Elvis Remembered By Sandy Semerad

Everytime I hear Elvis’ music or watch one of his movies, I remember the first time I saw him. He was my first crush. Maybe that’s why my romantic heroes have features similar to the King of Rock and Roll.

I can still hear myself swoon. It was a hot, summer night near Sarasota, Florida.
I had not reached puberty yet, but I realized I was close to it when the lean, mean “Memphis flash” walked out on a rickety stage, attacked the microphone, hiked up one side of his mouth and shimmied down into a split. He looked handsome and pure one minute, animalistic and sexy the next, while singing in the voice of an angel.
I didn’t know it then, but he personified American rock and roll. How could I know? I was a kid, attending a day camp. Mother drove me and my sister and members of my swim team to see our heartthrob. His songs had inspired us while performing our water ballets.
We were certain Elvis loved women. His told us so in song. He was always wanting to love us and wanting us to forgive him. How could we NOT love him back?
That night, so many moons ago, Elvis surveyed the crowd with an amused look. Our screams made him laugh.
But when the music began, he was transformed into another dimension. He was a wild man, a tiger out of control, stalking his prey with song.
He was the American dream, a sharecropper and truck driver’s son who found fame and fortune. He represented the future, the integrated South. He seemed both black and white.
That night, the microphone and a string from his guitar gave way to his wild gyrating performance. I screamed myself hoarse and my knees felt week. Yet, I’m pleased to say I didn’t faint as others in the crowd did.
It was a night I will never forget, and I feel fortunate I was able to see him then and a number of times after that, even though I later realized he was in trouble.
When he died, I came to the conclusion he was a bundle of contradictions, sort of like the American South.
He spoke out against drugs but he died from a heart attack brought about by drug abuse.
He loved Jesus and his mother. Yet, he cheated on the women in his life.
He was a law and order man who broke the law when it suited him.
He was a tragic figure who has been idolized the world over in spite of the public’s knowledge of his real life.
He was a millionaire many times over but the Southern abject poverty from which he sprang was always present. He was America’s first Southern rock hero. Yet he disliked hard-rock music.

He gave the world and its people a part of the South we will never forget, and I couldn’t resist resurrecting his image in my books.

Hugs,
sandy semerad

6 thoughts on “Elvis Remembered By Sandy Semerad

  1. Excellent, Sandy. Thank you for sharing your experiences and your insights into one of music’s and the world’s most iconic troubled soul.

  2. Iagree with your analysis completely! Elvis was the absolute Classic example and epitome of the “American Dream”! He embodied all the traits & gifts God could bestow on a Man! He was also oh so human and naive & gullable in his youth! So capable of falling hard into the traps the Negative Power set for him! Yes…he was both Saint & Sinner, Compassionate and emotional in all directions! He had it all and …he knew it! He just didn’t really know for certain what to do with it and he ran the gaunlet from Shy Sweet Southern Country boy to God Like Charisma, Confidance and Talent! Sooooh much talent and that Voice! Velvet smooth three Octave range Perfection! Michael Bluble said it perfectly, “Jesus Kissed his Throat” Yes he was a whirlwind of Contradictions! From his pure angelic nature to GIVE…GIVE…GIVE to everyone…to anyone! He was Santa Clause in black leather to people in need…no matter what the reason or cause! Then the paradoxical oxymoronic Rebel…shooting out TV sets in demonic anger! Consuming massive amounts of Amphetamines & Barbituits to stay up all night & sing Gossiple songs with James Brown in his frantic search for God and the reason he was chosen to be…ELVIS! Winning Priscilla, the embodiment of Mother & Love…then loosing her to the impossible irresistible temptation of Seduction visa vie Ann Margret..His Twin Image! Through it all though he still made it to 42 and …Yes…He …Did …Do…It…”MY WAY”! I hope he is at peace now in Heaven with his long lost twin Brother, Jessie Garron! What a reunion that must have been! The Final Conclusion….He lived “THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM” and proved that “ONE MAN CAN CHANGE THE WORLD”! Elvis Arron Presley lived a Lifetime in his 42 brief years on a Journey from abject poverty to the Greatest Entertainer of the 2Oth Century…and he Touched all of our Lives in the End in a GOOD WAY!

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