independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Why does Prince hate on Elvis?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 4 of 5 <12345>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #90 posted 12/18/04 3:02pm

squirrelgrease

avatar

DorothyParkerWasCool said:

squirrelgrease said:



They performed while on their period?

Inappropriate and the joke is ingnorant too considering that minstrel and menstrual are spelled differently. neutral
[Edited 12/18/04 14:14pm]


You misspelled "ignant".
If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #91 posted 12/18/04 4:57pm

DorothyParkerW
asCool

squirrelgrease said:

DorothyParkerWasCool said:


Inappropriate and the joke is ingnorant too considering that minstrel and menstrual are spelled differently. neutral
[Edited 12/18/04 14:14pm]


You misspelled "ignant".


You're right I did...didn't catch that...but u got the point; your post was still IGNORANT. razz
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #92 posted 12/18/04 6:25pm

Snake

Name Elvis type Songs By Prince.
>Delirous
>Horny Toad
Any Else.....?

Name an Elvis Song Prince should Do.
>Suspicious Minds
.
We all want a big hit again because
we want to relive the Hysteria & Pandemonium we experienced
when Purple Rain was Hot. Actually, he doesn't care if it happens again or not.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #93 posted 12/18/04 7:54pm

purplesmoke

avatar

Damn Elvis sampling and stealing music. He should come back again and steal some more music.
"Did u love somebody
But got no love in return?
Did u understand the real meaning of love?
That it just is and never yearns"
...Prince
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #94 posted 12/18/04 8:27pm

4nowneway

Elvis was bad in his day, anyone with an musical since knows that, and Prince has lots of it, I know P respects Elvis, as an entertainer not as a musician, Elvis was just a singer and entertainer, not a true musician like P. P will never go out like Elvis, fat and out of shape.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #95 posted 12/18/04 10:52pm

alandail

10 seconds on google shows the supposed Elvis comment is an urban legend

http://www.snopes.com/mus...esley1.asp
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #96 posted 12/18/04 11:16pm

bkw

avatar

The "dead like Elvis" line in Face Down is actually a sample from an unreleased Poet 99 track recorded in around 1989 I think.

Just some useless trivia for you. I think he used that line cos he liked the sample, simple as that. smile
When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #97 posted 12/19/04 1:26am

IstenSzek

avatar

bkw said:

The "dead like Elvis" line in Face Down is actually a sample from an unreleased Poet 99 track recorded in around 1989 I think.

Just some useless trivia for you. I think he used that line cos he liked the sample, simple as that. smile


nod

it's funny though how people here go absolutely nuts over something
like this and make up their own story as they go along. at the end
of a thread the outcome is mostly hilarious and absolutely wrong.

then, a month or so later, that same wrong outcome is posted again
as fact at the beginning of yet another thread. the fabrications
have than become "fact".

falloff
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #98 posted 12/19/04 1:30am

jazzy328is

Most of you people defending Elvis are a Trip and a half. He said it, (there is no proof) Give me a break, he said it, Back in the 60's when James Brown did I'm Black and I'm Proud, Elvis did a song in concert, SAy it loud I'm white and I'm, proud.

Prince does a song and says Abraham Lincoln was a Racist, and a lot of white folks call him a racist, he's against white people etc. Why do white people run from the truth, Elvis didn't care for Blacks, period. Live with it, Hell when The beatles came here, they asked them who was their favorite american singer, John said, James Brown and the reporter said who is James Brown? Black people didn't matter to most whites, was not important, and anything they did that was important, somebody white stole it and got paid and got the credit for it. Why don't you people living in Egypt (de nile) just shut up, you sound like fools. He did say it.
How you gonna get my back when you fronting.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #99 posted 12/19/04 5:15am

GertjandeR

avatar

With "Rock 'n Roll Is Still Alive" he was reacting on the song "Rock 'n Roll Is Dead" by Lenny Kravitz.

