Elvis Aaron Presley was born on January 8th, 1935 in Tupelo, Mississippi. The house he was born in was small, a two room shotgun house that his father, Vernon, had built with borrowed money on Old Salt Road. It had no running water and no indoor plumbing. The family had very little, and there were times when they did not have enough to get through the week.
Vernon Preszley worked whatever jobs he could find. He drove trucks, did farm labor, and took on odd work around Tupelo. Glattis Presley, Elvis’s mother, worked at a garment factory for a time. Neither of them had much education, and the work they could find did not pay well. The Presley’s were not unique in this.
Tubelo in the 1930s had many families living the same way, but the financial pressure on the household was real and constant. Elvis was supposed to have a twin brother. Jesse Garen Presley was born that same January morning, but was still born. Elvis grew up as an only child, and his parents, particularly his mother, Glattis, kept him close.
The loss of Jesse made Elvis more significant to both of them. Glattis was protective of him in a way that people who knew the family noticed. She walked him to school. She waited for him. The bond between them was strong throughout his childhood and would remain that way for the rest of her life.
The Presley’s attended the first Assembly of God church in Tupelo. This was a Pentecostal congregation and the services were not quiet. There was singing, there was energy, and there was a physical engagement with the music that was different from more formal church services. Elvis sat in those pews from the time he was very young.
He heard gospel music the way other children hear nursery rhymes. It was simply part of the environment he grew up in. Outside the church, Tupelo had its own musical life. Mississippi was home to a blues tradition that ran through its towns and fields. Elvis heard black musicians playing on street corners and at gatherings.
He grew up in a place where different musical currents existed side by side, gospel, country, and blues. And he was exposed to all of them before he was old enough to understand what any of that meant. When Elvis was around 11 years old, he wanted a bicycle for his birthday. His parents could not afford it.
Instead, his mother helped him get a guitar. There are different versions of exactly how this happened, but the result was the same. Elvis ended up with a cheap guitar and no formal instruction on how to play it. He learned by watching others, by practicing on his own, and by listening. His uncle, Vetor Presley, showed him some basic chords.
A pastor at his church helped as well. It was informal, slow, and self-taught. At Milm Junior High School in Tubelo, Elvis entered a talent contest in 1945. He sang a song called Old Shep, a country ballad about a boy and his dog. He performed without any musical accompaniment. According to accounts from people who were there, he played somewhere in the middle of the rankings.
Not last, but not a winner either. It was a modest result, but Elvis had stood in front of an audience and performed. That was something. In 1948, when Elvis was 13 years old, the family left Tubelo. Vernon had work troubles and the family needed a fresh start. They packed what they had and drove to Memphis, Tennessee.
They moved into a rooming house on Popular Avenue with shared bathrooms and thin walls. Later, they got into a public housing project called Lauderdale Courts. The conditions were modest, but Memphis itself was a different kind of city. It was larger, louder, and had a music scene that Tupelo could not match. Elvis attended Humes High School in Memphis.
He was quiet there, not part of any particular social group. He dressed differently from most of the other students. His hair was longer, his clothes had more color. Some students noticed him, mostly because he looked different. He was not a prominent figure at the school. He did not play sports or hold any student office.
Music was something he did on his own in private without much of an audience. By the time he graduated from Humes High School in June 1953, Elvis was 18 years old. He was working at a factory called Precision Tool and had also started driving a truck for the Crown Electric Company. He was earning money to help his family.
He had no recording contract, no manager, and no connections to the music industry. He was a truck driver from Memphis who played guitar in his spare time. That is who Elvis Presley was when he first walked through the door of Sun Studio. Memphis Recording Service sat at 706 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee.
From the outside, it did not look like much. It was a small storefront with a painted sign and a glass door. Inside, the space was modest, a recording room, a control booth, and equipment that Sam Phillips had put together carefully over time. There was nothing about the building that suggested it would become one of the most important places in the history of American music.
