Phillips, Sam

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'''Sam Phillips''', born '''Samuel Cornelius Phillips''' ([[January 5]], [[1923]] [[June 30]], [[2003]]), was a [[record producer]] who played an important role in the emergence of [[rock and roll]] as the major form of popular music in the [[1950s]].  He is most notably attributed with the discovery of [[Elvis Presley]], and is associated with several other noteworthy [[rhythm and blues]] and rock and roll stars of the period.
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[[Image:Sam phillips.jpg|right|thumb|[[Sun Records]] founder Sam Phillips signs an original copy of [[Carl Perkins]]' ''Blue Suede Shoes''. 2001.]]
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'''Sam Phillips,''' born '''Samuel Cornelius Phillips''' (January 5, 1923 – June 30, 2003), was a [[record producer]] and founder of [[Sun Records]] in Memphis, best remembered for discovering and first recording [[Elvis Presley]], [[Johnny Cash]], [[Jerry Lee Lewis]], [[Roy Orbison]], and other early pioneers of [[rock and roll]]. Often referred to as the "father of rock and roll," Phillips was committed to providing opportunities for gifted performers regardless of their race or economic background. Phillips' respect for the artistry of southern black musicians led him to record many major blues artists, including [[B. B. King]], [[Howlin' Wolf]], [[James Cotton]], and [[Bobby "Blue" Bland]].
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{{toc}}
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The now classic Sun recordings by Presley, Cash, Lewis, Orbison, and Carl Perkins synthesized the blues, southern gospel, and country music into a distinctively American musical idiom that would capture the imagination of America's youth. Despite the often-overt eroticism of rock and roll, which caused consternation in the culturally conservative fifties and contributed to the erosion of sexual mores in the decades that followed, the music exerted far-reaching influence on the integration of African Americans into the artistic, economic, and cultural mainstream of the [[United States]]. Significantly, Phillips was the first non-performer inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] in its inaugural elections in 1986.  
  
Phillips was a native of [[Florence, Alabama]] and a graduate of [[Coffee High School]].
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== Biography ==
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Sam Phillips was born in Florence, [[Alabama]], the city where [[W. C. Handy]], the “father of the blues," was born fifty years earlier, in 1873. The son of poor tenant farmers, Phillips worked every day with black field laborers as a child and was deeply impressed with the pitch and rhythm of the singing.  
  
==The "Memphis Recording Service" and Sun Records==
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Like Handy before him, Phillips was drawn to the musical magnet of [[Memphis]] and the legendary  [[Beale Street]], where itinerant blues musicians from throughout the South came to live out their dreams. Phillips first arrived on Beale Street in 1939, on a trip to [[Dallas]], but returned to Alabama to work as a radio announcer and engineer in Decatur, throughout the forties.
In the 1940s, Phillips worked as a DJ for [[Muscle Shoals]], [[Alabama]] radio station [[WLAY]]-AM.  According to Phillips, this radio station's "open format" (of broadcasting music from both white and black musicians) would later inspire his work in Memphis.
 
  
On [[January 3]], [[1950]], Phillips opened the "Memphis Recording Service" at 706 Union Avenue in [[Memphis, Tennessee]], which also served as the studios for Phillips' own label, [[Sun Records]], through the 1950s. In addition to musical performances, he recorded events such as weddings and funerals, selling the recordings.
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Phillips’ chance to move to Memphis came in 1949, with a job at WREC radio at the famed Peabody Hotel, just one block from Beale Street. Although Memphis was famed for its music, surprisingly there was no recording studio when Phillips arrived. Not looking to strike gold with the opportunity, Phillips was still obsessed with launching a recording studio—“for one reason: I wanted to record black people, those folks who never had the opportunity to record. My unconscious mind was just saying I should do it.”<ref>Olsen, "Founding Father," 82.</ref>
  