Prince doesn't hate Elvis. He once even mentioned Elvis as an example for his live performances, like James Brown was an example for the same.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #100 posted 12/19/04 6:25am

RipHer2Shreds

jazzy328is said:

Most of you people defending Elvis are a Trip and a half. He said it, (there is no proof) Give me a break, he said it, Back in the 60's when James Brown did I'm Black and I'm Proud, Elvis did a song in concert, SAy it loud I'm white and I'm, proud.

Prince does a song and says Abraham Lincoln was a Racist, and a lot of white folks call him a racist, he's against white people etc. Why do white people run from the truth, Elvis didn't care for Blacks, period. Live with it, Hell when The beatles came here, they asked them who was their favorite american singer, John said, James Brown and the reporter said who is James Brown? Black people didn't matter to most whites, was not important, and anything they did that was important, somebody white stole it and got paid and got the credit for it. Why don't you people living in Egypt (de nile) just shut up, you sound like fools. He did say it.


You really need to learn how to argue your point instead of just putting those down who don't agree with you and insisting that you needn't give any proof. Something isn't true just because you believe it to be so.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #101 posted 12/19/04 2:25pm

laurarichardso
n

RipHer2Shreds said:

Rhondab said:




My mother had a "friend" on her job that she would have lunch with everyday that always confused to be a racist and yet loved to talk with my mom. Was that person still a racist, yep....


I don't know why ppl are acting brand new with this Elvis and racism stuff. Both him and John Wayne made some comments against black folks....its not new info.

It may not be new info, but I just don't understand it and I've never seen confirmed information about it. I'm not saying it can't be true, I'm just saying from what I've read and heard, I can't definitively say that I believe it. Did Elvis have bigoted notions? I'm sure he did, and there's not a single United States citizen that can say they don't; it's engrained in our society from the time we're born (anyone who's read and fully understands Jane Elliott's work will get this point).

But from what I've heard, Elvis was fully aware that he was performing black American music, and he never tried to hide it. NPR had a whole series of programs in August 2002 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of his death. During one of these programs, they played a radio interview where he talked at length about the roots of the music he performed and loved. Not once did he claim that it was his music. He said he performed music that was otherwise lesser known to the general American public, i.e., white folks, and that he was popularizing work that others were already doing.

Also, I'm fully aware that how he talked in public when it came to his music could very likely be quite different than what he talked about in private about his personal feelings. What I'm saying is, things I've heard about those issues are widely conflicting. I hadn't heard the comment he apparently made to Redd Foxx about black folks shining his shoes. But even in that context - if the quote is true - Redd admitted that he changed a lot and that he was very young at the time. You've got to be accountable for the comments you make, but that doesn't mean he didn't change and learn from his mistakes.

-----
You know what Elvis may have changed as he got older but if you think the Elvis of the Jim Crow South of the 1950's was singing the prises of black people publicly you are living in a dream world.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #102 posted 12/19/04 2:31pm

laurarichardso
n

RipHer2Shreds said:

Fleshofmyflesh said:

Just the quote "....Elvis took music...." doesn't sound right.
How can you take music ?
I could see you saying this if the 20 year old Elvis was savvy enough to set out to intentionally copy and impersonate music he heard all his life, but that is so far from reality as to be ridiculous. We all know that throughout history, Black people have suffered and often been sold out so that the White man could profit. It began with slavery, and in my opinion, continues today with boxing and entertainment. The difference is in the intent. Was Elvis driven to perform because his intent was to steal something that didn't belong to him so that he could make money? If you know anything about Elvis, you know the answer to this.
Let us not forget the troubled road he paved for himself by refusing to conform to a racist society. He was called nigger lover. He received death threats. People feared him, some hated him. But he refused to go away. Why ? Because he had to be who he was. And who was he ? A poor boy from Mississippi who had music coming out of his pores. If anything, he symbolizes ANTI racism and the struggles so many endured to change people's minds.


This much is true. And it wasn't just the white folks buying his music. Elvis is one of the biggest hit makers on the R&B chart, raking in 35 hits and six #1's. In fact, he is the only performer to chart #1 on the R&B, pop and country chart with the same song - Don't Be Cruel, Hound Dog and All Shook Up all acheived that status. I ain't sayin' the man's perfect. It sounds like he had plenty of faults, but that he recognized them and presumably changed for the better.

