"Blue Suede Shoes
" is a rock and roll standard written and first recorded by Carl Perkins in 1955. The 12-bar blues is considered one of the first rockabilly (rock and roll) records and incorporated elements of blues, country and pop music of the time.
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BLUE SUEDE SHOES TICKETS
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Origin
Johnny Cash planted the seed for the song in the fall of 1955, while Perkins, Cash,
Elvis Presley, and other
Louisiana Hayride acts toured throughout
Texas and the
South. Cash told Perkins of a black airman whom he had met when serving in the military in Germany. He had referred to his military regulation air shoes as "blue
suede shoes." Cash suggested that Carl write a song about the shoes. Carl replied, "I don't know anything about shoes. How can I write a song about shoes?"
[1]
When Perkins played a dance on December 4, 1955, he noticed a couple dancing near the stage. The girl was gorgeous, he thought, and the boy wore blue suede shoes. As they danced the boy cautioned his date "don't step on my suedes." Perkins was bewildered that a guy would value shoes over a beautiful girl.
[2]
Later that night, while in bed, Perkins began working on a song based on that incident. His first thought was to frame it with a nursery rhyme. He considered, and quickly discarded "Little Jack Horner..." and "See a spider going up the wall...". Then settled on "One for the money..." Leaving his bed and working with his Les Paul guitar, he started with an A chord. After playing five chords while singing "Well, it's one for the money... Two for the show... Three to get ready... Now go, man, go!" and broke into a boogie rhythm.
[3]
He quickly grabbed a brown paper potato sack and wrote the song down, writing the title out as "Blue Swade, S-W-A-D-E". "I couldn't even spell it right," he later said.
[4]
The song was recorded weeks later, and producer
Sam Phillips suggested that Perkins's line "go boy go" be changed to "go cat go".
Success of Perkins' Sun Records release
The Sun recording of "Blue Suede Shoes" was released on January 1, 1956, as Sun 321. Two copies of the song on 78 rpm records were sent to Perkins, but arrived broken. Carl soon discovered that the song was available in the newer 7" microgrooved 45 rpm format, and was disappointed that he didn't have a copy in the older, more substantial 78 rpm format.
[5]
In both Jackson, where Perkins lived, and in Memphis, radio stations were playing the flip side of the record, "Honey Don't." In Cleveland, Ohio, however, disc jockey
Bill Randle was featuring "Blue Suede Shoes" prominently on his nightly show, and before January was over, the Cleveland distributor of the record asked Phillips for an additional 25,000 copies of the record.
[5]
"Shoes" became the side of choice throughout the South and Southwest. On February 11 it was the #2 single on Memphis charts, was number one the next week, and remained there for the next 3 months. Perkins made four appearances on the
Big D Jamboree
[7] on radio station
KRLD (AM) in Dallas where he played the song every Saturday night, and was booked on a string of one nighters in the Southwest. The
Jamboree
emanated from the
Dallas Sportatorium with about four thousand seats, and it sold out for each of Perkins' performances. Music shops in Dallas ordered a huge number of records,
[8] and at one point the record was selling at a rate of 20,000 copies per day.
A Song Hits review of the song, published February 18 stated that "Perkins has come up with some wax here that has hit the national retail chart in almost record time. Interestingly enough, the disk has a measure of appeal for pop and r.&b. customers."
[9]
On March 17, Perkins became the first country artist to reach the number three spot on the
rhythm & blues charts.
[10] That night, Perkins and his band first performed "Blue Suede Shoes" on television on ABC-TV's
Ozark Jubilee
[11] (coincidentally, Presley was on
Stage Show
on
CBS-TV that same night, singing the song for a second time).
Perkins was booked to next appear on
The Perry Como Show
on NBC-TV on March 24, but on March 22 he and his band members had a serious automobile accident on the way to New York City, resulting in the death of a truck driver and the hospitalization of both Perkins and his brother. While Perkins recuperated from the accident, "Blue Suede Shoes" rose to number one on most pop, R&B, and country regional charts. It also held the number two position on the Billboard Hot 100 and country charts. Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" held the number one position on the pop and country charts, while "Shoes" did better than "Heartbreak" on the R&B charts.
By mid-April, more than one million copies of "Shoes" had been sold.
[12] "Blue Suede Shoes" was the first million selling country song to cross over to both rhythm and blues and pop charts.
[13]
Sam Phillips retained the rights to the song, although it was represented by the New York house of Hill and Range as part of the agreement when Phillips sold Presley's contract. Perkins would not acquire the rights to "Shoes," along with all of his Sun Records songs until 1977.
[14]
Presley's RCA cover
Recording cover versions of songs was standard practice during the 1940s and 1950s, and "Blue Suede Shoes" was one of the first tunes RCA wanted their new performer, Elvis Presley, to record. "
Heartbreak Hotel" and "Shoes" rose on the charts at roughly the same time.