Sam Phillips had opened the Memphis Recording Service in 1950. He had grown up in Alabama and had worked in radio before setting up his own operation in Memphis. Phillips had a specific interest in recording musicians who were not getting attention from the larger record labels in New York or Los Angeles.
He recorded blues artists, gospel singers, and rhythm and blues musicians, people whose music was being made all around Memphis, but was not being captured or distributed in any serious way. He licensed some of those recordings to independent labels. In 1952, he started his own label, Sun Records, so he could release the music himself.
The Memphis Recording Service also offered a service that was open to the general public. For $4, anyone could walk in off the street and cut a record. The studio would press a recording onto an acetate disc, a personal record that the customer could take home. It was marketed toward regular people who wanted to record a message for a family member or capture a memory.
It was not designed as a path to a music career. It was a simple commercial service, the same way a photo studio takes portraits. This is what Elvis knew about when he walked in during the summer of 1953. He was 18 years old and had graduated from Humes High School a few weeks earlier.
He was working at Precision Tool at the time. He had no appointment, no introduction, and no one who had sent him there. He simply showed up. The reason Elvis gave for coming then and later was that he wanted to record a gift for his mother. He wanted to make something she could keep. That explanation has been repeated many times and it may well have been part of his thinking.
Glattis Presley was the most important person in his life and the idea of recording something for her fits with who he was at the time. But people who have looked at the sequence of events more closely have noted that Precision Tool where Elvis worked was not far from Sun Studio. He had almost certainly walked or driven past the building.
He knew what the Memphis Recording Service did. He knew it was a place where you could make a record. Whether the gift for his mother was the whole reason or just part of it, Elvis was also curious about what it would feel like to stand in front of a microphone in a real recording studio. When he arrived, the person at the front desk was Marian Kisker.
She worked closely with Sam Phillips and handled much of the day-to-day operation of the studio. Sam Phillips was in and out that day, and Kisker was the one who dealt with Elvis when he came through the door. She took his information, collected the $4, and set him up to record. Elvis recorded two songs that day.
The first was My Happiness, a popular ballad that had been a hit a few years earlier. The second was That’s When Your Heartaches Begin, another slow, sentimental song. Both were the kind of material that was being played on mainstream radio at the time. Polished, careful songs with a clear, melodic structure. Elvis sang them straight, the way he had heard them on the radio.
What happened next is something Marian Kisker talked about in later years. She said that while Elvis was recording, she started writing down his name. She had listened to enough musicians come through the studio to recognize when someone had something that was worth paying attention to.
She was not sure exactly what it was she was hearing, but she did not want to forget the name. She wrote it down with a note beside it. The note said something along the lines of, “Good ballad singer. Hold.” Sam Phillips was not in the studio for the full session that day. He heard some of what Elvis recorded, but the two men did not have a real conversation.
Elvis paid his $4, took his acetate disc, and left. He came back to the studio a few months later in early 1954, and recorded again. The same format, the same fee, another set of songs. He was not invited back by Phillips. He simply returned on his own, the same way he had the first time. Marian Kisker noted his name again.
Elvis was not waiting to be discovered. He kept showing up. By the spring of 1954, Sam Phillips had a problem he could not quite solve. He had been working in Memphis long enough to know that something was shifting in American music. The blues and rhythm and blues records he had been producing had an energy and a feeling that white mainstream radio was not touching.
Phillips believed there was an audience for that sound, a broader audience, if the right person could deliver it in the right way. He talked about this openly with Marian Kisker. He was looking for a white singer who could carry that feeling naturally without it sounding forced or imitated.
He had not found that person yet. In the meantime, Marian Kisker still had Elvis Presley’s name written down from those two walk-in sessions. When Phillips mentioned that he had a demo of a ballad he wanted to try with a singer, a song called Without You, Kisker suggested they call the young man whose name she had kept.