-----
Well of course black people brought his records. We buy rap music and the rappers do nothing but degrad themselves and the African-American communinty.

African-Americans are so use to being put down in this country that we are numb to it. Elvis being white and racist comments would not have stopped us from buying his records.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #103 posted 12/19/04 2:35pm

RipHer2Shreds

laurarichardson said:

RipHer2Shreds said:


It may not be new info, but I just don't understand it and I've never seen confirmed information about it. I'm not saying it can't be true, I'm just saying from what I've read and heard, I can't definitively say that I believe it. Did Elvis have bigoted notions? I'm sure he did, and there's not a single United States citizen that can say they don't; it's engrained in our society from the time we're born (anyone who's read and fully understands Jane Elliott's work will get this point).

But from what I've heard, Elvis was fully aware that he was performing black American music, and he never tried to hide it. NPR had a whole series of programs in August 2002 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of his death. During one of these programs, they played a radio interview where he talked at length about the roots of the music he performed and loved. Not once did he claim that it was his music. He said he performed music that was otherwise lesser known to the general American public, i.e., white folks, and that he was popularizing work that others were already doing.

Also, I'm fully aware that how he talked in public when it came to his music could very likely be quite different than what he talked about in private about his personal feelings. What I'm saying is, things I've heard about those issues are widely conflicting. I hadn't heard the comment he apparently made to Redd Foxx about black folks shining his shoes. But even in that context - if the quote is true - Redd admitted that he changed a lot and that he was very young at the time. You've got to be accountable for the comments you make, but that doesn't mean he didn't change and learn from his mistakes.

-----
You know what Elvis may have changed as he got older but if you think the Elvis of the Jim Crow South of the 1950's was singing the prises of black people publicly you are living in a dream world.

You continue to argue the same point without reading what I posted. The radio interview I listened to was indeed from the 1950s, and guess what? He was singing the praises (or prises, take your pick) of black music in the 1950s.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #104 posted 12/19/04 2:36pm

laurarichardso
n

mozfonky said:

FunkMistress said:



Please tell me my eyes are deceiving me, and you did not just pull out that tired racist bullshit about how much somebody "loved" their black servants.

disbelief


How can I be racist, come on now, chill brother. I'm not going to even dignify that. A worker is not a slave, she was bothered by the stories so he talked to her. She was like family, he bought her a house. He was not 'massa presley' as you are trying to get me to come across saying. As much as I sympathize with black folks as an indian, and agree that racism is denied in this country, there are times when black folks just flat out imagine shit. But, I'm sure i've been guilty of it too, racism will make you paranoid. Now, someone stated redd foxx said this, I rebutted by saying another black person said something else, that he was his cook is really incidental. Elvis was a mixed bag of generosity and ego, but he did not say that mess (I don't believe). Go ahead and believe it if you want. I'd love to read the Redd Foxx interview and check it myself. Foxx wasn't perfect himself, he was a former street hustler who I'm sure was not above making up shit. Now, I'll give you a reason to be pissed, Elvis once said onstage that his black singers had breath that smelled like catfish, they walked off on him. That is factual, and it was said in humor. Come on black folks, laugh.

-----
"there are times when black folks just flat out imagine shit"

yes, black people imagined the "Jim Crow south", lynchings, "KKK", Castrations and Slavery.

None of this shit happend it was all in our minds. You need to get to the public libary immediatly and do some reading.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #105 posted 12/19/04 2:37pm

RipHer2Shreds

laurarichardson said:

RipHer2Shreds said:



This much is true. And it wasn't just the white folks buying his music. Elvis is one of the biggest hit makers on the R&B chart, raking in 35 hits and six #1's. In fact, he is the only performer to chart #1 on the R&B, pop and country chart with the same song - Don't Be Cruel, Hound Dog and All Shook Up all acheived that status. I ain't sayin' the man's perfect. It sounds like he had plenty of faults, but that he recognized them and presumably changed for the better.

