SCHOOL TEACHER Had #1 Hit of the YEAR..15 Years LATER Her Son HAD #1 Hit of 1971 | Professor Of Rock

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • In the mid-50s, a school-teacher, and a former dishwasher repairman collaborated on writing a song allegedly inspired by the suicide note of a despondent man that was included in an article published by the Miami Herald. It would turn out to be for the King of Rock and Roll Elvis Presley… The song? Heartbreak Hotel. In fact the schoolteacher named Mae Axton vowed to Elvis that she would write his first #1 million seller and she did. Although Presley’s label RCA thought the song was a disaster. They hated it and predicated it would fail. It went to #1 for 7 weeks and was the biggest song of the years. Years later the school teacher who wrote it, would have a song Hoyt Axton who would write a #1 hit for Three Dog Night called Joy to the World making them the only mother and son to do so in history. Over the years the writing of Heartbreak Hotel from a newspaper article has become a mystery. Curiously, there is no evidence of such an incident in the public records of the State of Florida, nor is there any proof of a news article that was published on the alleged suicide by the Miami Herald. It’s the conflicting and mystifying story of the first #1 pop song by the King of Rock ’N Roll…NEXT on Professor of Rock.”
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    It’s hard to believe that there was a time when Elvis Presley was not one of the all-time greatest pop icons. But, long before he was crowned the ‘King of Rock ’N Roll,” some of Elvis’s fellow musicians looked down upon him as a “kid who wasn’t going to go anywhere.”That is exactly what singer Glen Reeves thought of Elvis, after he begrudgingly agreed to perform the vocal for a demo of a song crafted for Elvis to record.
    The song on that demo was “Heartbreak Hotel”- becoming Elvis’s first #1 pop single, and propelling the 21 year old performer into an international phenomenon: How the composition of“Heartbreak Hotel”evolved is a confusing, mysterious, and, ultimately puzzling story. The co-writers- Mae Boren Axton, and Tommy Durden both claimed that the inspiration for the song came from a newspaper article published in the Miami Herald about an unidentified man who committed suicide in a Miami hotel room.
    Tommy Durden was a steel guitarist playing in bands from Gainesville & Jacksonville, Florida. Although Durden was a professional musician, who backed up luminaires like Tex Ritter & Johnny Cash, he didn’t make much money as a hired player.
    He still needed to have ‘day jobs’ to make ends meet, such as being a dishwasher repairman. One morning in the summer-of ‘55, Durden grabbed the Miami Herald from his front porch, and read an article about an unidentified man who killed himself in a Miami hotel room.
    No one knew the man’s name, which seemed to be exactly what the deceased wanted. According to the news paper report…before taking his life, the man destroyed all of his identification certificates, and left a suicide note with only one cryptic line…
    “I walk a lonely street”……

Комментарии • 662

  • @ProfessorofRock
    @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +34

    Poll: What is your pick for the greatest early Rock and Roll song?

    • @johnbernstein7887
      @johnbernstein7887 Год назад +9

      Toss up between Ben E King's "Stand By Me" or the Platter's "Twilight Time"

    • @RBS_
      @RBS_ Год назад +3

      @Anna Trail ...JINX! ...ha-HAA!!

    • @DC8091
      @DC8091 Год назад +2

      Cry ,Cry, Cry - The Man In Black
      Angel Eyes - The Chairman Of The Board

    • @killrmillr
      @killrmillr Год назад +8

      Little Richard - Long Tall Sally

    • @adolfsson2705
      @adolfsson2705 Год назад +8

      Jailhouse rock

  • @IndianaJoe0321
    @IndianaJoe0321 4 месяца назад +3

    It took me 53 years to get to Graceland. You really must go! I also ended up spending 5 days in Memphis and enjoyed BBQ, Beale St., the Lorraine Motel, etc. Despite the high crime rate, Memphis has great food, great music, and historic places of interest.

  • @IAmSweetPea
    @IAmSweetPea Год назад +41

    I spent hours playing my grandfather’s 45s in the attic of our house. “In the ghetto” was one of the records and I remember crying listening to him sing. There’s no way I was old enough to understand what he was saying but he moved me…….. The King

    • @1439315
      @1439315 Год назад

      Government goal is to get majority of us into the ghetto; easier for them to control poor people than wealthy . . .

    • @mojoron
      @mojoron Год назад +6

      Mac Davis wrote an amazing song but it was Elvis that really pushes it over the emotional edge.

    • @mjkk-nx3mk
      @mjkk-nx3mk 10 месяцев назад +4

      your not alone in song chioce. reachs deep in the heart and soul.

  • @hellradiolives
    @hellradiolives Год назад +49

    My mom graduated high school in 1957 and Elvis was her dreamboat! If music didn't have that Elvis twang, she was definitely skeptical of it. Honesty, I think she married my dad because he looked like small town Missouri's version of Elvis. Thank you for many smiles on this one , Prof!

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +6

      My mother was another lady smitten by Elvis. She graduated from high school around 1960.

    • @scottymoondogjakubin4766
      @scottymoondogjakubin4766 Год назад +4

      I love that !

    • @jenniferm6042
      @jenniferm6042 Год назад +1

      Miss Hips....

    • @eternallife9786
      @eternallife9786 Год назад +3

      That's funny cuz my mom graduated in like 59 and she was telling me she got to see Elvis live and she couldn't even enjoy the show because all the girls were freaking and fainting and she couldn't hear the show and that always rubbed her wrong always called Elvis a cult of personality wasn't really a hater nor was she obsessed

    • @kentneumann5209
      @kentneumann5209 Год назад +1

      I remember as a kid, back in the 70's, when my mom told us Elvis had died. She wept as though she knew him personally.
      Back then, there was 4 tv networks that we could get. One of them had movies after the news... The Late Show, I think.
      Anyway, mom would let us stay up after bedtime if the late show was an Elvis movie or a Jerry Lewis movie.
      Now, when I catch one of their movies, its like a warm hug from mom. Who is shaking her ass for Elvis and laughing it up with Jerry right now.
      See you soon mom. l love you and I'm so, so sorry for everything.
      I thought we would have more time, and I didn't want to be a burden. I wanted to succeed before I came back.
      Pride is a sin and I'm guilty. So godamn sorry. I did not mean to cause you any pain. I wanted the exact opposite.
      Now its too late, and you are gone and we can never get that time back. Not here anyway.
      I'm so selfish. Please don't reincarnate until I die and can see you again. Or do, if it makes you happy, cuz you deserve to be. To think of yourself instead of putting everyone else first.
      So sorry I wasn't there for you like you were for me my whole life..

