. I,

1948-1950. Milford, N.H.: Big Nickel Publications, 1986.

---. First Pressings: Rock History as Chronicled in Billboard Magazine. Vol. 2, 1951-1952. Milford,

N.H.: Big Nickel Publications, 1986.

--. The History of Rhythm &- Blues. Vols. 1-7 (1951-1957). Milford, N.H.: Big Nickel Publications,

1991-1993.

--. The History of Rhythm &- Blues, Special 1950 Volume. Milford, N.H.: Big Nickel Publications,

1993.

Gentry, Linnell. A History and Encyclopedia of Country, Western, and Gospel Music. Nashville: linnell

Gentry, 1961.

Hardy, Phil, and Dave Laing. Encyclopedia of Rock, 1955-1975. London: Aquarius Books, 1977.

The 1953 Senior Herald. Humes High School Yearbook. Reprint, Port Townsend, Wash.: Osborne

Enterprises, 1988.

Report of Guardian Ad Litem in re the Estate of Elvis A. Presley, Deceased, in the Probate Court of Shelby

County, Tennessee. Number A655.

Stambler, Irwin. Encyclopedia of Pop, Rock and Soul. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1977.

Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Landon. Encyclopedia of Folk, Country and Western Music. New York:

St. Martin's Press, 1969.

Whisler, John A. Elvis Presley: Reference Guide and Discography. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press,

1981.

Worth, Fred L., and Steve D. Tamerius. All About Elvis. New York: Bantam Books, 1981.

---. Elvis: His Life from A to Z. Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1988.

5 3 2

B I B L I O G RA P H Y <-.... 533

D I S C O G R A P H I B S, S O N G A N D R B C O R D G U I D B S

Blackburn, Richard. Rodeabilly: A Comprehensive Discography ofReisSlUS. N.p.: Richard Blackburn,

1975·

Cotten, Lee, and Howard A. DeWitt. JailhollSe Roele: The Bootleg Records of Elvis Presley, 1970--1983.

Ann Arbor, Mich.: Pierian Press, 1983.

The Elvis Presley Album ofJulee Box Favorites, NO. 1. New York: Hill and Range Songs, 1956.

Escott, Colin, and Martin Hawkins. Sun Records: The Discography. Vollersode, West Germany:

Bear Family, 1987.

Hawkins, Martin, and Colin Escott. Elvis Presley: The nlllStrated Discography. London: Omnibus

Press, 1981.

Jancik, Wayne. Billboard Boole ofOnt-Hit Wonders. New York: Watson-Guptill, 1990.

Jorgensen, Ernst, Erik Rasmussen, and Johnny Mikkelsen. Elvis Recording Sessions. Stenlose,

Denmark: JEE Productions, 1984.

Jorgensen, Ernst, Erik Rasmussen, and Roger Semon. Sessionography and Discography for

Elvis: The King of Roc Ie 'N' Roll: The Complete 50'S Masters (RCA 07863-66050-Z), 199Z.

Kingsbury, Paul, ed. Country on Compact Disc: The Essential Guide to the MIISic. New York: Grove

Press, 1993.

Pavlow, Big Al. The R &- B Boole: A Disc-History of Rhythm &- Blues. Providence: Music House

Publishing, 1983.

Tunzi, Joseph A. Elvis Sessions: The Recorded MIISic of Elvis Mon Presley, 1953-1977. Chicago: JAT

Productions, 1993.

Weisman, Ben. Elvis Presley: "The Hollywood Years. " Secaucus, N.J.: Warner Brothers Publications,

199Z.

Whitburn, Joel. Pop Memories, 1890--1954: The History of American Popular MIISic. Menomonee

Falls, Wis.: Record Research, 1986.

--. Top Country Singles, 1944-1988. Menomonee Falls, Wis.: Record Research, 1989.

--. Top Pop Records, 1955-1972. Menomonee Falls, Wis.: Record Research, 1973.

---. Top R &- B Singles, 1942-1988. Menomonee Falls, Wis.: Record Research, 1988.

B O OKS OF M O R B G B N B R A L I N T B R B S T

Alexander, A. L., ed. Poems That Touch the Heart. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1941.

Amburn, Ellis. Darle Star: The Roy Orbison Story. New York: Lyle Stuart, 1990.

Arnold, Eddy. It's a Long Way from Chester County. Old Tappan, N.].: Hewitt House, 1969.

Atkins, Chet, with Bill Neely. Country Gentleman. Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1974.

Atkins, John, ed. The Carter Family. London: Old Time Music, 197J.