-----
Well of course black people brought his records. We buy rap music and the rappers do nothing but degrad themselves and the African-American communinty.

African-Americans are so use to being put down in this country that we are numb to it. Elvis being white and racist comments would not have stopped us from buying his records.

I'm not arguing against that. I'm simply saying his music reached a lot of people - not just white Americans. We can argue whether or not he was a bigot, but his musical content was not in any way.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #106 posted 12/22/04 7:32am

jamaulredmond

Fleshofmyflesh said:

jamaulredmond said:




That quote has been disputed also. There hasn't been solid proof that he said that, but I believe he did since he also didn't want black musicians to play in his band, His justification was that a lot of black musicians can't read music.

um, neither could he. But the topic was whether prince hates him, I seriously doubt he does.


So he objected to using black musicians but ONLY used black female back up singers?
WTF ?



That was my sentiment exactly,,,WTF!!!


Let me just say that I am a fan of Elvis. Even have a rare collection of trading cards. BUT the man WAS racist amongst other things. It still doesn't take away from his talents.

R-kelly is a peeing pedophile, but he can still sing better than most artist out there.
[Edited 12/22/04 7:35am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #107 posted 12/22/04 8:05am

laurarichardso
n

RipHer2Shreds said:

laurarichardson said:


-----
You know what Elvis may have changed as he got older but if you think the Elvis of the Jim Crow South of the 1950's was singing the prises of black people publicly you are living in a dream world.

You continue to argue the same point without reading what I posted. The radio interview I listened to was indeed from the 1950s, and guess what? He was singing the praises (or prises, take your pick) of black music in the 1950s.

-----
Singing the praises of black musicians has nothing to do with Elvis being a bigot. Lot's of white people purchased black music in the 50's. That does not mean they wanted blacks to have equal rights. Elvis was a product of the Jim Crow South. My guess is he made racist statements all the time, enjoyed RnB music and employed blacks at Graceland. It does not mean he was free of bigotry.

You just will not acknowledge the time that Elvis came from.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #108 posted 12/22/04 8:16am

RipHer2Shreds

laurarichardson said:

RipHer2Shreds said:


You continue to argue the same point without reading what I posted. The radio interview I listened to was indeed from the 1950s, and guess what? He was singing the praises (or prises, take your pick) of black music in the 1950s.

-----
Singing the praises of black musicians has nothing to do with Elvis being a bigot. Lot's of white people purchased black music in the 50's. That does not mean they wanted blacks to have equal rights. Elvis was a product of the Jim Crow South. My guess is he made racist statements all the time, enjoyed RnB music and employed blacks at Graceland. It does not mean he was free of bigotry.

You just will not acknowledge the time that Elvis came from.

Actually, I did just that; I never said he was free of bigotry. You should re-read my posts. You seem to be trying to make a point and painting me as a fool who's ignorant of how the south was in the 1950s. I grew up in the South. I know racism existed there and still exists everywhere in this country. Your train of thought is to paint everyone that came out of that era and location as a racist. It's simply not true.

I think I've argued my point with facts. You have not. I'm not saying Elvis was definitively not a bigot. If you'd take the time to actually read what I said, you'd see that. You've just not argued your point well at all. I've given you a fact about Elvis and you counter it with a notion about that time in general. That doesn't mean everyone subscribed to that notion. To continue this discussion would be pointless, because people's minds - including my own - are already made up on this. I'm certainly not going to be the one to change them.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #109 posted 12/22/04 8:44am

mozfonky

avatar

Elvis was so collosal that no one knew what to make of him in the early days. Hence, there were all kinds of rumours. Some going way back to his boyhood that Elvis was actually part black, and as he got into entertainment, that he was passing for white. They say he shot his mother, that he stuffed his pants with a garden hose for tv, (the real reason sullivan shot him from the shoulders up) and so forth. That he was gay,etc.. Most of these had no truth to them, Either way, he's good enough for Prince though and remained a touchstone for him since the early days.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #110 posted 12/23/04 8:21pm

sisforscandalo
us

avatar

Fleshofmyflesh said:

Rhondab said:




I think it could be that Elvis gets a lot of credit for things that he clearly took from other artists.....



