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I knew Elvis was a thief but this takes the cake https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZvnQ3482TU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CVAz4QP4to [Edited 8/19/22 1:01am] Graycap23 was ME! | |
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Stop being a drama queen. He was influenced, just like prince, mj and all other artist are by older generations. This is how art works. | |
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Word...he's well known and well documented as a thief...also a terribly overrated singer, he couldnt dance, and he was a terrible actor...ive always been confused as to why he was ever "famous" in the first place...
In the words of the great Flavor Flav.. "Mother F--- him, and John Wayne..." [Edited 8/20/22 8:32am] | |
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In some interviews like this one Chuck has said he likes Elvis' music. He's said that he doesn't agree of the perception of Elvis as being The King or credited as inventing rock n roll. [Edited 8/19/22 10:24am] You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Little Richard got part of his look from a musician named Esquerita. Gospel singer Marion Williams influenced some of his vocal screams. Paul McCartney was doing a Little Richard impression on some of the early Beatles songs and they did a tour with Richard. Some of Michael Jackson's dance moves were inspired from dancers like Bob Fosse & Fred Astaire. The Nicholas Brothers appeared on The Jacksons 1970s variety TV show. Beyonce's Single Ladies video is basically a copy of a 1960s dance routine by Gwen Verdon called Mexican Breakfast, which was choreographed by Fosse. Some of Led Zeppelin's songs were copied from old blues songs. The Beatles songs were based on R&B, traditional Indian music, showtunes, reggae, classical, folk, country, etc. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
In some interviews like this one Chuck has said he likes Elvis' music. He's said that he doesn't agree of the perception of Elvis as being The King or credited as inventing rock n roll. [Edited 8/19/22 10:24am] I couldnt care less what Chuck D says in that interview...i know what he said and felt on the song i quoted...and i stand firmly on what i said and what Gooddoctor23 said about Elvis being a thief, and what i said about Elvis having no talent as an actor and dancer, and beng wildly overrated as a singer...his music and movies and performances are overrated trash, In my opinion...he was no King [Edited 8/19/22 11:08am] | |
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I'm not going to rate something a random dude on an obscure website said over Elvis contemporaries like B.B. King, Mavis Staples, Rufus Thomas, Jackie Wilson, & others who have said that Elvis "stole" nothing. James Brown released a tribute song to Elvis when Elvis passed. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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MickyDolenz said:
I'm not going to rate something a random dude on an obscure website said over Elvis contemporaries like B.B. King, Mavis Staples, Rufus Thomas, Jackie Wilson, & others who have said that Elvis "stole" nothing. James Brown released a tribute song to Elvis when Elvis passed. Of course those old school southern reared and even brainwashed and/or undereducated artists would say that...because it wouldve been career suicide and possibly even WORSE to say anything to the contrary...im sure those people you named didnt want to take the risk of being blackballed or lynched or murdered for speaking against the powers that be, whether it be the entertainment industry or social/political power structure...those are extremely poor examples... now go find out what progressive and educated people of color, like Muhamnad Ali or Malcolm X or even people like Curtis Mayfield or Quincy Jones from that era, thought...or what most contemporary black artists with knowledge and awareness of self, and knowledge of music history, think...by now, anyone with sound mind and common sense KNOWS that most ALL the popular music genres and styles, and even specific songs and dances, were influenced by, and/or stolen from black and african-american-caribbean culture...whether it be rock, country-western, jazz, soul, r&b, hiphop, pop, disco, etc... | |
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You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Ali speaking at a 1985 memorial service for Elvis: watch You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Ok i assumed wrong about Ali (another born and bred southerner; i shouldve known better)...but i remain unmoved and unchanged about my, and many many others' feelings about Elvis Presley, a well known thief and blatant appropriator of black culture...there is no link or video that can convince me otherwise...i know what i know and i feel what i feel...besides, im just a "random dude on an obscure website", anyway...right? | |
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I never heard of Roy Hamilton but this is beyong influence. He stole everything but the mans wife. Graycap23 was ME! | |
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RJOrion said: Word...he's well known and well documented as a thief...also a terribly overrated singer, he couldnt dance, and he was a terrible actor...ive always been confused as to why he was ever "famous" in the first place... In the words of the great Chuck D.. "Mother F--- him, and John Wayne..." Flavor Flav said that, and he was right. | |