Phillips recorded what some—notably music historian [[Peter Guralnick]]—consider the [[first rock and roll record]]: "[[Rocket 88]]" by [[Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats]], a band led by 19-year-old [[Ike Turner]], who also wrote the song. The recording was released on the Chess/Checker record label in Chicago, in [[1951]]. From 1950 to 1954 Phillips recorded the music of black rhythm and blues artists such as [[James Cotton]], [[Rufus Thomas]], [[Rosco Gordon]], [[Little Milton]], [[Bobby Blue Bland]], and others. Blues legends such as [[B.B. King]] and [[Howlin' Wolf]] made their first recordings at his studio.
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Risking his meager fortune, Phillips opened the Memphis Recording Service on January 1, 1950. Recording poor, itinerant blues singers didn’t always pay the bills, however; so Phillips supplemented his recording work with weddings, funerals, bar mitzvahs, political speeches“anything, anywhere, any time,” according to the business card. During these first years, Phillips recorded masters by little-known blues artists such as B.B. King and Howlin' Wolf, and “Doctor” Isaiah Ross (specialist in the “Boogie Disease”), which he would lease to other independent labels with major marketing operations, such as [[Chess]] and RPM. In 1951, Phillips recorded Jackie Brenston's “[[Rocket 88]]” (with Ike Turner on piano), often cited by music historians as the first rock and roll record.
  
==Elvis Presley==
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== Sun Records==
  
Although much has been written about Phillips' goals, he can be seen stating the following: "Everyone knew that I was just a struggling cat down here trying to develop new and different artists, and get some freedom in music, and tap some resources and people that weren't being tapped."  <ref> The Rockabilly Legends; They Called It Rockabilly Long Before they Called It Rock and Roll by Jerry Naylor and Steve Halliday DVD, 22:00 ISBN-13;: 978-I-4234-2042-2 </ref>
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In 1952, frustrated with his leasing arrangement, Phillips launched his own label, calling it Sun Records. Sun got its first national R&B hit in 1953, with Rufus Thomas' “Bear Cat,” a transparent cover of “[[Hound Dog]],” a hit recorded just earlier by the blues singer [["Big Mamma” Thornton]] and later, with phenomenal success, by Elvis Presley. Other electrified blues artists, like James Cotton, Little Milton, and Junior Parker, recorded for Sun, with some commercial success.  
  
[[Elvis Presley]], who recorded his version of Arthur "Big Boy" Cruddup's [[That's All Right (Mama)]] at Phillips' studio, met that goal, and became highly successful, first in Memphis, then throughout the southern United States. For the first six months, the flip side, ''Blue Moon Over Kentucky'', his upbeat version of a [[Bill Monroe]] bluegrass song, was slightly more popular than "That's All Right (Mama)." While still not known outside the South, Presley's singles and regional success became a drawing card for Sun Records,  as singing hopefuls soon arrived from all over the region. Singers such as [[Sonny Burgess]] ("My Bucket's Got A Hole In It"), [[Charlie Rich]], [[Junior Parker]], and [[Billy Lee Riley]] recorded for Sun with some success, while others such as [[Jerry Lee Lewis]], [[BB King]], [[Johnny Cash]], [[Roy Orbison]], and [[Carl Perkins]] would become superstars.
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Phillips’ role in these records was far more than technician. He had an unusual rapport with the performers, most of whom had never seen the inside of a recording studio, and told them, “I don’t care about making a hit record; I only care about making a good record.”<ref>Olsen, "Founding Father," 82.</ref> He also had an intuitive sense of the crossover appeal of blues and was willing to record electric guitars and harmonica at high volume with fuzzy and distorted textures.  
  
