Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Move over, Beatles...

James Burton provides guitars to Students





James Burton Provides Guitars to Students

The famed guitarist, who's played with Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Emmylou Harris, Merle Haggard, John Denver and Ricky Nelson, was handing out guitars to school children Tuesday.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame guitarist James Burton was at North Highlands Elementary in Shreveport today to present new guitars to children as part of the new Little Kids Rock! program.

Some researchers say there is a connection between academics, music and self-esteem.

Burton's foundation this year plans to give guitars to children at 23 Caddo schools to help them become better students.

Burton worked with music teachers this summer to get them ready for Little Kids Rock!


Source: http://www.ktbs.com/news/local/3709336.html

Elvis: $3 million bounty




A reward of $3 million has been offered to anyone who finds Elvis Presley alive.

The bounty has been stumped up by a US filmmaker who is currently putting together a documentary to coincide with next year's 30th anniversary of The King's death.

Adam Muskiewicz says he will pay-out the enormous reward if anyone gets concrete evidence to back up the conspiracy theories that suggest Elvis is still alive.

Muskiewicz has set-up a website to support the investigation, which has seen him interview around 200 people who knew the original rock'n'roll star.

He claims that around 25 per cent of the people interviewed so far believe Elvis is still alive, a theory backed-up by confusion surrounding his apparent death and subsequent funeral.

"You don't have to be an expert to see there were procedural questions - why was the funeral so fast? Things were sealed and people went quiet," Muskiewicz told Reuters.

For more information, go to elivswanted.com.

Source: Yahoo News UK

Gellar sues over Ebay breach




MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Celebrity psychic Uri Geller and two partners claim in a federal lawsuit that the former owners of Elvis Presley's first house breached an eBay contract to sell the home.

Geller, who gained notoriety in the 1970s for seeming to bend spoons through telekinesis, and his partners are seeking to rescind the sale of the property to Nashville record producer Mike Curb.

Their $905,100 offer was the high bid in the May 14 Internet auction. But after the auction, they made changes to the real estate contract that gave owners Cindy Hazen and Mike Freeman 60 days to move from the property.

"If we had signed the contract, they could have taken possession immediately. We couldn't do that," Freeman said.

Hazen and Freeman then decided to sell the house to Curb for $1 million, a move Geller and his partners claim broke their contract.

For Hazen and Freeman, now divorced, the sale of the Audubon property resulted in the reopening of a bankruptcy case in which they had been excused of $43,000 in debt. With profits from the sale of the home, Hazen said, more than $43,000 was placed in escrow to cover the debts owed to their creditors.

In a court hearing Thursday, Hazen and Freeman agreed to repay the money. "We wanted to fulfill that obligation," she said.

A former lieutenant governor of California, Curb is chairman of Curb Records and head of the Mike Curb Family Foundation, which describes itself as a "philanthropic organization dedicated to preserving music history and promoting music business education."

A Curb spokeswoman said in June that the foundation was negotiating with a Memphis college to operate a music education center at the former Presley home. She declined to name the college.

Presley bought the four-bedroom, ranch-style Memphis house in 1956 with his early song royalties. The singer, his parents and grandmother lived there for 13 months before moving to a two-story colonial house already known as Graceland.

Schiling shares Elvis memories in new book

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Beth Rucker, AP
Published: Monday, August 21, 2006


When he was 12, Jerry Schilling couldn't believe the voice he heard on the radio singing "That's All Right" belonged to a teenager from his own north Memphis neighborhood.

A few days after hearing the song, he was playing a pickup football game, and the quarterback on his team was the same kid from the neighborhood, 19-year-old Elvis Presley.

"We went into a huddle, and I said, 'Wow, that's the guy with a song on the radio!'" Schilling told The Associated Press.

Schilling has written a new memoir about his 23-year friendship with Presley, but he didn't use the book to convince anyone that his childhood friend was a great performer or a rock 'n' roll legend.

Instead, "Me and a Guy Named Elvis," written with Chuck Crisafulli, shows Presley's more human side, the intelligent and passionate man who struggled with drug abuse and was frustrated with his mediocre Hollywood movies.

After Presley's death in 1977, Schilling, who still lives in the Hollywood Hills, Calif., home that Elvis bought for him, worked for Elvis Presley Enterprises and produced documentaries and TV specials about the performer.

But Schilling had always said he wasn't interested in writing an Elvis book, as other members of the inner circle had done. He changed his mind only when Schilling's wife, Cindy, urged him to tell the story.

Schilling worked with Crisafulli, an entertainment journalist who has written several books. Publisher Gotham, an imprint of the Penguin Group, said that the pair wrote the book side by side over the course of three years, and it was a very successful collaboration. There are about 30,000 copies in print of the book, which already has been sent back for a second printing since its Aug. 17 release.

"It's a fun, complicated book about a simple friendship in a complicated world," Schilling said in a recent interview while in town to promote his new book. "(His death) was the biggest loss of my life, ever. I still miss him."

Peter Guralnick, author of the two-volume biography of Presley, "Last Train to Memphis" and "Careless Love," said Schilling's memoir is a balanced treatment of Presley and offers insights into the characters that surrounded the musician.