Phillips agreed to try it. The call went to the Presley home in the spring of 1954. Elvis was 19 by this point and was working as a truck driver for Crown Electric. When he got the message that Sun Studio had called and wanted him to come in, he did not wait. By most accounts, he got there so quickly that it seemed like he had run the whole way.
Mary and Kisker later said that he arrived almost before she had put the phone down. That eagerness was real. Elvis had been walking into the studio on his own, paying out of pocket, recording songs that nobody asked for. He had been doing that quietly for almost a year. A call from Sam Phillips was not something he was going to take slowly.
When Elvis arrived at the studio, Philillips had him listen to the demo of Without You and then try to sing it. The song was a ballad, slow, controlled, and built around the very specific emotional tone. Elvis worked at it. He tried it more than once. Phillips listened and watched. It did not come together.
The song was not the right fit, and no amount of additional attempts was going to change that. Philip shifted direction and asked Elvis what else he could do. What else did he know? What had he been singing? What followed was a long and somewhat scattered audition. Elvis went through a range of material. Country songs, ballads, gospel numbers, anything he could pull from memory.
He knew a wide variety of songs because he had spent years absorbing whatever he heard on the radio or at church or in the neighborhoods around Memphis. He was not limited to one style. But knowing many songs and being able to deliver them in a way that worked on a record were two different things.
Phillips listened through all of it. He was patient and did not cut Elvis off abruptly. But as the session continued, it became clear that nothing they were trying was landing the way Philillips needed it to. The ballads were competent but did not stand out. The other material showed range but not direction.
Elvis could sing that was not in question, but the session was not producing anything that Philillips felt he could use. When it was over, the assessment was not encouraging. Phillips did not offer Elvis a recording contract. He did not schedule a follow-up session on the spot.
The audition ended without a clear outcome, and Elvis left the studio that day without any agreement in place. What Sam Phillips actually said to Elvis in specific terms has been described in different ways depending on the source. But the general conclusion from everyone who has discussed that session is the same.
Philillips thought Elvis had something, but he had not heard it in a form that told him what to do with it. It was not a flat rejection in the sense of being told he had no talent. It was more that the audition had not answered the question Philillips was actually asking. For Elvis, the result was the same either way.
He had come in when Sam Phillips called, had given the session everything he had, and had walked out without a deal. He was still a truck driver. He still lived with his parents at Lauderdale Courts. Nothing about his daily life had changed. Marian Kisker, for her part, kept his name. Phillips did not throw the number away, either.
He had sat across from Elvis for long enough to know that the answer he was looking for might still be somewhere in that voice. He just hadn’t found the right conditions to bring it out. The session had stopped, but the file had not been closed. Elvis Presley drove a truck for Crown Electric Company through the summer of 1954.
He woke up in the morning, went to work, made his deliveries, and came home. The job was steady, and the pay was reliable. And for a family that had spent most of its life without financial stability, that mattered. Vernon and Glattis Presley had been through enough difficult years to know the value of a regular paycheck, and Elvis understood that, too.
From the outside, nothing about his life looked like it was on the edge of changing. He was a 19-year-old truck driver living with his parents in Memphis. He had been to his son’s studio a handful of times, twice on his own, and once when Sam Phillips called him in. And none of those visits had produced anything concrete.
There was no contract, no recording, no next step that anyone had laid out for him. He had tried, it had not worked out, and life had continued as before. But Elvis did not stop playing music. This is the part of that period that matters. He had no professional outlet, no gigs lined up, and no one managing his time or pushing him toward anything.
What he did have was a guitar and the same self-driven habit he had carried since he was a teenager in Tubelo. He played at home. He played with people he knew from the neighborhood and from church. Music was not something he did because a career was waiting on the other side of it. It was simply what he did.
The people around him during this time noticed that he was still at it. His mother, Glattis, heard him playing in the evenings. Friends who came by the house would find him with the guitar in his hands. He was not performing for anyone in any formal sense. He was just continuing to do what he had always done, the same way he had done it before anyone paid attention.
and with the same consistency he would carry into everything that came later. There is something worth understanding about who Elvis was at this point in his life. He had grown up without money, without connections, and without any road map that told him how a person from Tupelo, Mississippi got into the music business.