  • @jkdubya85
    @jkdubya85 Год назад +21

    I love Elvis - when I was a kid and I was sick, my mom would put a VHS of old Elvis movies on. She loved them, but it was the test to see if I was actually sick or not (this was the 80s - was a different time). Anyhow, joke's on her, because I came to appreciate it and love it myself. When I'm sick these days, I'll pull up one of those things off of Amazon Prime and watch it and remember what life used to be.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +4

      Those Elvis movies are SPECTACULAR.

    • @zulumagoo1
      @zulumagoo1 Год назад +2

      When i was a kid i used to stay home, to listen to records. There were at least 3 elvis albums in mom and dad's collection. Mom got to see Elvis live, in vegas.

  • @qyouwilber5734
    @qyouwilber5734 Год назад +4

    What a yarn. I never would have thought there could be so much drama behind a song. Thank you for telling. You are the Professor of Rock!

  • @richardfedeli5206
    @richardfedeli5206 5 месяцев назад +2

    1962 i'm 10yrs old laying in my mom's bed sick & on the radio comes "Return to Sender" I was HOOKED.....To this day at 71, "I wish I was 16 in 1956" / seen Elvis Live in 1970-75-76 Still Miss Him .....

  • @robster7316
    @robster7316 Год назад +71

    Fascinating to hear the detailed behind the story behind this monumental tune. Mae's son Hoyt also wrote The Pusher, recorded by Steppenwolf, who shared a label and producer with Three Dog Night. Talented family! Thx Adam!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +11

      That's right! The pusher. Thanks Robster.

    • @fivestring65ify
      @fivestring65ify Год назад +5

      I didn't know this. Thanks.

    • @duckylove3930
      @duckylove3930 Год назад +3

      Been waiting for an episode of the young man who started it all. His sweet innocence rolled in with raw sex appeal and a natural, one of a kind voice. Swoon! He gave to all of us the gift of his roots, bathed in ‘coloured’ culture that was hidden to us prior and opened our eyes to the intense beauty and feel of it. Multiple artists claim that seeing The Beatles, The Stones, Zepplin, influenced them into becoming rock stars, but only one man influenced them themselves. The King.

    • @vehicle22
      @vehicle22 Год назад +8

      Also wrote Joy to the World and Never Been To Spain (Three Dog Night), and the No No Song (Ringo Starr). I made a killing on bar bets on all 4 lol

    • @tartanphantom
      @tartanphantom Год назад +8

      Steppenwolf also recorded another Hoyt Axton tune as well-- "Snowblind Friend". Another Hoyt Axton song, "Greenback Dollar" was a hit for the Kingston Trio.

  • @franksantos3418
    @franksantos3418 Год назад +2

    Born in 1965 and I had Elvis posters on my bedroom wall until 1976 when Farrah replaced him. It’s almost 2023 and Elvis is still the King of Rock & Roll with no equal in sight.

  • @DiverBand
    @DiverBand Год назад +14

    Nobody comes close to Elvis, nobody! True words were never spoken. So not only do we have similar taste in music from the 80s, but we also share a love for Elvis Presley. I became a fan of the tender age of five and the ironic thing was that none of my parents or grandparents particularly cared for him. I saw him on television and that was it for me. Overtime I actually got my parents and grandparents to love Elvis Presley as well. He is the greatest singer performer of all time in my honest opinion. And he’s the reason why I’m a singer as well. Long live the king!

    • @dmitryowens
      @dmitryowens 11 месяцев назад

      Elvis was great for his time, but in retrospect he was only pretty good. Robert Plant destroyed him.

  • @stephenhanft1226
    @stephenhanft1226 Год назад +10

    To me, Elvis Presley is, was, and will always be The King Of Rock And Roll. His sound and style were so groundbreaking and revolutionary that it changed the course of popular music. He influenced all rock artists who came after him. Without Elvis, there never would've been The Beatles. John Lennon was quoted in saying "Before Elvis, there was nothing." "Heartbreak Hotel" was the song that launched him nationally going to #1 on the pop charts in 1956. John Lennon also said that when he first heard "Heartbreak Hotel", he knew that he wanted to go into music. Professor, as a life-long major Elvis fan, I am so happy you devoted an episode to an Elvis Presley song. Hopefully, there's more to come.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +3

      Definitely more to come.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +1

      Elvis is probably THE trailblazer of the rock era.

    • @stephenhanft1226
      @stephenhanft1226 Год назад +4

      @Anna Trail I remember the specific incident you are referring to. An individual tried to turn this comments section into a debate forum trying to discredit Elvis Presley's influence and importance to rock music. He went out of his way to respond to all of us who defended Elvis Presley's legacy and was determined to win the argument. What he was forgetting is that music is subjective and there really is no right or wrong answer. It just comes down to each individual's tastes. Another one of rock's 50's pioneers, Buddy Holly, was quoted saying, "Without Elvis, none of us would have made it." So, his peers fully recognized his importance and how his music really changed the world.

  • @shirleytice9176
    @shirleytice9176 Год назад +8

    I grew up with Elvis too, but you can't forget Ricky Nelson who gave Elvis competition in the early years. Ricky was known as the first teen idol and had quite a few top ten hits and continued to play music until his death. I loved Elvis and listened to his music and watched his movies, watched his concerts on TV, he was the King of Rock and Roll. We had so much great music in that era. Long live Rock and Roll.