Despite this popular regional acclaim, by mid 1955 Sam Phillips' studio experienced financial difficulties, and he sold Presley's contract in November of that year; [[RCA Records]]' offer of $35,000 beat out [[Atlantic Records]]' offer of $25,000Through the sale of Presley's contract, he was able to boost the distribution of Perkins' song '[[Blue Suede Shoes]]', and it became Sun Records' first national hit.
+
In the summer of 1953, a shy young singer arrived at Sun Studio with the stated purpose of recording a couple of sentimental songs for his mother. Phillips made a note of the eighteen-year-old with the strange name and appearance, Elvis Presley. A year later, on July 5, 1954, Phillips called Presley back and arranged for a session with guitarist Scotty Moore and bass player Bill Black. During a break after lackluster renditions of a number of ballads, Presley playfully began to improvise around a country blues song, “[[That’s Alright Mama]],” by Arthur “Big Boy” Cruddup.
 +
[[Image:sun studio.jpg|right|thumb|]]
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This anonymous moment with the microphone turned off became an iconic event in American musical history, as Phillips flipped on the microphone and launched a career that would come to transform the American musical landscapeIn 1954 and 1955, Presley made a series of now-classic recordings for Sun Records, a spontaneous synthesis of blues, country, gospel, and pop that were mostly covers of recent country and rhythm and blues recordings.  
  
Phillips is credited with teaching production to Presley who used this knowledge into his career with RCA VictorAlthough [[Steve Sholes]] was credited as the official producer of Elvis after his move to RCA, it was Elvis who in reality, produced most of the music, using what he had learned from Sam Phillips.
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Phillips recorded looking for a feel, not technical perfection.  He told Presley that the worst thing he could go for was perfectionPhillips was always seeking what he called the perfect/imperfect cut.  This meant that it was not technically perfect, but perfectly conveyed the feeling and emotion of the song to the listener and gave the song a living personality, partially due to it being technically imperfect.
  
Phillips had an open style and insightful guidance that seemed to allow musicians, especially Presley, to search and feel their way to a point to where they would perform beyond Phillips' and their own expectations.  He also seemed to have a sense for when the artist was about to reach the point of their best performance.  Phillips recorded looking for a feel, not technical perfection.  Phillips told Elvis that the worst thing he could go for was perfection.  Phillips was always seeking what he called the perfect/imperfect cutThis meant that it was not technically perfect, but perfectly conveyed the feeling and emotion of the song to the listener and gave the song a living personality, partially due to it being technically imperfect.
+
Most recordings at the time gave substantially more volume to the vocals.  Phillips pulled back the Elvis vocals, blending it more with the instrumental performances.  Phillips also used tape delay to get an echo into the Elvis recordings by running the tape through a second recorder headRCA, not knowing the method that Phillips had used was unable to recreate the Elvis echo when recording "[[Heartbreak Hotel]]." In an attempt to duplicate the Sun Records sound, RCA used a large empty hallway at the studio to create an echo, but it sounded nothing like the echo that Phillips had created at Sun Records.
  
Phillips innovated while recording Elvis. Most recordings at the time gave substantially more volume to the vocals.  Phillips pulled back the Elvis vocals, blending it more with the instrumental performances.  Phillips also used tape delay to get an echo into the Elvis recordings by running the tape through a second recorder head.  RCA, not knowing the method that Phillips had used was unable to recreate the Elvis echo when recording "[[Heartbreak Hotel]]".  In an attempt to duplicate the Sun Records sound, RCA used a large empty hallway at the studio to create an echo, but it sounded nothing like the echo that Phillips had created at Sun Records.
+
Following Presley into Sun Studio were some of rock and roll’s greatest names—Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison. Like Presley, each came from impoverished background and drew on rich veins of vernacular music, fashioned into a recognizable idiom, termed [[rockabilly]], by the sound engineer, Sam Phillips.
  