RCA, with its superior distribution and radio contacts, knew it could probably steal a hit record from Phillips and Perkins. For his part, when Presley who knew both Perkins and Phillips from his days at
Sun Records gave into pressure from RCA, he requested that they hold back his version from release as a single. The Elvis version features two biting guitar solos by Scotty Moore, along with
Bill Black on bass, and
D.J. Fontana on drums.
[15]
According to Scotty Moore, when the song was recorded, "We just went in there and started playing, just winged it. Just followed however Elvis felt." According to reports confirmed by Sam Phillips, RCA producer Steve Sholes agreed not to release Presley's version of the song as a single while Carl's release was hot.
[16]
Presley performed the song on national television three times in 1956. The first was on February 11 on the CBS program
Stage Show
. He performed it again on his third
Stage Show
appearance on March 17, then again on the
Milton Berle Show
on April 3. On July 1,
Steve Allen introduced Elvis on the
Steve Allen Show
, and Presley, appearing in formal evening wear, stated "I think that I have on something tonight that's not quite right for evening wear." Allen asked, "What's that, Elvis?" "Blue suede shoes" was the answer, as he lifted his left foot to show the audience. Presley mentioned blue suede shoes a second time on this show: in a song during the "Range Roundup" comedy skit with Steve Allen,
Andy Griffith, and
Imogene Coca, he delivers the line, "I'm a warnin' you galoots, don't step on my blue suede shoes."
[17]
Moore has said that Presley recorded the song to help out Perkins after his accident. "Elvis wasn't really thinking at that time that it was going to make money for Carl; he was doing it as more of a tribute type thing. Of course Carl was glad he did. It really helped as his record started going down."
[18]
"Blue Suede Shoes" was the first song on the first groundbreaking album
Elvis Presley
, which was released in March. RCA released two other records with "Blue Suede Shoes" the same month: one an Extended Play with four songs, RCA EPA 747, and a 2x extended play version with eight songs, RCA EPB 1254.
RCA released the Presley version as a single on September 8. This single reached #20, whereas the Perkins version had topped the chart.
In 1960, Presley re-recorded "Blue Suede Shoes" for the soundtrack of the film
G.I. Blues
. While Elvis' character's group "The Three Blazes" plays a ballad at a Frankfurt night club ("Doin' The Best I Can" by Doc Pomus & Mort Shuman), a bored GI plays "Blue Suede Shoes" by Elvis Presley on the jukebox, remarking that he wants "to hear an original". When another soldier tries to unplug the jukebox, the entire place erupts into a fight.
[19] This studio re-recording marked one of only a few occasions in Presley's career in which he agreed to re-record a previously issued song.
Other 1956 recordings
"Blue Suede Shoes" was recorded and released many times in 1956. February releases were by Delbert Barker and the Gateway All Stars on the Gateway and Big Hits labels, Thumper Jones (
George Jones), Hank Smith, and Buzz Williams. RCA Victor released a
Pee Wee King version on March 3 of that same year, the same date as a Capital release by Bob Rubian. These releases were followed closely by the March 10 releases of a Boyd Bennett version on King, and the Columbia release of a Sid King version. Decca, too, released a version by Roy Hall,
and the Dot label then released a recording by Jim Lowe. The song was also recorded in 1956 by Loren Becker with the Light Brigade on Waldorf Music Hall Records and Bob Harris and the John Weston Orchestra on Sapphire.
Legacy
"Blue Suede Shoes" is often referenced in other songs including
Chuck Berry's "
Roll Over Beethoven" with "I'm giving you the warning, don't you step on my blue suede shoes."
"Blue Suede Shoes" was chosen as one of the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.
In
1986 Perkins' version was inducted in the
Grammy Hall of Fame, and was included by the
National Recording Preservation Board in the
Library of Congress National Recording Registry in
2006.
[20] The board selects songs on an annual basis that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
In 2004, Perkins' version was ranked number 95 on
Rolling Stone
magazine's list of
the 500 greatest songs of all time.
[21]
It is his only song on that list. Presley's recording of the song was also on the list at number 423.
In 1999,
National Public Radio included "Blue Suede Shoes" in the "NPR 100," in which NPR's music editors sought to compile the 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century.
The song is referenced in the
Beastie Boys song "
Johnny Ryall" from their album
Paul's Boutique
. The title character, a homeless man, "claims that he wrote the Blue Suede Shoes".
The song appears in the TV miniseries
Elvis
, where
Jonathan Rhys Meyers, portraying Presley, performs the song on stage.
Selected list of recorded versions
The song is a
rock and roll standard and has been performed and recorded by many artists, including:
- 1955 Carl Perkins, US #1 (3 weeks), Billboard Country & Western Chart, #2 (4 weeks), Billboard Juke Box chart, #3 Best Seller chart, #4 Top 100 chart, #5 Jockey chart, #2, R&B Chart; Cashbox pop singles chart, #2; UK, #10
- Buddy Holly as recorded on the Buddy Holly Story compilation and the 1964 LP Buddy Holly Showcase.