  • @brenturquhart7090
    @brenturquhart7090 Год назад +8

    My dad rescued a Wurlitzer jukebox from a local dinner that was updating it to one that played 45s, he was 16 at the time and my grandparents basement instantly became the place to be by all his friends. It helped that my grandmother loved to cook and fed everyone in the neighbourhood. Lol
    So when I was young I loved nothing better than to sit in the basement and play those records. Elvis was a favourite of my moms, so there were quite a few of his earlier songs on the playlist, and this was my go to song of choice.
    Funny, I’ve mentioned on this channel that great music was the soundtrack to my life and that every girl had her own song, and this was no different. Actually it was the first song to be associated with a girl.
    I was told that I could not have a girlfriend till I turned 13, so on my 13th birthday party I introduced my parents to my first girlfriend, June 27th. Though by the time summer ended the relationship was no longer, she dumped me.
    I finally knew what this song was all about and played it over and over again. Till 2 weeks later when I got another girlfriend that is. Lol

  • @rticle15
    @rticle15 Год назад +46

    This channel never ceases to be interesting. Love the backstories on the hits. You really do the research and create a top-notch presentation. Rock on.

  • @jeffstumpf9129
    @jeffstumpf9129 Год назад +9

    The background story of this song told by the Professor is iconic. The Professor is an old soul.

  • @SWarren958
    @SWarren958 2 месяца назад +1

    We Absolutely Need More Elvis Stories!!!!!

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 Год назад +37

    Elvis had countless hits, you could say that every single one of his tunes was a classic! Never knew the bizarre story behind it, just makes so much more mysterious and intriguing, but that's the trend with these hits!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +4

      Thanks RC32.

    • @LazyIRanch
      @LazyIRanch Год назад +7

      I heard this story years ago, the first time I stayed at the spooky old Von Minden Hotel in Schulenburg, TX built in 1927. It is reputed to be haunted, but I didn't know that the first time I stayed there. It is nicknamed "The Heartbreak Hotel" after the song, and the story behind the song. The hotel's owner told us of the legend behind the Elvis hit.
      The Von Minden had a suicide of a WWII soldier/paratrooper who was reported MIA to his family and girlfriend, and they weren't told he was alive until he got home and moved into the Von Minden. While staying in room 37 on the 3rd floor of the hotel, he received a packet of letters, mostly from his girl, written while he was in the War. He read them, out of order, and the story goes that he read a "Dear John" letter from her, and believing she married someone else, he threw himself out his 3rd floor window, and was caught by a clothesline just before hitting the ground. The clothesline, "clotheslined" him, and he died from a broken neck or strangulation. He didn't get to the letter she wrote telling him that she learned he was alive, broke it off with the other guy, and was on her way to be with him.
      I don't know if much of the story is true, but he really did kill himself by jumping out the window. People have claimed they have seen a young woman in a polka dot dress looking for room 37, but I never saw her during the four times I stayed there.
      Wonderfully spooky place, though. The current owners bought it in 1977, and, as one article put it, "got busy doing absolutely nothing to update the place". Very true; it has original bathroom fixtures from 1927, old furniture, and the 4th floor rooms are flop-house tiny with one large shared bathroom with showers that looked worthy of a horror movie!

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +5

      It’s a pretty amazing story!

  • @cimarronperformancewerks6611
    @cimarronperformancewerks6611 Год назад +18

    Wow. This one hits home for me. As a teen in the late 60s, I was a huge Three Dog Night fan. I learned about who wrote my favorites to my surprise was a country music star, not my genre at all. Same time as the old Hee Haw show where Hoyt appeared. He seemed so genuine that I soon learned about his mother and a only a part of the history you told. I live in central Oklahoma now with a rich music history. Anyway, this one will remain in my POR favorites.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +3

      Him and his mother were both very prolific, known for writing some classics!

    • @lorianne4936
      @lorianne4936 Год назад +2

      Awww, yes, the heart of music is Country ❤️

  • @MrRandyKelley
    @MrRandyKelley Год назад +2

    As a young teenager, I remember having Elvis' Greatest Hits on 8-track playing on loop in my room. Fell asleep and woke up to it.

  • @johnathansaegal3156
    @johnathansaegal3156 Год назад +2

    I grew up with those three television channels - can anyone younger than 40 even understand that there were ONLY three channels on TV? Not only were there just three stations to choose from, but from midnight to 6am, there was nothing but static or the color bars - no shows aired in the wee hours of the night.
    Now, imagine being a young singer who gets invited to perform on live television. One third of the TV-watching world would be seeing your performance. Give that a thought.
    My dad was 11 when "Heartbreak Hotel" came out, and up until last Christmas, 2021 when my dad passed away, he could mimic Elvis' moves and voice (in the Navy, long before my dad became a Navy Captain, he would perform impersonations of Elvis while deployed off Vietnam to the thrill of the sailors on his ship)... my memory of "Heartbreak Hotel" is forever sealed into my thoughts of my dad AND Elvis, never just Elvis himself.

  • @johnrau2265
    @johnrau2265 Год назад +4

    Wow, you finally featured a song older than I am.😎 Seriously, I was born in January of 1956. Pretty much everybody my age was raised listening to Elvis, even if secretly because of parental disapproval. Even after moving into pop, Motown, and then rock, I would still stop to catch an Elvis song on the radio. Of course, Elvis movies were a not-really-guilty pleasure. His resurgence in the late '60s brought new, more contemporary songs.
    Dying at 42 was a thorough shock.
    Good episode.

  • @mournblade1066
    @mournblade1066 Год назад +3

    Elvis was my mother's all-time favorite musician, so I grew up listening to him and all the other early rock and roll and rockabilly greats. I was almost seven years old when Elvis passed away, and my mother spent the entire day watching the news, and recorded the radio broadcasts on our 8 track recorder.

  • @kraigpeterson3667
    @kraigpeterson3667 Год назад +22

    Elvis is one of the greats that can never be topped. A few of my favorites are "Always on my Mind", "In the Ghetto", and "Cant Help Falling in Love". I know he starred in a few movies but my all-time favorite is "Clambake". If you have not seen that I would check it out! Rock on Brother!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +8

      I saw it about 20 years ago! Need to watch it again. Classic!