Elvis did not have a band when he arrived and Sun Records. It was Sam Phillips who decided that little was needed to augment Elvis' vocals and rhythm guitar. Phillips chose two musicians, lead guitarist [[Scotty Moore]] and bassist [[Bill Black]] to perform with Elvis. This choice of musicians proved to be inspired as this group along with drummer [[D.J. Fontana]] produced some of the biggest hits in rock 'n' roll history, even after Phillips had sold the Presley contract to RCA Victor. These included "[[Heartbreak Hotel]]", "[[Hound Dog (song)|Hound Dog]]", and "[[Don't Be Cruel]]".
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Despite popular regional acclaim, by mid 1955, Sam Phillips' studio experienced financial difficulties, and he sold Presley's contract in November of that year; [[RCA Records]]' offer of $35,000 beat out [[Atlantic Records]]' offer of $25,000.  Through the sale of Presley's contract, he was able to boost the distribution of Perkins' song, "[[Blue Suede Shoes]]," and it became Sun Records' first national hit, later recorded (twice) by Presley and the [[Beatles]], and sometimes called "the national anthem of rock and roll."
  
Phillips' pivotal role in the early days of rock and roll was exemplified by a celebrated jam session on [[December 4]], [[1956]] which came to be known as the [[Million Dollar Quartet]].  Jerry Lee Lewis was playing piano for a Carl Perkins recording session at Phillips' studio. [[Johnny Cash]] was there listening, and Elvis Presley walked in unexpectedly, leading to an impromptu session featuring the four musicians.
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==Other roles==
  
==WHER==
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Phillips' musical horizons reached elsewhere than the artistic enfranchisement of poor southerners. In 1955, he launched radio station [[WHER]], an "All Girl Radio" format.  Each of the women who auditioned for the station assumed they were applying for a single female announcer position like other stations at that time. Only before the first broadcast did they learn that almost every position at the station was held by a woman.
  
Phillips launched radio station [[WHER]] on [[October 29]], [[1955]].  Each of the young women who auditioned for the station assumed there would only be one female announcer position like other stations at that time. Only a few days before the first broadcast did they learn of the "All Girl Radio" format. Almost every position at the station was held by a woman.[http://www.npr.org/programs/lnfsound/stories/991029.stories.html]
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Broadcasting out of a few pastel, beauty salon-like rooms known as the "doll's den" at a Memphis Holiday Inn, the "jockettes" played the records, managed the station, and reported the news. Few thought the station would survive, but it broadcast for eleven years, going off the air in 1966.
  
==Other Business Interests==
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"When I started WHER … people thought I had rocks in my head," Phillips said. "A girl could do a cooking show, but no one thought girls could handle hour-to-hour programs and commercials. I felt differently. I had always wanted a radio station, but Memphis already had nine. I had to do something different. An all-girl crew, and pleasant, light music, was the answer."<ref>"NPR Revisits WHER."</ref>
  
 
Through savvy investments, Phillips soon amassed a fortune. He was one of the first investors in [[Holiday Inn]], a new motel chain that was about to go national.  He would also create two different subsidiary recording labels—Phillips International and Holiday Inn Records.  Neither would match the success or influence of Sun, which Phillips ultimately sold to [[Shelby Singleton]] in the 1960s.
 
Through savvy investments, Phillips soon amassed a fortune. He was one of the first investors in [[Holiday Inn]], a new motel chain that was about to go national.  He would also create two different subsidiary recording labels—Phillips International and Holiday Inn Records.  Neither would match the success or influence of Sun, which Phillips ultimately sold to [[Shelby Singleton]] in the 1960s.
  
==Rock and Roll Hall of Fame==
+
Phillips died of respiratory failure at St. Francis Hospital in Memphis on June 30, 2003, only one day before the original Sun Studio was designated a National Historic Landmark. He is interred in the Memorial Park Cemetery in Memphis.
  