Bane, Michael. White Boy Singin' the Blues: The Blacle Roots of White Rocle. New York: Penguin

Books, 1982.

Bane, Michael, and Mary Ellen Moore. Tampa, Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Tampa: Misher

and King Publishing, 1981.

Banks, Ann, ed. First-Person America. New York: Vintage Books, 1981.

Barthel, Norma. Ernest Tubb Discography (1936-1969). Roland, Okla.: Ernest Tubb Fan Club Enterprises,

1969.

Bashe, Philip. Teenage Idol, Travelin ' Man: The Complete Biography of Ric Ie Nelson. New York: Hyperi

on, 199Z.

Benson, Bernard. The Minstrel. New York: G. P. Pumam's Sons, 1977.

Berry, Chuck. Chucle Berry: The Autobiography. New York: Harmony Books, 1987.

534 '" B I B L I O G RA P H Y

Biles, Roger. Memphis i n the Great Depression. Knoxville: University o f Tennessee Press, 1986.

Black, Jim. Elvis on the Road to Stardom. London: W. H. Allen, 1988.

Blaine, Hal, with David Goggin. Hal Blaine and the Wrecking Crew. Emeryville, Calif.: Mix

Books, 1990.

Blumhofer, Edith L. Restoring the Faith: The Assemblies of God, Pentecostalism, and American Culture.

Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1993.

Booth, Stanley. Rythm Oil: A journey Through the Music of the American South. London: Jonathan

Cape, 1991.

Bowles, Jerry. A Thousand Sundays: The Story of the Ed Sullivan Show. New York: G. P. Putnam's

Sons, 1980.

Branch, Taylor. Parting the Waters: America in the King Years. New York: Simon and Schuster,

1988.

Braudy, Leo. The Frenzy of Renown: Fame and Its History. New York: Oxford University Press,

1986.

Buckle, Phillip. All Elvis: An Unofficial Biography of the "King of Discs." London: Daily Mirror,

1962.

Burk, Bill E. Early Elvis: The Humes Years. Memphis: Red Oak Press, 1990.

---. Early Elvis: The Tupelo Years. Memphis: Propwash Publishing. Forthcoming.

---. Elvis: A 30-Year Chronicle. Tempe, Ariz.: Osborne Enterprises, 1985.

---. Elvis Memories: Press Between the Pages. Memphis: Propwash Publishing, 1993.

---. Elvis Through My Eyes. Memphis: Burk Enterprises, 1987.

Cain, Robert. Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On: jerry Lee Lewis. New York: Dial Press, 1981.

Cantor, Louis. Whulin' on Beale. New York: Pharos Books, 1992.

Capers, Gerald M., Jr. The Biography of a River Town: Memphis, Its Heroic Age. 1966. Reprint,

Memphis: Burke's Book Store.

Carr, Roy, and Mick Farren. Elvis Presley: The Illustrated Record. New York: Harmony Books,

1982.

Cash, Johnny. The Man in Black. New York: Warner Books, 1975.

Cash, June Carter. From the Heart. New York: Prentice Hall Press, 1987.

Cash, W. J. The Mind of the South. 1941. Reprint, New York: Vintage Books.

Chapple, Steve, and Reebee Garofalo. Rock 'n' Roll Is Here to Pay. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1977.

Choron, Sandra, and Bob Oskam. Elvis! The Last Word. New York: Citadel Press, 1991.

Cocke, Marian J. I Called Him Babe: Elvis Presley's Nurse Remembers. Memphis: Memphis State

University Press, 1979.

Cohn, David. Where I Was Born and Raised. Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press,

1967·

Cohn, Nik. Rock from the Beginning. New York: Pocket Books, 1970.

Conaway, James. Memphis Afternoons. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1993.

Country Music Foundation. Country: The Music and the Musicians. New York: Abbeville Press,

1988.

Country Music Magazine, editors of. The Illustrated History of Country Music. Garden City, N.Y.:

Doubleday, 1979.

Crumbaker, Marge, and Gabe Tucker. Up and Down with Elvis Presley. New York: G. P. Putnam's

Sons, 1981.

Dalton, David.james Dean: The Mutant King. New York: Dell, 1974.

Dalton, David, and Lenny Kaye. Rock 100. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1977.

Daniel, Pete. Standing at the Crossroads. New York: Hill and Wang, 1986.

B I B L I O G RA P H Y c,.. 535

Davis, Jr., Sammy, Jane Boyar, and Burt Boyar. Hollywood i n a Suitcase. New York: William

Morrow, 1980.