    • @Fiona2254
      @Fiona2254 Год назад +4

      Love Me Tender followed by Can’t Help Falling in Love had me ugly crying in my 20th anniversary pictures. Such sweet songs.

    • @DDKaraokeOutlaw
      @DDKaraokeOutlaw Год назад +2

      A few of my favorites are "Don't" "Don't Cry Daddy" and "Memories."

    • @tornfrayed4977
      @tornfrayed4977 Год назад +4

      Love Cartmans cover of In the Ghetto.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +2

      Viva Las Vegas and Girls Girls Girls are my faves!

  • @johnnyjohnson1326
    @johnnyjohnson1326 Год назад +1

    I was 6 when Elvis died. I still remember my mom collapsing and crying almost hysterically when the news came over the radio on the kitchen table.
    I've still never cried over a singer/entertainer, etc, dying, but I've come close... Waylon, Dimebag, Dale Sr.
    Thanks Professor for these amazing stories!

  • @belle.m
    @belle.m Год назад +5

    Awesome breakdown of this classic. Was brought up with a lot of different music, everything from blues, rock and roll, pop, soul, disco, classical. But nothing better than Elvis. His voice is so unique. Consider myself lucky to be brought up with such great music. Elvis, the Beatles, Zeppelin, just breaks my heart hearing music today.

  • @splenderella9
    @splenderella9 Год назад +4

    You really hit the jackpot with this one Adam! Almost no one knew the story behind "Heartbreak Hotel", OR the number of great musicians it influenced in their careers!! Thank you for doing the research and bringing the results to us in such an entertaining way...! 👍🤗

  • @joeymorvant161
    @joeymorvant161 Год назад +1

    I love Elvis Presley! This is one of my favorites by him, along with "Jailhouse Rock", "Suspicious Minds", "Burnin' Love" and "Memories".

  • @MrLeram12
    @MrLeram12 Год назад +2

    A great friend gave me a 78 RPM copy of Heartbreak Hotel and on the way home, it fell on its edge and broke. Boy was I ever woeful!

  • @conniemoney4459
    @conniemoney4459 Год назад +1

    Thank you. I’m 63 years old and have loved Elvis forever

  • @mrbniederer
    @mrbniederer Год назад +1

    That show with Elvis in black leather in a theater in the round sold me on Elvis forever.

  • @dannysunay4386
    @dannysunay4386 Год назад +1

    The first time I heard Elvis was when I was 10. A young girl and her boyfriend moved in the apartment across from us and would play Elvis all the time. I was hooked. This was in 1975.

  • @christopherbraun8912
    @christopherbraun8912 Год назад +1

    Heartbreak Hotel was the first song I ever remember hearing with massive reverb. I was about 7 years old. That really left its mark on me. And that piano and bass and drum brushes on the break was sooo cool. I am still a fan of the standup bass. There is just something warm and full about it that an electric bass just can't match.

  • @ellenjones4523
    @ellenjones4523 Год назад +8

    I have a renewed interest in Elvis since 2020 watching reactors and your channel I am enjoying the rock era all over again with better appreciation. I remember watching aloha from Hawaii and when Elvis did American Trilogy I was a fan for life. Thank you for your appreciation for music and educating us with your knowledge.

  • @RFXLR
    @RFXLR Год назад +9

    Floyd Kramer’s solo on that song is awesome!

  • @RandomParrot
    @RandomParrot Год назад +2

    This episode is why I love professor of rock!!! God I relate so well to this guy. Keep up the awesome work professor!!!!

  • @fivestring65ify
    @fivestring65ify Год назад +6

    What a great story. I love hearing the history behind these classics. Great episode professor.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @RBS_
      @RBS_ Год назад +2

      ....FABULOUS episode, today, I want MORE!

    • @fivestring65ify
      @fivestring65ify Год назад +3

      @@ProfessorofRock As I was watching the episode, I was hoping you would include the fact that Mae was Hoyt's mother. You didn't disappoint. I love the version of HH by Nelson and Russell too.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад

      This one followed closely by the Joker story on Tuesday are the winners of this week so far!

  • @Fiona2254
    @Fiona2254 Год назад +3

    Elvis was such a huge guy while growing up! I remember thinking he was too young to die :(
    We celebrated our 20th anniversary in Vegas and on a sudden impulse we got “Elvis” to remarry us in the famous chapel. We thought it was fun, dressed in shorts with a little veil and matching color fake buque of flowers, until the guy started singing Love Me Tender and I just started crying. The impersonator had a Pink Cadillac and I regret, 14 years later, not getting a ride through the strip with Elvis driving us.
    He was a titan and still greatly missed

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад

      I know several people who got married by “Elvis” in the chapel in Vegas. It was even showcased on a few eps of 90 Day Fiance!

    • @Fiona2254
      @Fiona2254 Год назад

      @@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 we entered just to see the place then we observed people getting ready as someone else was getting married. We got curious and asked how often were the weddings and she told us “15 minutes and we can also divorce you.” They have everything from rings and full on formal dresses and tux for rent. I’m glad we commemorated our anniversary there. We wanted young Elvis but he wasn’t available, we ended up with an awesome pantsuit Elvis.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад

      @@Fiona2254 It is such a unique place, that Graceland Chapel. Sounds like “Elvis” did his best to be calm, cool, and collected with you guys. Glad you enjoyed it there.

  • @evanstaub2548
    @evanstaub2548 Год назад +4

    I’m so glad you did an Elvis video. It was totally worth the wait. I hope you do more Elvis in the future along with some Chuck Berry videos.

  • @jeffbeckfreak54
    @jeffbeckfreak54 Год назад

    I'm 68 and when I heard Elvis, I wanted to be him so bad. I eventually became a guitar player/singer. I've been playing guitar for 51 years and singing 35. Elvis was one of many influences I've had over the years.