Everything he had done up to that point, walking into Sun Studio on his own, paying $4 to make a record, showing up when Sam Phillips called him, had come from his own initiative. Nobody had guided him through any of it. He had figured out that the Memphis Recording Service existed and he had walked through the door himself.
That pattern of behavior did not stop after the audition came up short. He was not the kind of person who needed external confirmation to keep going. He had not started playing music because someone told him he was good enough to do it professionally. He had started because the music was there and he wanted to play it.
What he did not do during this period is equally telling. He did not approach other studios. He did not try to connect with other labels or look for alternative routes into the industry. He had found Sun Studio and Sam Phillips and in his mind that was still where the possibility existed. He had not been told the door was permanently closed.
The audition had been inconclusive, not final. Phillips had not told him to stop coming around. Mary and Ker had been friendly every time he walked in. The relationship, such as it was, had not ended. So Elvis waited. He worked his truck route during the day and played guitar in whatever time was left.
Weeks passed. The spring moved into early summer. Memphis in June and July is hot and slow and the city settled into its summer rhythm while Elvis continued his routine. What he could not have known during those weeks was that Sam Phillips was still thinking about him. He had not resolved the question that the audition had raised.
He had heard enough in that session to know that something was there. He had just not heard it clearly enough to know what to do with it. The wrong song, the wrong conditions, the wrong day. Any of these things can affect what comes out of a recording session. Philillips had been working with musicians long enough to know that a single session does not always tell the full story.
He had also been talking to two musicians he worked with regularly, a guitarist named Scotty Moore and the bass player named Bill Black. Phillips thought it might be worth having Elvis meet them, play a little, and see what happened in a more informal setting. That conversation between Phillips and Scotty Moore was about to lead somewhere.
Sam Phillips did not keep every name that came through the door of Memphis Recording Service. People walked in off the street regularly, paid their $4, recorded their songs, and left. Most of them were never thought about again after they walked out. The service existed to generate income for the studio and the people who used it were customers first.
Whether they had any real musical ability was a secondary consideration in most cases. Elvis Presley was different. Not because a session he had done with Phillips had gone well. It had not gone particularly well. Not because Philillips had heard something fully formed that told him exactly what he was dealing with.
The reason Philillips kept Elvis’s number was more specific than that. and it had to do with what Sam Phillips was actually looking for at that point in his career. Phillips had been working in Memphis long enough to understand the city’s musical landscape in a way that very few people did.
He had recorded blues musicians, gospel groups, and rhythm and blues artists through the early years of Sun Records. He had sat across from some genuinely talented people and had put their music on tape. He understood that music deeply and respected it, but he also understood the commercial reality of the industry he was working in.
The larger record labels in New York and Chicago were not paying serious attention to the music coming out of Memphis. The independent labels that were releasing blues and rhythm and blues records had limited distribution and limited reach. The music was reaching its existing audience, but it was not breaking into the mainstream radio market in any significant way.
Philillips believed the music had the potential to reach a much wider audience. What he needed was the right vehicle to carry it there. He had said to Marian Kaiser in various forms and on more than one occasion that if he could find a white singer who could deliver that feeling honestly, not as an imitation, not as a performance of something he did not understand, but as a genuine expression.
The commercial possibilities would be significant. This was not a casual observation. It was the central question that Phillips was working around during this entire period. Everything he was doing at Sun Records in 1953 and 1954 was in some way connected to that search. When he listened to Elvis during the walk-in sessions and then again during the audition, what Philillips heard was someone who had absorbed a wide range of musical influences without being locked into any single tradition.
Elvis had grown up in a Pentecostal church where the music was physical and emotional. He had heard blues coming out of the black neighborhoods of Memphis. He had listened to country radio and knew that material as well as anyone his age. These were not separate compartments in the way he processed music.