In [[1986]] Sam Phillips was part of the first group inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] and his pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the [[Rockabilly Hall of Fame]]. In [[1987]], he was inducted into the [http://www.alamhof.org/phillips.htm  Alabama Music Hall of Fame]. He received a [[Grammy Trustees Award]] for his lifetime achievements in [[1991]]. In [[1998]], he was inducted into the [[Blues Hall of Fame]], and in October [[2001]] he was inducted into the [[Country Music Hall of Fame]].
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==Legacy==
  
Phillips died of respiratory failure at St. Francis Hospital in [[Memphis, Tennessee]] on [[June 30]], [[2003]], only one day before the original [[Sun Studio]] was designated a National Historic Landmark. He is interred in the [[Memorial Park Cemetery, Memphis]].
+
Sam Phillips is  best remembered for his role in launching the rock and roll revolution and the careers of some of its most talented performers, preeminently Elvis Presley. Rock and roll had enormous popular appeal among young people and became a global phenomenon. Borrowing heavily from the blues, the music was energetic and celebratory rather than brooding, but also adopted much of the erotic subtext of the blues.  
  
He is portrayed by [[Charles Cyphers]] in the 1979 film ''[[Elvis]]'', [[Trey Wilson]] in the 1989 film ''[[Great Balls of Fire]]'' and by [[Dallas Roberts]] in the 2005 film ''[[Walk the Line]]''. He was portrayed by [[Gregory Itzin]] in a 1993 episode of ''[[Quantum Leap]]'' entitled "Memphis Melody."
+
The term “rock and roll” was itself a fairly candid allusion to sex, and in both lyrics and stage performances the music frequently advanced the notion that sexuality was primarily a kind of entertainment.  Packaged and marketed for affluent young whites, rock and roll engendered deep social divisions, as traditional views of sexuality grounded in religious faith were challenged by powerful commercial forces. The sexual revolution of the sixties and the continuing erosion of traditional views of sexuality may be seen as consequences of the rock and roll’s widespread popularity, although many other factors beside this music must be recognized as contributing to these changes.
 +
 
 +
Another, more important legacy of Sam Phillips was his formative role in breaking down racial barriers and culturally enfranchising American blacks. Phillips recognized from an early age that hardship could be sublimated into art and that society’s most discriminated-against underclass, the rural southern black, poignantly expressed their experience in the music and poetry of the blues.
 +
 
 +
Phillips’ empathy for the less fortunate and his conviction of their inherent dignity and artistic ability is the legacy for which he would want to be remembered. "Now we've learned so much from some of these people we thought were ignorant, who never had any responsibility other than chopping cotton, feeding the mules, or making sorghum molasses," Phillips said of his legacy. "When people come back to this music in a hundred years, they'll see these were master painters. They may be illiterate. They can't write a book about it. But they can make a song, and in three verses you'll hear the greatest damn story you'll ever hear in your life."<ref>Olsen, "Founding Father," 81.</ref>
 +
 
 +
"Sam Phillips possessed an almost Whitmanesque belief not just in the nobility of the American dream but in the nobility of that dream as it filtered down to its most downtrodden citizen, the Negro," agrees music writer and Presley biographer Peter Guralnick.<ref>Peter Guralnick, ''Last Train to Memphis'' (New York: Back Bay Books, 1994), 60. ISBN 0-316-33220-8</ref>
 +
 
 +
In 1986, Sam Phillips was part of the first group, and the first non-performer, inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] and his pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the [[Rockabilly Hall of Fame]]. In 1987, he was inducted into the [http://www.alamhof.org/phillips.htm  Alabama Music Hall of Fame]. He received a [[Grammy Trustees Award]] for his lifetime achievements in 1991. In 1998, he was inducted into the [[Blues Hall of Fame]], and in October 2001, he was inducted into the [[Country Music Hall of Fame]].
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
+
<references/>
  