  • @kittylemew
    @kittylemew Год назад +1

    I fell in love with Elvis while watching Jailhouse Rock at a 3rd grade sleepover. 💕
    Years later, the 80's Rockabilly revival led me to the unique early music of Elvis, and other 50's trailblazers, and I've never been the same... seriously.
    Thanks for this cool rock'n'roll mystery with all the supporting characters and obscure details. Your presentations are always top notch but this one was stellar!

  • @Lam_3-22-23
    @Lam_3-22-23 Год назад +4

    I had the opportunity last month to pass through Memphis and to Sun Studio. Amazing how tiny that place is, but oh my the hits it produced.

  • @WickedFelina
    @WickedFelina Год назад +1

    God Bless you Professor! This was one of your BEST - if not "THE!"

  • @MyName-pl7zn
    @MyName-pl7zn Год назад +4

    That is one crazy story about the song that changed everything in popular music. Kind of wild that the song was inspired by a guy that died robbing a tackle shop. Thanks for this one because without this song and Elvis would we have the Beatles and the Stones and all those inspired by them. Was this song the true birth of rock and roll. I think it was. Great episode professor, gives as much 50s as you can there is so much I need to know.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +1

      Isn't it crazy?

    • @MyName-pl7zn
      @MyName-pl7zn Год назад

      @Anna Trail I am impressed with how much work Adam does to get as much information possible on history of music. The 50s rock and rockabilly is absolutely fantastic I agree

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +1

      I had no idea that there was such a haunting backstory behind this song. I thought that the backstory was Elvis’s girlfriend ditched him, and so he went through a period in which he felt lonely. The rock era wouldn’t be rock without Elvis!

    • @MyName-pl7zn
      @MyName-pl7zn Год назад

      @@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Elvis never wrote any of his songs but man did he own them!

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад

      @@MyName-pl7zn For sure he did!

  • @chrisnave9588
    @chrisnave9588 Год назад

    I can remember stories from my mother seeing Elvis in concert. She told me that my grandfather really didn't approve of his gyrations. But my mom was so cool that she got to see Elvis in concert and she also seen Kiss in concert!

  • @PatrickMersinger
    @PatrickMersinger Год назад +1

    I remember getting the Elvis album called “50,000,000 fans can’t be wrong” for Christmas. It was a greatest hits record. Incredible!

  • @tnrodgers
    @tnrodgers Год назад +1

    HBH was Elvis’ iconic song. He owned it. I never related the song to morbidity, just sadness over a girl. Hoyt wrote my happy songs. Adam, you’ve waited for Stairway, and now holding out for Elvis. What else is in your closet??

  • @JamesJones-zt2yx
    @JamesJones-zt2yx Год назад +8

    Wow. "Heartbreak Hotel" preceded me into the world by a few months, but still I heard it a lot, and it was unique. I remember Stan Freberg's hilarious parody. Thanks for telling the story behind the song.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +1

      Thanks James.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +1

      My grandparents were in high school when Heartbreak Hotel was popular.

    • @scottburton9701
      @scottburton9701 Год назад +1

      Stan Freberg's parody of "Heartbreak Hotel" was fantastic-Dr.Demento has played it a time or two on his show.

  • @rogerdeahl9629
    @rogerdeahl9629 Год назад +85

    Now this is a deep profile! Would have never guessed the backstory here.
    Elvis benefitted from many people helping him with songs. This is a great story, Professor. Thanks for all the work on this!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +5

      Sorry Roger, your comment got cut off!

    • @RBS_
      @RBS_ Год назад +6

      ....OOOOOOOOH-WEE, was this a GOOD One, today!

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад +4

      I thought he was singing about how he went to stay at Heartbreak Hotel because his baby left him and now he’s lonely! Never knew the exigence of this one.

    • @katemaloney4296
      @katemaloney4296 Год назад +5

      EVERY successful musician benefits from people helping them with songs.

    • @CSltz
      @CSltz Год назад +1

      @@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Did he ever write anything himself?

  • @toddwilson7895
    @toddwilson7895 Год назад +2

    Great episode again! Professor never fails! Growin' up in a city between Memphis and Nashville ,Tennessee, and from a musical family, I come outta the womb with music history. Elvis was pivotal for music in a global way. Great origin story on "Heartbreak Hotel". It would probably be the most influential early Rock song to me. I like all of Elvis' catalog. Ole boy could get down. Daddy and my Step-Dad appreciated Elvis also. Of course, even non musicians like him. Many Elvis paintings in homes down South, the dark colored ones on cloth. My ear likes the Memphis sound. Always has. I was the same way hearin' Vedder and Pearl Jam as Lennon was hearin' Elvis. Couldn't completely make out the lyric at first, only the energy of the vocal and instruments. Really captured my interest. I believe if Elvis had not of came through in the 50's, music would not have advanced like it did in the following 4 decades. It seems we are at a similar place in music now as we were before Elvis passed through. It will be interestin' to hear where it goes from here.

  • @conniedavis3553
    @conniedavis3553 Год назад +1

    Elvis' song Memories is honestly my favorite. It apparently got buried in my head and heart at a very young age. Only when I became a Barbra fan later it resurfaced with confusion. I had trouble even finding it for the loooooongest time before the internet became more user friendly back in the stone age. I find it haunting.

  • @bonitadiablo
    @bonitadiablo Год назад

    I still have the two tickets my dad bought us to go see Elvis in Huntington WV, unfortunately Elvis passed before that concert. My dad still had those two tickets in his wallet when he died. Funnily, although I liked Elvis ok at that time I was 13 and not thrilled to go see him. Heart and Kiss were more my jam back then lol. I honestly never knew just what an international and global icon he was till I visited Hawaii and then Graceland for my daughter’s 13th birthday. Ironically, she is a major Elvis fan! :)

  • @mary-anneswanson8445
    @mary-anneswanson8445 Год назад +10

    I was raised on country and Elvis . Elvis didn't need to be in any music category because he was a force all his own . Peace In The Valley and Don't Cry Daddy are my two favorite Elvis songs :)