They had all gone in together and mixed into something that was genuinely his own. That combination was unusual. Most singers Philillips encountered came out of one tradition and stayed inside it. A country singer sounded like a country singer. A gospel singer sounded like a gospel singer.
Elvis did not fit cleanly into any single category. And that quality, as frustrating as it had been during the audition when it meant the session lacked direction, was also exactly what Philillips had been describing when he talked about what he was looking for. So, he kept the number. He did not call right away.
There was no immediate follow-up session scheduled after the audition ended. Philillips had other work to do and other artists he was recording, but Elvis Presley’s name and contact information stayed within reach rather than being set aside permanently. During this period, Philip spoke with Scotty Moore, a guitarist he had been working with through a group called the Starlight Wranglers.
Scotty was a careful and technically solid musician who Philillips trusted to give him an honest assessment of another musician’s ability. Phillips told Scotty about Elvis and suggested that Scotty meet with him informally, spend some time playing together, get a sense of what the young man could do in a relaxed setting rather than a formal studio environment.
Scotty Moore agreed to the meeting. He called Elvis and invited him over to his house on a Sunday afternoon in early July in 1954. Phillips was not present. He simply waited to hear what Scotty thought. Scotty Moore had spent an evening with Elvis Presley at his house on Bell Street and had come away with a mixed impression.
He had written a short note to Sam Phillips afterward. The note said that Elvis had a good voice and an unusual quality to the way he sang, but that Scotty was not entirely sure what to do with it from a musical standpoint. It was not a negative report. It was an honest one. Scotty had heard something in Elvis that he could not fully describe, but he had also not heard anything in that one evening that told him clearly what direction to take it.
Sam Phillips read the note and made a decision. He called Elvis directly and told him to come into the studio. He also told Scotty Moore and Bill Black to be there. The session was not presented as a formal audition in the way the earlier one had been. It was framed more as an informal opportunity to play together and see what came out of it.
There was no specific song that Philillips had in mind for them to record. There was no set agenda beyond getting the three of them in the same room with instruments and seeing what happened. For Elvis, the call was everything the previous months had been building toward. He had spent the weeks since the earlier audition driving his truck route and playing guitar at home with no indication of when or whether Philillips would reach out again.
The fact that the call came at all was significant. It meant Philillips had not moved on. It meant the door that had seemed uncertain after the inconclusive audition was still open. Elvis said yes immediately. There was no hesitation and no negotiation about the timing. Philillips told him when to come in and Elvis agreed without pause.
This was consistent with everything he had done from the beginning. The same speed with which he had arrived at the studio when Philillips first called him in the spring. The same directness that had led him to walk into the Memphis recording service on his own in the first place. The session was set for the evening of July 5th, 1954.
Memphis in early July is heavy with heat and the city slows down in the evenings as the temperature holds from the day. The studio at 706 Union Avenue was small and the equipment generated its own warmth. It was not a comfortable environment in the physical sense, but it was the environment where the work would happen.
Elvis arrived that evening with his guitar. Scotty Moore was there with his. Bill Black had his upright bass. Sam Phillips was behind the glass in the control room. The setup was simple and the space was tight, the same as it always was at Sun Studio. There was nothing about the physical conditions of that session that was different from any other session Philips had run in that building.
What was different was what Philillips was allowing the session to be. He was not directing them toward a specific outcome. He was not running them through a song he had already selected and asking them to perform it a certain way. He let the three of them play. They went through songs, stopped, tried other things, talked a little, and played some more.
It was loose in a way that a formal recording session is typically not. Philillips listened from the control room. He was patient in a way that came from experience. He had sat through enough sessions with enough musicians to know that the thing he was looking for could not always be forced into existence by structure and direction.