--. Why Mer The Sammy Davis, Jr., Story. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1989.

DeCosta-Willis, Miriam, and Fannie Mitchell Delk. Homespun Images: An Anthology of Black Memphis

Writers and Artists. Memphis: LeMoyne Owen College, 1989.

Delmore, Alton. Truth Is Stranger than Publicity. Edited by Charles K- Wolfe. Nashville: Country

Music Foundation Press, 1977.

DeWitt, Howard A. Elvis - The Sun Years: The Story of Elvis Presley in the Fifties. Ann Arbor,

Mich.: Popular Culture, Ink., 1993.

Dollard, John. Caste and Class in a Southern Town. 3d ed. New York: Doubleday Anchor, 1957.

Dundy, Elaine. Elvis and Gladys. New York: Macmillan, 1985.

--. Ferriday, Louisiana. New York: Donald Fine, 1991.

Dunne, Philip. Take Two: A Lift in Music and Politics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980.

Elvis Presley. Prepared by the Editors of TV Radio Mirror Magazine. New York: Bartholomew

House, 1956.

Elvis Presley Heights, Mississippi: Lee County, 1921-1984. Compiled by Members of the Elvis Presley

Heights Garden Club. Tupelo, Miss., 1984.

Elvis Presley Speaks! Text by RobertJohnson. New York: Rave Publishing, 1956.

Escott, Colin, and Martin Hawkins. Good Rockin' Tonight: Sun Records and the Birth of Rock 'n'

Roll. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991.

Escott, Colin, Martin Hawkins, and Hank Davis. The Sun Country Years: Country Music in Memphis.

1950--1959. Vollersode. West Germany: Bear Family Records. 1987.

Escott. Colin, with George Merritt and William MacEwen. Hank Williams: The Biography. Boston:

Little. Brown. 1994.

Falkenburg. Claudia, and Andrew Solt, eds. A Really Big Show: A Visual History of the Ed Sullivan

Show. Text by John Leonard. New York: Viking Studio Books. 1992.

Farren. Mick. ed. Elvis in His Own Words. London: Omnibus Press. 1977.

Finnis. Rob, and Bob Dunham. Gene Vincent and the Blue Caps. London: Rob Finnis and Bob

Dunham, n.d.

Fortas. Alan. Elvis: From Memphis to Hollywood. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Popular Culture. Ink. • 1992.

Fowler, Gene, and Bill Crawford. Border Radio. Austin: Texas Monthly Press, 1987.

Fowles, Jib. Star Struck: Celebrity Peiformers and the American Public. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian

Institution Press, 1992.

Frady, Marshall. Southerners: AJournalist's Odyssey. New York: New American Library. 1980.

Gabree, John. The World of Rock. Greenwich, Conn.: Fawcett, 1968.

Gaillard, Frye. Watermelon Wine: The Spirit of Country Music. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1978.

Garbutt. Bob. Roc/eabilly Queens: The Careers and Recordings of Wanda Jackson. Janis Martin,

Brenda Lee. Toronto: Robert Garbutt Productions, 1979.

Gart, Galen. and Roy C. Ames. Duke/Peacock Records: An fllustrated History with Discography.

Milford. N.H.: Big Nickel Publications, 1990.

Gelatt. Roland. The Fabulous Phonograph. 1877-1977' New York: Collier Books, 1977.

Geller. Larry, and Joel Spector with Patricia Romanowski. "If I Can Dream": Elvis' Own Story.

New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989.

Gibson, Robert, with Sid Shaw. Elvis: A King Forever. London: Elvisly Yours, 1987.

Gillett. Charlie. The Sound of the City: The Rise of Rock and Roll. Rev. ed. London: Souvenir Press,

1983·

Goldman. Albert. Elvis. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1981.

5 3 6 '" B I B L I O G RA P H Y

---. Elvis: The Last 24 HOUTs. New York: St. Martin's Paperbacks, 199I.

Goldrosen, john, and john Beecher. Remembering Buddy: The Definitive Biography of Buddy Holly.

New York: Penguin Books, 1986.

GTaceland: The Living Legacy of Elvis Presley. San Francisco: Collins Publishers San Francisco, 1993.

Green, Douglas B. Country Roots: The Origins of Country Music. New York: Hawthorne Books,

1976.

Greenwood, Earl, and Kathleen Tracy. The Boy Who Would Be King. New York: Dutton, 1990.

Gregory, james, editor. The Elvis Presley Story. New York: Hillman Periodicals, 1960.