  • @ronjones1077
    @ronjones1077 Год назад +1

    I watched Elvis on Ed Sullivan’s show his first appearance. We lived in Caldwell Idaho in 55~ 57. I was six years old and remember Dad telling Mom “ we’ve got to see Sullivan tonight. There is going to be some singer on there that just goes nuts”. They both sat on our blue couch and I sat on the floor in front facing the b/w tv.
    There was a follow up song for the story of Heartbreak Hotel called Lonely Street. Andy Williams had an album called that and I still have it. Beautiful song.
    For the new Elvis movie Republic Records newest artist arraigned and did a live video with Republic head of LA studio Rob Christie of Suspicious Minds. Angelia Jordan is even weeding the black jumpsuit, Priscilla’s beehive hair, and playing the same red guitar as he appeared in his 68 comeback special. You will be blown away! It’s on YT with close to 3 million views since July

  • @RobinMarks1313
    @RobinMarks1313 Год назад +1

    My mom loved Elvis. One year, she was going to finally she her first Elvis concert, she had tickets to a Niagara Falls for a late fall show. Fall of 1977. She was so sad.

  • @christophercolt1361
    @christophercolt1361 5 месяцев назад +1

    FABULOUS RESEARCH, PROFESSOR! AMEN TO IT ALL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @SnapCracklePapa
    @SnapCracklePapa Год назад

    It RAISES the question, it does not "beg the question".

  • @TheBohemianAngels
    @TheBohemianAngels Год назад

    So great to hear this episode. Great discussion and information. Glad to know that you have been an Elvis fan for so long. It shows you have a great ear and taste. Great show.

  • @gaetanoflorio6277
    @gaetanoflorio6277 Год назад +2

    This episode brought back great memories of my visit to Graceland and Sun Studios. There is a lot of history there, and thank you again for your thorough research and story to go with this amazing song. Keep up the great content 👌🇵🇳

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 Год назад

    I had just turned 3 years old when Heartbreak Hotel hit the local airwaves in L.A. My mom immediately bought the 45. I was not familiar with blues at that time. The song spooked and fascinated and moved me like no other song. In 1973 I got a job that required I sing a song on my table-bussing break at a local restaurant. I had never performed in front of people. I was a competent guitarist so that was done. The vocal scared the shite out of me so two days before I started the job I would ride my bicycle into Runyan Canyon in the Hollywood Hills and hike to the hilltop where there were no dog walkers. During those 2 days I sang the song at the top of my lungs many times just to smooth out the rough parts. I settled on an Elvis impersonation since I had no idea what my "true voice" sounded like. Came my first day of work and I bused tables and my break came. I performed the song and was so terrified I blacked out before it was finished. When I came to I was fired. I do a mean Elvis impersonation and I don't faint in the middle of a song anymore. Nice to know that there are other historical fans.

  • @CraftQueen22
    @CraftQueen22 Год назад +1

    I was still in my mom's belly when this song came out. I found out that I was pregnant with my 1st child the day he died.

  • @TUSK1157
    @TUSK1157 Год назад +3

    I was just reading up on Mae Axton. In 1973, I went to 1 of the schools she taught at in her earlier years in Jacksonville, Fla. Doesn't mean 💩 to a tree but I found it interesting. Also, I recently caught an episode of McCloud, where Hoyt played a country singer that was strung out on heroin, doing a tour of the Soviet Union.

    • @splenderella9
      @splenderella9 Год назад +1

      I first heard Hoyt on an episode of "WKRP in Cincinnati" as an old boyfriend of Jennifer's...he sang "Della and the Dealer" over the closing credits...!

    • @TUSK1157
      @TUSK1157 Год назад

      @@splenderella9, I'm a fan of WKRP. I think I do remember that. My aging memory is kind of a blur but after seeing your reply. I started having small flashbacks of it. Thanks

  • @joeguetzloff4465
    @joeguetzloff4465 Год назад +1

    So funny to find this. Mae Axton was an old high school friend of my 98 year old neighbor who lives across the street from me. She has a photocopy of the original lyric notes along with an original 45 of Heartbreak Hotel signed by both her and Tommy Durden. Also in the frame is an article about the song from The Nashville Banner dated July 13th, 1956.

  • @TheOlesarge
    @TheOlesarge Год назад +1

    I was a kid growing up in New Orleans in the 70s, sprung from the ending of the Vietnam War and Watergate. The first pop stars I remember hearing of were B.B. King (well, almost pop, eh?) and Elvis Presley. Elton John then came along and opened the gates for KISS, Foghat, Led Zeppelin, and others such. While I never was much of an Elvis fan, he was the king... baby.

  • @stringfellowlocke2214
    @stringfellowlocke2214 Год назад

    Back in the 70's my parents had several 8 track tapes of Elvis, and some 45's that I played ENDLESSLY (much to the frustration of my older brother who was a beetles fan). We only had 1 TV, and as [luck] would have it, I got to pick what we watched one night - the very night that Elvis had his satellite broadcast concert! My brother was beyond being upset ... at first. But the end of the concert he admitted that Elvis was "pretty good" and he got a kick out of watching me jump around, dance, and sing to the music, with my enthusiasm helping him to come to appreciate, and even enjoy the music of "the king of Rock and Roll." So much so, that he was the first person who consoled me on that fateful day of August 16, 1977. They are some fantastic memories I have of my brother during that time.

  • @williambenner701
    @williambenner701 Год назад +4

    I was actually born the year this song became a hit!😯
    Shure makes me feel old..
    Great story behind that song Professor! I was wondering if you would ever do anything on Elvis, even though it makes sense you would. After all Elvis was "The King Of Rock and Roll"!

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +1

      Yes! Been waiting to do this one for a Looooong time.

    • @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980
      @xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Год назад

      At one point I was like, “Has he done any 50s vids?” I was finally excited to watch this one! And the Ritchie Valens one.

  • @lcruz2783
    @lcruz2783 Год назад

    Elvis is The King, what a great song and a true American Icon of music

  • @marisam7560
    @marisam7560 Год назад

    This was a wild ride! Thanks for closing the loop on that newspaper article because I was going to down a rabbit hole lol Another awesome episode!