Sometimes you had to create the conditions and then wait for it to appear on its own. The three musicians went through a range of material during the early part of that evening. Country songs, ballads, and various other things they knew between them. Some of it was tight, and some of it was rough. None of it was producing the moment that Philillips was listening for.
The session moved through its early hours without anything that made anyone in the room stop and take notice. Then, during a break, Elvis picked up his guitar and started playing around with a song. It was an old blues number by Arthur Crudeup called That’s All Right. He was not playing it as a serious attempt at anything.
He was just loosening up, moving between one thing and the next, the way musicians do when the pressure of a session momentarily lifts. Scotty Moore picked up the pattern. Bill Black joins in on the bass. Sam Phillips leaned forward in the control room. Something was happening in that room that had not been there a moment before.
The moment Sam Phillips leaned forward in the control room, something had already shifted. Elvis had not announced that he was going to try something different. He had not stopped the session and asked Philillips for direction. He had simply picked up his guitar during a break and started playing Archer Crup’s That’s All Right in a way that was loose and unplanned.
And Scotty Moore and Bill Black had fallen in behind him without any discussion about it. Philillips opened the intercom from the control room and told them to stop. Not because it was not working, because it was. He wanted to go back to the beginning and capture it properly from the start.
He needed to make sure the tape was running and that the levels were set before they went through it again. The moment had arrived quickly and without warning, and the last thing Philillips wanted was to lose it to a technical problem. Elvis, Scotty, and Bill ran through the song again from the top.
What came out of those three musicians in that small studio on Union Avenue that night was something that did not fit neatly into any category that existed on American radio in July 1954. The rhythm was not straight country. The feeling was not straight blues. The vocal was not coming from any single tradition that a listener could point to a name.
It moved the way the music Elvis had grown up around moved with a physical looseness that came from Pentecostal church services and blues records and country radio all mixed into one thing. Scotty Moore’s guitar work on the track was clean and quick with a tone that cut through without overpowering the vocal. Bill Black’s bass playing was simple and direct, holding the rhythm in a way that kept the track moving forward without weight.
Elvis sang the song the way he had been playing it during the break. Not carefully, not with the controlled effort that had characterized the earlier parts of the evening, but freely. The way a person plays when nobody is watching and the pressure of a formal session has temporarily lifted. That quality, the looseness, the absence of self-consciousness was exactly what the earlier audition had been missing.
When Philillips had put Elvis in front of a song with clear expectations about how it should sound, Elvis had tried to meet those expectations and the effort had showed. When the pressure was off and Elvis was just playing around between attempts at something else, the thing Philillips had been listening for came out on its own.
Phillips ran the playback in the control room and listened to what they had. He then brought the three musicians in to hear it with him. The reaction in the room was a mix of surprise and uncertainty. They had not set out to record that song. They were not sure what they had made or what to call it or where it fit. Elvis himself reportedly found the playback almost strange to listen to.
He recognized his own voice, but the overall sound was different from anything he had heard himself do before. Philillips did not share their uncertainty about its value. He had been listening for something like this for years, and he knew when he was hearing it. The recording was not perfect in a technical sense.
There were things in it that a more polished production would have smoothed out. But the energy in it was real, and that energy was not something that could be added in after the fact. Either it was there in the original recording or it was not there at all. In this case, it was there. They kept working that night.
Phillips wanted more material and the three musicians had momentum now that the first song had come together. They worked on Blue Moon of Kentucky, a Bill Monroe bluegrass number, and approached it with the same looseness that had produced That’s All Right. What came out was again something that sat between categories, faster than the original, with a rhythm that pushed it away from its bluegrass roots towards something that had more in common with the feeling of the Crutup song they had just recorded. By the time the session ended in the early hours of July 6th, they had two recordings that Phillips believed were worth releasing. He had been looking for the right combination of voice, feeling, and musical setting for long enough to recognize that what he had on tape was what he had been after. Elvis drove home that night to the house on Alabama Street where his parents were sleeping. He had gone into that session as a truck driver who sang on the side. What he was driving home as was not yet clear to anyone, including
him. Sam Phillips had two recordings on tape and a decision to make. That’s All Right and Blue Moon of Kentucky were not standard product by any measure he knew how to apply. They did not fit the format of what country radio was playing. They did not fit the format of what rhythm and blues radio was playing.