==Reference==
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==References==
*Guterman, Jimmy. (1998). "Sam Phillips". In ''The Encyclopedia of Country Music''. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 414.
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* Gardner, Robert. ''Sam Phillips the Man who Invented Rock 'n' Roll.'' San Francisco: Video Beat, Peter Jones Productions, 2000.
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* Guralnick, Peter. ''Last Train to Memphis.'' New York: Back Bay Books, 1994. ISBN 0-316-33220-8
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* Olsen, Eric P. "Founding Father: Sam Phillips and the Birth of Rock and Roll." ''The World & I.'' Washington, DC: Washington Times Corp, 2001.  
 +
* Ware, Susan. ''Forgotten Heroes: Inspiring American Portraits from our Leading Historians.'' New York: Free Press, 1998. ISBN 0-684-84375-7
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.sunstudio.com Official site]
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All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
*[http://rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=166 Rock Hall of Fame]  
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* [http://www.sunstudio.com Sun Studio Official site]
*[http://www.elvispresleynews.com/SamPhillips.html Elvis Presley at Sun Studio]
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* [http://rockhall.com/inductees/sam-phillips/ Rock & Roll Hall of Fame]
 
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* [http://www.elvispresleynews.com/SamPhillips.html Elvis Presley at Sun Studio]  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Phillips, Sam}}
 
  
[[Category:American record producers]]
 
[[Category:American music industry executives]]
 
 
[[Category:Music]]
 
[[Category:Music]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
  
 
{{Credit|141587153}}
 
{{Credit|141587153}}

Latest revision as of 01:58, 23 December 2022

Sun Records founder Sam Phillips signs an original copy of Carl Perkins' Blue Suede Shoes. 2001.

Sam Phillips, born Samuel Cornelius Phillips (January 5, 1923 – June 30, 2003), was a record producer and founder of Sun Records in Memphis, best remembered for discovering and first recording Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, and other early pioneers of rock and roll. Often referred to as the "father of rock and roll," Phillips was committed to providing opportunities for gifted performers regardless of their race or economic background. Phillips' respect for the artistry of southern black musicians led him to record many major blues artists, including B. B. King, Howlin' Wolf, James Cotton, and Bobby "Blue" Bland.

The now classic Sun recordings by Presley, Cash, Lewis, Orbison, and Carl Perkins synthesized the blues, southern gospel, and country music into a distinctively American musical idiom that would capture the imagination of America's youth. Despite the often-overt eroticism of rock and roll, which caused consternation in the culturally conservative fifties and contributed to the erosion of sexual mores in the decades that followed, the music exerted far-reaching influence on the integration of African Americans into the artistic, economic, and cultural mainstream of the United States. Significantly, Phillips was the first non-performer inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in its inaugural elections in 1986.

Biography

Sam Phillips was born in Florence, Alabama, the city where W. C. Handy, the “father of the blues," was born fifty years earlier, in 1873. The son of poor tenant farmers, Phillips worked every day with black field laborers as a child and was deeply impressed with the pitch and rhythm of the singing.

Like Handy before him, Phillips was drawn to the musical magnet of Memphis and the legendary Beale Street, where itinerant blues musicians from throughout the South came to live out their dreams. Phillips first arrived on Beale Street in 1939, on a trip to Dallas, but returned to Alabama to work as a radio announcer and engineer in Decatur, throughout the forties.

Phillips’ chance to move to Memphis came in 1949, with a job at WREC radio at the famed Peabody Hotel, just one block from Beale Street. Although Memphis was famed for its music, surprisingly there was no recording studio when Phillips arrived. Not looking to strike gold with the opportunity, Phillips was still obsessed with launching a recording studio—“for one reason: I wanted to record black people, those folks who never had the opportunity to record. My unconscious mind was just saying I should do it.”[1]

Risking his meager fortune, Phillips opened the Memphis Recording Service on January 1, 1950. Recording poor, itinerant blues singers didn’t always pay the bills, however; so Phillips supplemented his recording work with weddings, funerals, bar mitzvahs, political speeches—“anything, anywhere, any time,” according to the business card. During these first years, Phillips recorded masters by little-known blues artists such as B.B. King and Howlin' Wolf, and “Doctor” Isaiah Ross (specialist in the “Boogie Disease”), which he would lease to other independent labels with major marketing operations, such as Chess and RPM. In 1951, Phillips recorded Jackie Brenston's “Rocket 88” (with Ike Turner on piano), often cited by music historians as the first rock and roll record.