This is a great topic for discussion.
I don't know why people see it this way. Elvis loved the blues. Rock n roll was in his blood. He always acknowledged the fact that he learned music from the Black folks in Mississippi who sat on their porches and played. Elvis never tried to steal or pretend that he invented that kind of music.
He just happened to be white.

co-sign. i loved elvis b4 i had any worldly comprehension of what "obsessive" ment. but that's not the point.
"music is my life partner. the only one who will never EVER leave me"--Tommy Lee
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #111 posted 12/23/04 10:49pm

XNY

avatar

I think if Prince was around in Elvis' day, EP would've ripped him off almost every record Prince put out and the only thing the kids would hear was EP's version. That's essentially what happened to Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and countless other black artists in the day.
"Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion" -- Martha Graham
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #112 posted 12/23/04 11:00pm

poetbear68

WapoWan said:

I think he's just kidding.
Have you seen Prince's concert in Las Vegas. He impersonates James Brown as senile old man.
Thats his sense of humor I guess


Aroo? If you're talking about the Aladdin DVD concert, where does he do James? I remember him goofing on Ozzy Osbourne, but not James.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #113 posted 12/23/04 11:02pm

poetbear68

Fleshofmyflesh said:

And I'm not asking why YOU hate on Elvis (if you do). I'm asking what Prince has against him. He has trashed him a couple songs....Face Down, Rock n Roll is Alive. On the Musicology tour he began the chords of Jailhouse Rock and then stopped and said "You have to be the Prince before you can be the King."
What's the deal?


Well, gosh, it's not like him to want to bag on someone, eh? He did it to Michael Jackson, so why are you surprised to see this? It's like when MJ dissed Donny Osmond on the Carol Burnett Show. LOL
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #114 posted 12/23/04 11:12pm

XNY

avatar

poetbear68 said:

Fleshofmyflesh said:

And I'm not asking why YOU hate on Elvis (if you do). I'm asking what Prince has against him. He has trashed him a couple songs....Face Down, Rock n Roll is Alive. On the Musicology tour he began the chords of Jailhouse Rock and then stopped and said "You have to be the Prince before you can be the King."
What's the deal?


Well, gosh, it's not like him to want to bag on someone, eh? He did it to Michael Jackson, so why are you surprised to see this? It's like when MJ dissed Donny Osmond on the Carol Burnett Show. LOL

MJ dissed Donnnnny??? Whaaaaahhhhhtttt? That bastard!
Just proves he likes to fuck little kids in the ass.
"Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion" -- Martha Graham
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #115 posted 12/23/04 11:35pm

piscesglenn

..nevermind
[Edited 12/23/04 23:40pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #116 posted 12/23/04 11:56pm

kalelvisj

Hello everyone at the org. been lurking here for a couple of years, and this is going to be my first post...be gentle.
I've got to say that I love this topic because I am a huge fan of both Prince and Elvis. And the things I like about them are very similar. They both did music that defied any sort of classification during the peaks of their careers. The both shattered not only racial but gender barriers. And they both tore it up on stage through out their careers.

But one seems to be at issue in this thread is racism. I am a little shocked to hear people say that everyone in the fifties had to be racist. If that was the case things would be even worse in this country than they are. I always find it upsetting to see racism from anyone, black white or the rainbow in between. There is no escaping the racist past of America. Period. There it is we are a nation ofpredjudiced people. Unfortunately that is the way it is. But that doesnt mean everyone is a racist. The Jim Crow south doesn't make everyone in the south a racist, the riots in LA doesn't mean every person of color is gonna cave in some truckers skull with a brick. But like the man himself said in "race" what are we gaining by only looking at that part of our history. And like another man said "If I can dream of a better land, where all my brother walk hand in hand, why Can't my dream come true?" Elvis "If I can Dream, 1968.)

