From Publishers Weekly:
The man who wrote "Blue Suede Shoes," and who will forever be associated with the seminal early rockabilly of Memphis's Sun Records label, has always raised a question mark in rock histories: Why, when his lead-guitar playing was so extraordinary and his songwriting talent so obvious, did he never become a celebrity on the magnitude of his label-mates Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison and Elvis? In this unusually pricey amalgam of biography and autobiography (on which McGee holds sole copyright), Perkins and McGee (a music journalist making his book debut) continually play at that puzzle. Born in 1932 as a sharecropper's son in Tiptonville, Tenn., Perkins had a perfect primary education in American roots music: he grew up picking cotton alongside his family, internalizing field spirituals, and as a teenager made music with his brothers in rough-hewn "tonks." When his "Blue Suede Shoes" single sold a million copies in 1956, Perkins found himself singularly unequipped for stardom: married with two children, he disliked mob scenes and had no PR sense. As the Sun years fade, the narrative spins ever faster: the ten years 1969-1979 are dealt with in as many pages. Ultimately, the Perkins/ McGee collaboration hinders narrative flow, with McGee's third-person prose, full of historical and critical insight, frequently disrupted by Perkins's unilluminating homilies about death, love and self-reliance. Photos, discography not seen by PW. Author tour.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist:
For deep-dyed fans of the 1950s hybrid of honky-tonk country music and black country blues called rockabilly, no one does it better than Carl Perkins. McGee gives us a compelling life of the guitarist-singer whose "Blue Suede Shoes" is the quintessential rockabilly hit. Perkins epitomizes a phenomenon that has passed into history--the poor farm boy rising to stardom. Born in 1932 to a sharecropping family in west Tennessee, Perkins started picking cotton at age six--and also plucking a guitar. Teen years spent playing in eye-gouging honky-tonks preceded any hit recordings, and then his rocket to stardom was aborted by a car crash that killed his rhythm guitarist--his brother Jay--and sent him deep into the bottle. He kept working, though (famously with Johnny Cash), writing songs McGee praises rather fulsomely, recording prolifically, and raising his family with his one and only wife, Valda. With the help of God, he mastered his alcoholism, which is just one of the stories he tells so well that McGee often turns the narrative entirely over to him. Ray Olson
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