Sun Records

In 1952, frustrated with his leasing arrangement, Phillips launched his own label, calling it Sun Records. Sun got its first national R&B hit in 1953, with Rufus Thomas' “Bear Cat,” a transparent cover of “Hound Dog,” a hit recorded just earlier by the blues singer "Big Mamma” Thornton and later, with phenomenal success, by Elvis Presley. Other electrified blues artists, like James Cotton, Little Milton, and Junior Parker, recorded for Sun, with some commercial success.

Phillips’ role in these records was far more than technician. He had an unusual rapport with the performers, most of whom had never seen the inside of a recording studio, and told them, “I don’t care about making a hit record; I only care about making a good record.”[2] He also had an intuitive sense of the crossover appeal of blues and was willing to record electric guitars and harmonica at high volume with fuzzy and distorted textures.

In the summer of 1953, a shy young singer arrived at Sun Studio with the stated purpose of recording a couple of sentimental songs for his mother. Phillips made a note of the eighteen-year-old with the strange name and appearance, Elvis Presley. A year later, on July 5, 1954, Phillips called Presley back and arranged for a session with guitarist Scotty Moore and bass player Bill Black. During a break after lackluster renditions of a number of ballads, Presley playfully began to improvise around a country blues song, “That’s Alright Mama,” by Arthur “Big Boy” Cruddup.

Sun studio.jpg

This anonymous moment with the microphone turned off became an iconic event in American musical history, as Phillips flipped on the microphone and launched a career that would come to transform the American musical landscape. In 1954 and 1955, Presley made a series of now-classic recordings for Sun Records, a spontaneous synthesis of blues, country, gospel, and pop that were mostly covers of recent country and rhythm and blues recordings.

Phillips recorded looking for a feel, not technical perfection. He told Presley that the worst thing he could go for was perfection. Phillips was always seeking what he called the perfect/imperfect cut. This meant that it was not technically perfect, but perfectly conveyed the feeling and emotion of the song to the listener and gave the song a living personality, partially due to it being technically imperfect.

Most recordings at the time gave substantially more volume to the vocals. Phillips pulled back the Elvis vocals, blending it more with the instrumental performances. Phillips also used tape delay to get an echo into the Elvis recordings by running the tape through a second recorder head. RCA, not knowing the method that Phillips had used was unable to recreate the Elvis echo when recording "Heartbreak Hotel." In an attempt to duplicate the Sun Records sound, RCA used a large empty hallway at the studio to create an echo, but it sounded nothing like the echo that Phillips had created at Sun Records.

Following Presley into Sun Studio were some of rock and roll’s greatest names—Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison. Like Presley, each came from impoverished background and drew on rich veins of vernacular music, fashioned into a recognizable idiom, termed rockabilly, by the sound engineer, Sam Phillips.

Despite popular regional acclaim, by mid 1955, Sam Phillips' studio experienced financial difficulties, and he sold Presley's contract in November of that year; RCA Records' offer of $35,000 beat out Atlantic Records' offer of $25,000. Through the sale of Presley's contract, he was able to boost the distribution of Perkins' song, "Blue Suede Shoes," and it became Sun Records' first national hit, later recorded (twice) by Presley and the Beatles, and sometimes called "the national anthem of rock and roll."

Other roles

Phillips' musical horizons reached elsewhere than the artistic enfranchisement of poor southerners. In 1955, he launched radio station WHER, an "All Girl Radio" format. Each of the women who auditioned for the station assumed they were applying for a single female announcer position like other stations at that time. Only before the first broadcast did they learn that almost every position at the station was held by a woman.

Broadcasting out of a few pastel, beauty salon-like rooms known as the "doll's den" at a Memphis Holiday Inn, the "jockettes" played the records, managed the station, and reported the news. Few thought the station would survive, but it broadcast for eleven years, going off the air in 1966.