  • @mjkk-nx3mk
    @mjkk-nx3mk 10 месяцев назад

    Elvis was the king. RIP
    I think I was around 9 or 10. Would have been around 1969/70. I was the same way. Elvis was my idol. I wanted to be him. Had every record he had put out. Wore out the memphis lp. Would try to sing like him to his songs. Must have driven the folks nuts. Mom, dad and my little brother all had musical talent. I must have sounded like a wounded dog. With what talent the god lord blessed me with. Lol
    My birthday was coming up. Elvis was putting on a concert in Cleveland around the same time.
    I asked my folks to see his show for my birthday that year. Probably begged. Lol
    Elvis was the first concert I ever went to.(ya i was with my folks. I didn’t care i was 9 or 10 lol) I can still remember it to this day. Or a big part of it anyway. Second level at the rail. Straight line of sight to the stage. The crowd was nuts. He changed outfits like every song or every other song. I thought his outfits were so cool.
    Got a life size poster of him at the show.
    Had an amazing time. God that has been a long time ago 50 plus years. Lol
    A couple of years after that. Had an accident happen and Elvis was still the king and my idol.
    But I never recovered from losing all my Elvis records.
    I wasn’t the easiest person to wake up for school in the morning. And was giving my dad a hard time not getting ready for school one morning. The records were on the bottom of a roll around tv cart with the record play sitting on top. The cart must have gotten in my dads way. As he was getting more pissed off. Because i wasn’t getting out of bed. When he pushed it out of the way. It rested next to the wall. Be in ohio in the winter time. The house had baseboard registers. I didn’t notice it or think about it. When I left for school. I was still in grade school at the time.
    When i got home from school. The cart and the records got pushed up against the heater register all day. Needless to say, the vinyl didn’t hold up to the heat that well. The whole stack was trashed. There were like 18”-24” records standing up on the bottom of the cart. Just sat there and cried. Got angry for a while. Dad caught the brunt of it for a while. It wasn’t his fault. It was mine for not getting out of bed. And my folks offered to replace them. But was too heart broken and never did. (what a mistake that was. Think about want original mint elvis vinyl would be worth today. Lol. it wouldn’t have mattered i would have lost them in a divorce along the way. lol)
    Times have changed, musical taste has changed, glad to have survive the 70’s and the 80’s
    Seen a lot of shows. Should say been to a lot of shows since then. Lol
    But Elvis will alway reign the king. His range of genres is unmatched by anyone yesterday or today. And the range of fans from all ages. No one compares.

  • @marksherrill9337
    @marksherrill9337 Год назад

    I must admit, I find these back stories interesting and think you do a good job.

  • @TheParadisecove
    @TheParadisecove Год назад

    Elvis really was the King of Rock 'n Roll...really....

  • @eddieschneider8470
    @eddieschneider8470 Год назад +2

    What a great video, a serious deep dive into the story

  • @RussellRobinson971
    @RussellRobinson971 Год назад

    I remember the day Elvis passed away, I was a kid I ran into the house my sisters were all crying their eyes out I asked what was going on said Elvis had passed away. I had no idea how powerful that morning was because I was so young but I do remember their reactions.

  • @theohlinsguy4649
    @theohlinsguy4649 Год назад

    Hoyt Axton was one of my favorites.

  • @SuperBeachbum74
    @SuperBeachbum74 Год назад

    My sister was in the Ben Casey fan club and they had meetings. A few months later a friend took her to see the movie “ Girls , Girls, Girls “ . She came home , tore down her Casey posters, quit the club and screamed, “ I love Elvis “ , put his posters everywhere ! I was 10, didn’t get it , but then she had to see some show of great entertainers showcasing their hits, they showed Elvis singing “ Hound Dog “ in his famous gold suit ! His self confidence and commanding stage presence grabbed me and I became a even bigger fan than her after hearing his next record , still my favorite of his all time. That being “ Devil In Disguise “ ! I saw him in 1972 at Chicago stadium in the 12th row ! He has no peers in entertainment !

  • @mistiroberts1576
    @mistiroberts1576 Год назад +1

    I LOVE Hoyt Axton; had no idea his mom was I'm music too
    I just looked on the Familysearch app and Hoyt Axton is my 8th cousin once removed 🤩

  • @hockemeyer1
    @hockemeyer1 Год назад

    I remember Elvis first time on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1956. I sat on the floor with my dad watching. I was 8 years old. Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, The Dorsey brothers, Satchmo, Elvis and Buddy Holly were staples in our house.

  • @magillanz
    @magillanz Год назад +2

    Never Been To Spain was recorded by Elvis as well. So mother and son wrote songs recorded by Elvis

  • @jray5363
    @jray5363 Год назад

    Always loved Elvis’s version of Never Been To Spain, but never made the connection with Hoyt Axton’s mother writing Heartbreak Hotel! I suppose it’s nice to have Elvis as a friend. And nice to have hit songwriters pitching you songs.

  • @nwchrista
    @nwchrista Год назад

    Both heartbreak hotel and are you lonesome tonight were my staple songs when singing with my mom's band during my high school years. I sang heartbreak hotel at a barn dance in Manteno Illinois once and about flipped out when they all jumped out to dance to it. I was about 17 years old and they called me Elvis the Pelvis at high school.
    Elvis was my idol and I was told I resembled him both in style and looks. I moved on from Elvis later but I was always able to sing him on a seconds notice by memory. And as a trained singer, I still listen to his voice in awe... Elvis, as a vocalist, was a generational phenom.

  • @jodidavis6595
    @jodidavis6595 Год назад

    The movie was fantastic. Loved it. I was 12 when Elvis died. My gramma and I were sitting in her 1973 ford Granada listening to the radio. We were at a tasty freeze eating chili dogs fries and drinking orange soda. We were going to my uncle Keith’s baseball game. Elvis came on the radio. When the song was over the DJ said..and I’ll never forget it, “Ladies and gentlemen that was the late great Mr.Elvis Presley who died today at his home in Memphis TN” after that I heard nothing else. I could barely swallow my food. My gramma turned off the radio and said..”Well, we better get to Keith’s game” tears where streaming down my face. I didn’t look at gramma. I just looked out the window. Don’t remember much at the ball game. I think ppl were starting to hear about it and talk softly. That’s what you did back then. I will never forget that day and where I was and who I was with. 45 plus yrs later.. still sad.