They existed somewhere between those two worlds. And in the music industry of 1954, that in between space was not a comfortable place to try to sell something. Phillips decided to take the recordings to Dewey Phillips. Dwey was a disc jockey at WHBQ radio in Memphis and hosted a program called Red Hot and Blue that played rhythm and blues music to a Memphis audience.
The two men shared a last name but were not related. What they shared was a mutual understanding of Memphis music and the trust that had developed through years of working in the same city around the same sounds. Sam Phillips believed that if anyone would understand what he had on tape and be willing to put it on the air, it was Dwey.
Dwey Phillips listened to That’s All Right and agreed to play it on his program. He did more than that. On the night of July 8th, 1954, just three days after the session at Sun Studio, Dwey put the record on the air during his broadcast. He did not play it once. He played it repeatedly throughout the night.
The response from listeners was immediate. The WHBQ switchboard received calls from people asking who the singer was and where they could get the record. Dwey Phillips got Elvis on the phone during the broadcast. According to accounts from people familiar with that night, Elvis had been too nervous to listen to the radio at home and had gone to a movie theater to keep himself occupied while the record aired.
His parents called the theater and had him pulled out of his seat. He came to the radio station and Dwey put him on the air for a brief interview. Dwey asked him which high school he had attended. A way of letting the Memphis audience know without directly stating it that the singer was white since the sound of the record had created genuine uncertainty about that among many listeners.
Elvis answered the question and the broadcast continued. By the end of that night, something had started moving that would not stop. Sam Phillips pressed the recording as a single. That’s All Right went on one side and Blue Moon of Kentucky went on the other. It was released as Sunre record single number 209 in late July 1954.
The local response in Memphis was strong enough that Phillips began working on getting Elvis, Scotty Moore, and Bill Black in front of live audiences. The three of them had been in a studio together exactly once as a working unit. Now they needed to perform the material in front of people.
Their early live appearances were not on large stages. They played on local bills, at clubs, and at events around the Memphis area. The reaction from audiences was something that nobody in the group had fully anticipated. Elvis moved when he performed. He was not standing still at a microphone the way most performers of that period did.
His legs moved, his body shifted, and the physical energy of his performance affected the people watching in a way that was immediate and visible. Audiences responded loudly, particularly younger audiences. Elvis himself was not entirely sure what was happening when crowds reacted that way.
He had not planned to move the way he did. It came out of the same looseness that had produced That’s All Right in the studio. An absence of rigidity that showed up in his body the same way it showed up in his voice. The movement was not a performance decision. It was simply what happened when he sang with that kind of energy in front of people.
Word about the young singer coming out of Memphis began moving beyond the city. Country music venues took notice. The Louisiana Hayride, a popular radio program broadcast from Shreveport that had served as a launching platform for other artists, invited Elvis to perform. He appeared on the Hayride in October 1954 and became a regular on the program, which extended his reach across a much wider radio audience throughout the South.
Through the remainder of 1954 and into 1955, Elvis recorded additional singles for Sun Records and continued performing across the region. Each record and each appearance extended the circle of people who had heard his name. RCA Records, one of the largest labels in the country, began paying attention. Colonel Tom Parker, a music promoter who had become a significant and complicated figure in Elvis’s life, made contact.
Sam Phillips eventually sold Elvis’s contract to RCA in November 1955 for $35,000, an amount that was considered substantial for the time. The boy who had walked into Sun Studio with $4 and no connections had become in the space of two years someone that the biggest record label in the country was paying a significant sum to acquire.
It had started with a truck driver playing around with an old blues song during a break in a small Memphis studio on a hot July night. That was all it had taken.