"When I started WHER … people thought I had rocks in my head," Phillips said. "A girl could do a cooking show, but no one thought girls could handle hour-to-hour programs and commercials. I felt differently. I had always wanted a radio station, but Memphis already had nine. I had to do something different. An all-girl crew, and pleasant, light music, was the answer."[3]

Through savvy investments, Phillips soon amassed a fortune. He was one of the first investors in Holiday Inn, a new motel chain that was about to go national. He would also create two different subsidiary recording labels—Phillips International and Holiday Inn Records. Neither would match the success or influence of Sun, which Phillips ultimately sold to Shelby Singleton in the 1960s.

Phillips died of respiratory failure at St. Francis Hospital in Memphis on June 30, 2003, only one day before the original Sun Studio was designated a National Historic Landmark. He is interred in the Memorial Park Cemetery in Memphis.

Legacy

Sam Phillips is best remembered for his role in launching the rock and roll revolution and the careers of some of its most talented performers, preeminently Elvis Presley. Rock and roll had enormous popular appeal among young people and became a global phenomenon. Borrowing heavily from the blues, the music was energetic and celebratory rather than brooding, but also adopted much of the erotic subtext of the blues.

The term “rock and roll” was itself a fairly candid allusion to sex, and in both lyrics and stage performances the music frequently advanced the notion that sexuality was primarily a kind of entertainment. Packaged and marketed for affluent young whites, rock and roll engendered deep social divisions, as traditional views of sexuality grounded in religious faith were challenged by powerful commercial forces. The sexual revolution of the sixties and the continuing erosion of traditional views of sexuality may be seen as consequences of the rock and roll’s widespread popularity, although many other factors beside this music must be recognized as contributing to these changes.

Another, more important legacy of Sam Phillips was his formative role in breaking down racial barriers and culturally enfranchising American blacks. Phillips recognized from an early age that hardship could be sublimated into art and that society’s most discriminated-against underclass, the rural southern black, poignantly expressed their experience in the music and poetry of the blues.

Phillips’ empathy for the less fortunate and his conviction of their inherent dignity and artistic ability is the legacy for which he would want to be remembered. "Now we've learned so much from some of these people we thought were ignorant, who never had any responsibility other than chopping cotton, feeding the mules, or making sorghum molasses," Phillips said of his legacy. "When people come back to this music in a hundred years, they'll see these were master painters. They may be illiterate. They can't write a book about it. But they can make a song, and in three verses you'll hear the greatest damn story you'll ever hear in your life."[4]

"Sam Phillips possessed an almost Whitmanesque belief not just in the nobility of the American dream but in the nobility of that dream as it filtered down to its most downtrodden citizen, the Negro," agrees music writer and Presley biographer Peter Guralnick.[5]

In 1986, Sam Phillips was part of the first group, and the first non-performer, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and his pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. In 1987, he was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. He received a Grammy Trustees Award for his lifetime achievements in 1991. In 1998, he was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame, and in October 2001, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Notes

  1. Olsen, "Founding Father," 82.
  2. Olsen, "Founding Father," 82.
  3. "NPR Revisits WHER."
  4. Olsen, "Founding Father," 81.
  5. Peter Guralnick, Last Train to Memphis (New York: Back Bay Books, 1994), 60. ISBN 0-316-33220-8

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Gardner, Robert. Sam Phillips the Man who Invented Rock 'n' Roll. San Francisco: Video Beat, Peter Jones Productions, 2000.
  • Guralnick, Peter. Last Train to Memphis. New York: Back Bay Books, 1994. ISBN 0-316-33220-8
  • Olsen, Eric P. "Founding Father: Sam Phillips and the Birth of Rock and Roll." The World & I. Washington, DC: Washington Times Corp, 2001.
  • Ware, Susan. Forgotten Heroes: Inspiring American Portraits from our Leading Historians. New York: Free Press, 1998. ISBN 0-684-84375-7

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.

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