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JorisE73 said: RJOrion said: Word...he's well known and well documented as a thief...also a terribly overrated singer, he couldnt dance, and he was a terrible actor...ive always been confused as to why he was ever "famous" in the first place... In the words of the great Chuck D.. "Mother F--- him, and John Wayne..." Flavor Flav said that, and he was right. Yep, youre right...on both points. | |
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Steal what? His manager paid for the rights and they all got paid. This is a guy who paved the way for alot of artist. He took risk back then and did not back down. Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It! | |
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Good thing the world doesn't give a shit about your opinion and has a different one. | |
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PatrickS77 said:
Good thing the world doesn't give a shit about your opinion and has a different one. YOU obviously give a shit, because you replied...and you replied all in your fragile feelings...walk it off, Chump..."the King" (of Thieves) is DEAD. | |
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PatrickS77 said:
Good thing the world doesn't give a shit about your opinion and has a different one. Amen. Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It! | |
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This is a great thread. "Actually, Chuck D said this..." "Who cares what Chuck D says, tell me what true greats like Ali said..." "Actually, Ali said this..." "WHO CARES what Ali says... I say this..." "We don't care." "OBVIOUSLY you do care!" [Edited 8/20/22 19:28pm] | |
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He claims that Ali is another "old school southern reared and even brainwashed and/or undereducated artists would say that...because it wouldve been career suicide and possibly even WORSE to say anything to the contrary...im sure those people you named didnt want to take the risk of being blackballed or lynched or murdered for speaking against the powers that be". This is the same Muhammad Ali that changed his named from Cassius Clay to a Muslim name in the early 1960s, then refused to go to Vietnam. He got his boxing titles & career stripped from him for several years and got a lot of death threats for being a "draft dodger". All of those artists have spoken well about Elvis long after he had passed away. What kind of lynching or having his career blacklisted would have happened to B.B. King in the 1980s or 1990s or 2000s? The US government was sponsoring B.B. King to perform in Russia & China in the 1970s & 1980s and do USO tours. Mavis Staples wrote about Elvis attending services at her church in her 2014 autobiography and she said nothing negative about him. Stevie Wonder has spoken well about Elvis and Eddie Murphy had a entire room of his home with Elvis stuff. Michael Jackson married his daughter. Even Louis Farrakhan said this about Black musicians going into the classical music field, "Elvis Presley shared the soul of black music's best performers. He was a reflection of our life experience. Why shouldn't we do the same? Black artists should feel the freedom to reflect the God in Mendelssohn's music just as whites are touched by the God in us.." You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Oh, yeah. And a response like a little child. We truly don't give a shit. We're just amused. | |
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chuck d's line in fight the power was more about elvis the symbol, the public figure, than elvis the singer/musician. it was a takedown of popular white figures. i bet chuck likes one or two john wayne movies too. elvis is just the target, the easy person to serve up if you are looking for someone to symbolise the 'white artists stole everything they know from black artists' line of thinking.
fact is, yes, elvis took from black music, but he also brought white influences into it too. there are many great elvis songs with little that obviously owes anything to blues, or rnb. so you dont have to LIKE elvis, but to just dismiss him entirely as a 'thief' etc etc, is not just too easy, it makes it look like you cant think in anything more than binaries tbh.
elvis' black peers might have had reservations about elvis being more succesful than them, they knew the racial politics of america, but i doubt they hated him or his music. but then artists are usually more open minded musically than the average person. | |
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https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/music-news/quincy-jones-michael-jackson-elvis-presley-1234955138/
quincy jones on elvis:
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vernon reid on elvis and bb king - https://twitter.com/vurnt22/status/1522953403357609984
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its this kind of (and often painful liberal) absolutism that makes everyone look stupid. youre telling me theres no country influence in elvis? | |
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loool
so everything is black music?
if im making myself look close minded, youre just making yourself look like that corny kind of white liberal patting himself on the back for saying 'oh its all black music really'
loooool
country might have some white influences, but youre telling me its not about the experience of white southern americans? that that isnt its cultural compass? i mean, jazz has white european influences all over it, but no one is saying its not 'black music'.
[Edited 8/29/22 3:37am] | |
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And maybe you should read up on Country music. | |
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