Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lessons from Elvis: All shook up

- George Will Columnist

In July 1954, a 19-year-old Memphis truck driver recorded at Sun Studio the song “That’s All Right.” When a local disc jockey promised to play it, the truck driver tuned his parents’ radio to the station and went to a movie.

His mother pulled him from the theater because the DJ was playing the record repeatedly and wanted to interview the singer immediatel­y. The DJ asked where the singer had gone to high school. He answered, “Humes,” an all-white school. The DJ asked because many callers “who like your record think you must be colored, singing the way you do.”

Elvis Presley from Tupelo, Mississipp­i, had committed “cultural appropriat­ion.”

According to Ray Connolly in “Being Elvis,” Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, a black Mississipp­ian, had popularize­d “That’s All Right.” When Presley first entered the recording studio, he was asked, “Who do you sound like?” He replied, “I don’t sound like nobody.”

Actually, he sounded like someone melding the sounds of gospel, country and what was then called “race music” — music by Southern blacks — to make something new.

Indignatio­n about appropriat­ion is a new frontier in the ever-expanding empire of cultivated victimhood: “Marginaliz­ed” persons from a particular culture supposedly are somehow wounded when “privileged” people — those who are unvictimiz­ed or less victimized — express or even just enjoy the culture of more pure victims without their permission.

The wearing of sombreros at tequila-themed parties triggered — to speak the language of the exquisitel­y sensitive — the anti-appropriat­ion constabula­ry at Bowdoin College. Oberlin College’s palate police denounced as “appropriat­ive” an allegedly inauthenti­c preparatio­n of General Tso’s chicken. Such nonsense is harmless — until it morphs into attempts to regulate something serious, like writing fiction: Do not write about cultures other than your own.

With characteri­stic tartness, novelist Lionel Shriver responded to this “climate of scrutiny” when, at a writers’ conference, she clapped a sombrero on her head and said: We’re not supposed to try on other people’s hats? That’s what we’re paid to do.

Instead, “any tradition, any experience, any costume, any way of doing and saying things, that is associated with a minority or disadvanta­ged group is ring-fenced: look-but-don’t touch.”

Eugene Volokh, law professor and maestro of the Volokh Conspiracy blog, drolly says: If only there were a word for “telling people that they mustn’t do something because of their race or ethnic origin.” Asks Franklin Einspruch, writing in The Federalist, “Where does new culture come from? It is copied, with alteration­s, from existing culture. The process is reproducti­ve. Sexy, even. So of course, the outrage-as-a-lifestyle wing of the progressiv­e left wants to dictate rules for its proper enjoyment.”

The University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Jonathan Zimmerman, writing in The Chronicle of Higher Education, says “the mostly left-wing quest for cultural purity bears an eerie echo to the right-wing fantasy of national purity, which peaked during the so-called 100-percent-American campaigns of the early 20th century.”

Of Chuck Berry, Zimmerman writes: “His first big hit, ‘Maybellene,’ adapted an old melody that had been recorded by country-music performers like Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys. Berry combined the ‘hillbilly’ sound of white country with the African-American rhythm and blues that he imbibed in his native St. Louis.” For this, he was heckled in Harlem.

John Lennon said, “Before Elvis, there was nothing.” Not really: There was Crudup, and before him there was a long, creatively tangled line of precursors. Elvis, said Mick Jagger, was “an original in an area of imitators.” Actually, no cultural figure is entirely original.

Listening to Radio Luxembourg late one night, teenaged Keith Richards heard “Heartbreak Hotel,” and “when I woke up the next day I was a different guy.”

Bob Dylan, a freewheeli­ng cultural appropriat­or himself, said, “Hearing Elvis for the first time was like busting out of jail.” Those who would wall off cultures from “outsiders” are would-be wardens.

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