  • @timbungarner3842
    @timbungarner3842 Год назад

    When I heard that my foot started tapping, and when nobody was around, I'd do my dance, 😂

  • @marcwhite9234
    @marcwhite9234 Год назад +1

    I love the Miles shirt. One of my favs.

  • @brenturquhart7090
    @brenturquhart7090 Год назад +1

    Adam, great Elvis impression. I played it for my mother, 84, and she automatically threw her panties at my iPad. Though it could be my BBQ cover, they’re about the same size.
    Oh god, I don’t think I’ll ever get that image out of my head now that I’ve said it. I seriously need help. Lol

  • @CasualSpud
    @CasualSpud Год назад +1

    I remember Hoyt on WKRP. Now there's a show that I miss.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад

      Same. Bought the entire DVD set last year!

    • @DDKaraokeOutlaw
      @DDKaraokeOutlaw Год назад

      @Anna Trail I like the closing theme to WKRP with the gibberish lyrics written by Jim Ellis, an Atlanta musician who recorded some of the incidental music for the show.

    • @tammylewis2408
      @tammylewis2408 Год назад

      @@DDKaraokeOutlaw POR should do a segment on the story behind the WKRP closing theme song.

    • @tammylewis2408
      @tammylewis2408 Год назад

      He played Jennifer's musician boyfriend on the show.

    • @DDKaraokeOutlaw
      @DDKaraokeOutlaw Год назад

      @@tammylewis2408 Sounds good to me.

  • @paulrichardson2942
    @paulrichardson2942 Год назад

    Thanks for covering THE KING. Love this!

  • @elaineremains
    @elaineremains Год назад

    actually, the biggest memory i have about Elvis was walking in a field with my transistor radio to my ear, and hearing the announcement of his death, i was so stunned that i have a PTSD type memory of it. :(

  • @TimmyGibbs73
    @TimmyGibbs73 Год назад

    Mae and her son Hoyt lived in New Lima Oklahoma not far from where I grew up in Wewoka and from what I was told by my Dad she was also an English Teacher at Wewoka High School years ago! (where I graduated in 1992!) 😊 Dad also told me that Hoyt used to say (Oklahoma is the cultural center of the universe.” 💖

  • @MIDNIGHTRIDER1068
    @MIDNIGHTRIDER1068 Год назад

    Glad you covered Elvis 😁🙂

  • @vincesteward8798
    @vincesteward8798 Год назад +1

    Great episode, I thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @JimSuperwhite43
    @JimSuperwhite43 Год назад +1

    Back in the late 90's there was this vinyl holdover record store down in New Orleans. Rough part of town, and a dump, so my kind of place. I went strolling in there and struck up a conversation with the owner. He had a picture of Elvis up behind the register, so I mentioned it. He said, "Oh, him. I had a chance to manage him before The Colonel got his hands on him, but I passed." Can you imagine? And now he was running some scruffy record store on the bad side of New Orleans. I was dumbfounded. "Why'd you pass???" I asked him. "Boy had no talent." he matter of factly stated. I asked him if he had any regrets about that decision and he shrugged and said, "What's to regret? Boy had no talent." And he wasn't joking, or deflecting. He believed it.

  • @jeffscott8323
    @jeffscott8323 Год назад

    And I Love his Style.

  • @michaeladavis5225
    @michaeladavis5225 Год назад

    Really good story. Watching from New Mexico. Love all your stuff.

  • @kellyalves756
    @kellyalves756 Год назад

    Boy, the Hoyt segment was a delight in and of itself. He wrote the No-No song? Damn! 😎

  • @redarmysoja
    @redarmysoja Год назад +2

    Perhaps being the only Hoyt Axton fan in existence here is my vote for a deep dive video on him.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  Год назад +2

      He had quite a career.

    • @charlesashworth6805
      @charlesashworth6805 Год назад +1

      Not true I'm here

    • @redarmysoja
      @redarmysoja Год назад

      @@charlesashworth6805 Hey! There's two of us, LOL.

    • @redarmysoja
      @redarmysoja Год назад +1

      @@ProfessorofRock LOL, I was about to pull my hair pout thinking you weren't going to mention Mae's son. I was like "OMG, don't tell me Prof doesn't know who her son was", but, you didn't disappoint.

    • @JamesJones-zt2yx
      @JamesJones-zt2yx Год назад +1

      You're not alone, @Tejas Rob.

  • @stinkypinkeee5085
    @stinkypinkeee5085 Год назад +4

    "Heartbreak Hotel" is one of the dopest songs I have ever heard, especially live...these gold laden rappers and rock n' roll peacocks could learn a lesson in swagger and attitude from The King...

  • @CliffMcAulay
    @CliffMcAulay Год назад

    Hey Prof! Your love of music, a good story, and of course the King, come across brilliantly in this clip.
    Thank you for your enthusiasm and for passing on the love.

  • @Axeman517
    @Axeman517 Год назад

    Heartbreak Hotel was NOT on his album. Back then, he recorded an album *and* single material.
    Great episode! I love your channel and I’m glad to see you covering Elvis!
    Btw, Never Been to Spain was covered by Elvis

  • @jhbb68
    @jhbb68 Год назад

    This is one of your best, Adam! I've never been the biggest Elvis fan, but always understood his impact. After this, I'm going to do a deep dive!

  • @kengoodman7637
    @kengoodman7637 Год назад

    Same here, I think I knew who Elvis was before any other rnr artist. My dad was a big Elvis fan being a teenager in the 50s being the first of his friend group to own the first couple albums. My mother even said she started dating him because my dad look like Elvis. My father eventually shed The sideburns but kept some version of a pompadour for the rest of his life. This is a great story about a great song.

  • @tvon698
    @tvon698 Год назад

    Dang bro.. Ur good at ur job!! Great work Professor..