Now to some cold hard facts. Presley recorded his first commercial work in 1954, Toured throughout the south where he was an outrageous success because NO ONE had heard anything like what he was putting out at the time. Chuck Berry and Little Richard both recorded their essential music after Presley was all over the air waves and the music they recorded after Elvis' success was far different than what the recorded before July 54 when Elvis first commercial single was released. Not point this out to in anyway to undermine the importance of either of these musical geniuses, just feel it important to put it all into context.
The biggest differences between Elvis, Chuck, and Little Richard is that Elvis ALWAYS acknowledged his influences both black and white and Chuck and Little Richard would have the world believe the created in a vacuum. Where is the theivery happening?

Culture is not genetic or racial it is environmental. The idea that if you take two people raised in the deep south, dirt poor sharecroppers, ostrecized from society and that based on the color of their skin one is a theif and the other a genius, that is in itself a racist notion.

Me personally I would rather put color aside and be part a new power generation.

Peace ya'll.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #117 posted 12/24/04 12:00am

kalelvisj

excuse the many typos in the previous post, just got home from end of semester celebrating.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #118 posted 12/25/04 10:33pm

lovemachine

avatar

kalelvisj said:

Hello everyone at the org. been lurking here for a couple of years, and this is going to be my first post...be gentle.
I've got to say that I love this topic because I am a huge fan of both Prince and Elvis. And the things I like about them are very similar. They both did music that defied any sort of classification during the peaks of their careers. The both shattered not only racial but gender barriers. And they both tore it up on stage through out their careers.

But one seems to be at issue in this thread is racism. I am a little shocked to hear people say that everyone in the fifties had to be racist. If that was the case things would be even worse in this country than they are. I always find it upsetting to see racism from anyone, black white or the rainbow in between. There is no escaping the racist past of America. Period. There it is we are a nation ofpredjudiced people. Unfortunately that is the way it is. But that doesnt mean everyone is a racist. The Jim Crow south doesn't make everyone in the south a racist, the riots in LA doesn't mean every person of color is gonna cave in some truckers skull with a brick. But like the man himself said in "race" what are we gaining by only looking at that part of our history. And like another man said "If I can dream of a better land, where all my brother walk hand in hand, why Can't my dream come true?" Elvis "If I can Dream, 1968.)

Now to some cold hard facts. Presley recorded his first commercial work in 1954, Toured throughout the south where he was an outrageous success because NO ONE had heard anything like what he was putting out at the time. Chuck Berry and Little Richard both recorded their essential music after Presley was all over the air waves and the music they recorded after Elvis' success was far different than what the recorded before July 54 when Elvis first commercial single was released. Not point this out to in anyway to undermine the importance of either of these musical geniuses, just feel it important to put it all into context.
The biggest differences between Elvis, Chuck, and Little Richard is that Elvis ALWAYS acknowledged his influences both black and white and Chuck and Little Richard would have the world believe the created in a vacuum. Where is the theivery happening?

Culture is not genetic or racial it is environmental. The idea that if you take two people raised in the deep south, dirt poor sharecroppers, ostrecized from society and that based on the color of their skin one is a theif and the other a genius, that is in itself a racist notion.

Me personally I would rather put color aside and be part a new power generation.

Peace ya'll.


Good points. Thank you.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #119 posted 12/25/04 10:53pm

Spats

There has never been any proof that Elvis was racist. That alleged comment that Elvis made was made up by a black magazine way back. All of their so called evidence was B.S. Redd Foxx was not a friend of Elvis', they only met a couple times in Vegas.

The Sweet Inspirations backed him up in concert. A racist would not do that. In Houston, the rednecks down there didn't want them on stage with Elvis but Elvis said if The Sweets couldn't appear than he wouldn't be appearing. The rednecks changed their minds.

Darlene Love claims she made out with Elvis in his trailer on the sets of one of his movies.

The guy from Public Enemy has since taken back what he said about Elvis because he actually did some research on him and realized he was wrong. Said his favorite Elvis tune was Suspicious Minds.

Prince is a fan of Elvis'. He talked about growing up on his movies when he was young and he has covered his tunes in concert.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 4 of 5 <12345>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Why does Prince hate on Elvis?