The book is "a personal memoir that, while it places its narrator squarely in the midst of historic events, never claims credit for those events in the way that so many self-serving memoirs are inclined to do," Guralnick wrote in the book's foreword.

The memoir also received the blessing of Presley's wife Priscilla and his daughter Lisa Marie.

Davis-Kidd Bookseller in Memphis sold more than 80 copies of the book during a preview weekend — a good showing for a topic that has tired most folks in Memphis, said Katherine Whitfield, marketing manager for the store.

"Me and a Guy Named Elvis" stands out from other Presley-themed books because it's clear he's not just trying to make a buck off his famous friend, Whitfield said.

"I think a lot of care was put into it," she said. "He talks about Elvis sort of like an older brother. I've seen a lot of people tell a lot of stories; it's hard to fake that sincerity."

Publisher's Weekly agreed, saying the memoir's "heartfelt narrative makes this more than just another piece of Elvis product."

Schilling started working for Presley in 1964, doing whatever was needed as Elvis moved from concerts to movie sets to the studio.

Those who worked for Presley — the so-called Memphis Mafia — became his friends and confidants. Presley even allowed Schilling and the others to live in his Memphis home at Graceland.

Schilling recalled a time while he lived at Graceland when Presley asked him to go for a drive with him. After a quiet ride, they pulled into the cemetery where the entertainer's mother, Gladys, was buried.

"Seeing him before that monument, it came to me that, perhaps for the very first time, I could see my friend as a small, fragile human — just like any other," he writes.

Even when Presley started seeing Priscilla, the Memphis Mafia was always around. Presley's manager, "Colonel" Tom Parker, shut his buddies out of their 1967 wedding in Las Vegas, but Presley managed to invite them along on the honeymoon.

"When he carried Priscilla across the threshold of their new Palm Springs home — the so-called Honeymoon House — the first thing Priscilla saw on the other side was us," Schilling writes.

Presley wanted his buddies around, but he wanted them to keep their distance from Priscilla, Schilling said, even though they were all living under the same roof.

Schilling once saw Priscilla in the kitchen of Graceland looking flushed and asked her if she was feeling OK — not realizing she and Elvis had been arguing. Priscilla later told Elvis that Schilling cared about her feelings, and it drove Elvis crazy. Schilling said Presley stormed into a room where his friends were watching TV and announced, "I don't need anybody else taking care of Priscilla and checking how she is." Schilling said he didn't talk to Priscilla again for almost a full year.

Even though the couple argued and eventually divorced, they remained close through the rest of singer's life. But the person who made him the happiest was his daughter, Lisa Marie.

"Elvis and Lisa were just magic together," Schilling said, adding that Presley wanted more time with his family just before his death.

Drugs have long been the suspected cause of Presley's death, and Schilling said he took pills to escape the disappointment he felt about the direction of his career. Elvis wanted to produce his own film about karate, but Parker refused to allow it. Elvis tried to make the movie himself with Schilling's help, but it was shelved as Elvis spent more time in the hospital to combat fatigue and drug usage.

He was also excited about the chance to appear alongside Barbra Streisand in the movie, "A Star Is Born." He thought the role — which eventually went to Kris Kristofferson — would prove he could do more than be the good-looking nice guy he played in most of his movies.

Parker ended Presley's participation in "A Star Is Born" with demands of twice the salary that Elvis was being offered and that he be billed before Streisand, who not only starred in the film, but also co-produced it.

"It was the creative disappointment that killed Elvis," Schilling said. "The drugs were just a Band-Aid."
© AP 2006

Source: Associated Press

More news from Tupelo

Behind the Image



In the sea of Elvis memorabilia on the market, one company has set itself apart with two documentary-style DVDs that capture little-seen footage of The King, in a new, high-quality format.

BUD GLASS, an avid collector of Elvis memorabilia, was frustrated at the lack of the quality of the Elvis footage that was circulating collectors circles. There was plenty of Super 8 mm footage being passed around, but as copies were made, the quality deteriorated.

Glass dreamed of creating a high-quality, affordable DVD of all of the accumulated footage. Out of this desire, along with Praytome Publishing, he created 'Elvis: Behind the Image' Volumes 1 and 2.

The DVDs feature original footage replicated directly from the film reels with cutting-edge laser technology into DVD format. Content-wise, they combine historic coverage with never-before-heard insights on the life of The King, from first-hand experiences of those who surrounded him.

To find out more about these DVDs, visit HERE


source: insider.tv.yahoo.com

Want to sing like ELVIS????





Want to be an Elvis impersonator but don’t know where to start? Check out Doug Church’s Sing Like A King, an instructional DVD being released on Wednesday, August 16th, the anniversary of Elvis’ death.
According to the press release, Church, 1991 winner of the Images of the King contest, will provide you with “proven vocal training exercises, secret techniques, and inside tips that will bring your Elvis illusion to a whole new level.” But wait, there’s more: mastering the Elvis accent, moves, hair and makeup, and posture; and the “Ten Commandments for Elvis Impersonators.” Check out the Web site HERE.

I second that!