Gregory, Neal, and Janice Gregory. When Elvis Died. Washington, D.C.: Communications

Press, 1980.

Grissim, john. Country Music: White Man's Blues. New York: Paperback Library, 1970.

Gruber, J. Richard, organizer. Memphis: 1948-1958. Memphis: Memphis Brooks Museum of Art,

1986.

Guterman, Jimmy. Rockin' My Life Away: Listening to Jerry Lee Lewis. Nashville: Rudedge Hill

Press, 199I.

Hagarty, Britt. The Day the World Turned Blue: A Biography of Gene Vincent. Vancouver: Talonbooks,

1983.

Haining, Peter, ed. Elvis in Private. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1987.

Halberstam, David. The Fifties. New York: Villard Books, 1993.

Haley,john W., and john von Hoelle. Sound and Glory. Wilmington, Del.: Dyne-American Publishing,

1990.

Hammontree, Patsy Guy. Elvis Presley: A Bio-Bibliography. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press,

1985·

Hand, Albert. Meet Elvis. An Elvis Monthly Special: Manchester, 1962.

Harbinson, W. A. The mustrated Elvis. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1976.

Harbinson, W. A., and Kay Wheeler. GTowing Up with the Memphis Flash. Amsterdam: Tutti

Frutti Productions, 1994.

Hawkins, Martin, and Colin Escott, comps. The Sun RecoTds Roclcing YeaTS. London: Charly Records,

1986.

Hemphill, Paul. The Nashville Sound: Bright Lights and Country Music. New York: Simon and

Schuster, 1970.

Hill, Wanda june. We Remember, Elvis. Palos Verdes, Calif.: Morgin Press, 1978.

Historic Black Memphians. Memphis: Memphis Pink Palace Museum Foundation, n.d.

Hodge. Charlie, with Charles Goodman. Me 'n Elvis. Memphis: Casde Books, 1988.

Holmes, Richard. Footsteps: AdventuTes of a Romantic Biographer. New York: Viking, 1985.

Hopkins, jerry. Elvis. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1971.

---. Elvis: The Final YeaTS. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1980.

---. The Rock Story. New York: Signet Books, 1970.

Horstman. Dorothy. Sing YOUT Heart Out, Country Boy. Rev. Ed. Nashville: Country Music Foundation

Press, 1986.

Hurst, jack. Nashville's Grand Ole Opry. New York: Abrams, 1975.

The Impersonal Life. Marina del Rey, Calif.: DeVorss, 1988.

jenkins, Mary. Elvis: The Way I Knew Him. Memphis: Riverpark Publishers, 1984.

jenkinson, Philip, and Alan Warner. Celluloid Rock. New York: Warner Books, 1976.

jones, Ira, as told to Bill E. Burk. Soldier Boy Elvis. Memphis: Propwash Publishing, 1992.

juanico, june. Elvis -In the Twilight of Memory. Unpublished manuscript.

Kienzle, Rich. GTeat Guitarists: The Most Influential Players in Blues, Country Music, Jazz and Rock.

New York: Facts on File, 1985.

B I B L I O G RA P H Y '" 5 3 7

Killen, Buddy, with Tom Carter. By the Seat of My Pants. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993.

Kirby, Edward "Prince Gabe." From Africa to Beale Street. Memphis: Music Management, 1983.

Lacker, Marty, Patsy Lacker, and Leslie S. Smith. Elvis: Portrait of a Friend. New York: Bantam,

1980.

Laing, Dave. Buddy Holly. London: Studio Vista, 1971.

Langbroek, Hans. The Hillbilly Cat. Self-published, n.d.

Latham, Caroline, and jeannie Sakol. "E" Is for Elvis: An A to Z fllustrated Guide to the King of Rock

and Roll. New York: New American Library, 1990.

Lemann, Nicholas. Out of the Forties. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983.

--. The Promised Land. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1991.

Levine, Lawrence W. Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery

to Freedom. New York: Oxford University Press, 1977.

Levy, Alan. Operation Elvis. New York: Henry Holt, 1960.

Lewis, Myra, with Murray Silver. Great Balls of Fire: The Uncensored Story of Jerry Lee Lewis. New

York: Quill, 1982.

Lichter, Paul. The Boy Who Dared to Rock: The Definitive Elvis. New York: Doubleday Dolphin,


Дата добавления: 2015-09-29; просмотров: 35 | Нарушение авторских прав







mybiblioteka.su - 2015-2024 год. (0.065 сек.)







<== предыдущая лекция | следующая лекция ==>