- 1956 Elvis Presley, US, #20, Billboard Best Seller chart, #24 Top 100 chart, #24 Jockey chart; UK, #9
- 1958 Cliff Richard and The Shadows
- Hank Marvin
- 1969 The Beatles, during the "Get Back"/"Let It Be" sessions, on Beatles Anthology 3
- 1969 Cat Mother & the All Night Newsboys in the rock and roll medley, produced by Jimi Hendrix, Good Old Rock 'N Roll
, US, #21, 1969
- Count von Count on Sesame Street
- The Grateful Dead performed the song during soundchecks on December 1, 1973 and at the Omni Coliseum in Atlanta, GA, recorded on December 12, 1973, which is available on YouTube and on fan recordings.
- Eddie Cochran
- Jimi Hendrix on the albums Hendrix in the West, Midnight Lightning, and Loose Ends
- Johnny Rivers, US #38, 1973
- 1969 John Lennon covered it live in Toronto with Eric Clapton on lead guitar, on the Gold Album Live Peace in Toronto 1969 and in the movie release
- Bill Haley & His Comets Haley recorded "Blue Suede Shoes" on two occasions: in 1960 for US Warner Bros. Records and again in 1972 for Swedish Sonet Records.
- Albert King "Blues For Elvis: King Does The King's Things" (Stax 1970)
- Lemmy and The Upsetters with Mick Green
- Black Sabbath (back when they were known as Earth), appears on Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970-1978), 2004, on a bonus DVD of a performance on the German television program the Beat Club
- Billy "Crash" Craddock on the album Live!
- Brian Setzer
- Carl Mann
- Warren Smith
- Pat Boone
- Ry Cooder
- Andy Kaufman on Saturday Night Live
, Season 2, Episode 11, January 15, 1977
- Tom Cruise sang the song on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 2008
- Roy Orbison
- Conway Twitty
- Johnny Hallyday
- The Dave Clark Five on the 1965 Weekend in London
LP and on the collection Glad All Over Again (Thirty Five Solid Gold Hits - A Selection Of The DC5's 50 Million Sellers) as part of the Good Old Rock 'N Roll medley
- Jerry Lee Lewis
- Johnny Cash in a performance with Carl Perkins at Madison Square Garden in 1969
- The Toy Dolls
- Merle Haggard
- Helloween
- Stray Cats
- Paul McCartney at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony in 1999
- George Harrison, Eric Clapton, Dave Edmunds, and Ringo Starr on the 1985 HBO special Blue Suede Shoes: A Rockabilly Session
- Los Super Reyes
- Hurriganes
- Shakin' Stevens
- Van Morrison and Bob Dylan performed the song on January 21, 1998 in concert
- The Residents
- Chubby Checker has performed the song in concert, which is available on YouTube.
- George Harrison, Bob Dylan, John Fogerty, Taj Mahal, and Jesse Ed Davis, dubbed "The Silver Wilburys", performed the song live on February 19, 1987 at the Palomino Club in North Hollywood in California
- Foghat members under the pseudonym Warren Phillips and the Rockets in 1969 when they were members of Savoy Brown. The album was re-released in 1979 as Before Foghat Days
.
- The Stray Cats performed the song live in Germany, joined on stage by Eddie Van Halen, Les Paul, B.B. King, Waylon Jennings, and Steve Miller. The performance is available on YouTube.
- John Fogerty has performed the song live in concert, which is available on YouTube.
- John Sebastian
- Johnny Winter
- Bruce Springsteen has performed the song in concert, the performance on August 19, 1983 at the Brighton Bar, Long Branch, New Jersey is available on YouTube.
- Mary J. Blige at the VH1 Divas Las Vegas 2002
- A Dick Clark All-Star jam in 1986 with a video of Elvis Presley and his band in the background, featuring Johnny Rivers, Charlie Daniels, Stephen Stills, Lee Rocker of the Stray Cats, Tommy Shaw of Styx, George Duke, Mick Fleetwood, Teena Marie, Tom Scott, Glen Glen Campbell, James Ingram, Eddie Money, Tom Wopat of The Dukes of Hazzard, Dee Murray of the Elton John Band, Ricky Scaggs, Steve Cropper of Booker T and the MGs,, Stanley Clarke, John Schneider of the Dukes of Hazzard, Bo Diddley, Nigel Olsson of the Elton John Band, Rindy Ross of Quarterflash, Chuck Mangione, and Lee Ritenour.
Cultural references
- Woodstock, 1969: Ten Years After performed the song at Woodstock as part of a medley incorporated in "I'm Going Home", with Alvin Lee on lead guitar; Mountain featuring Leslie West performed the song on day two; John Sebastian mentioned the song in his performance of "Rainbows All Over Your Blues" ("You better run to your closet and fish out your blue suede shoes").
- Marc Cohn makes a reference to "Blue Suede Shoes" in his song "Walking in Memphis".
- Langston Hughes created a short story titled, "Thank You, Ma'am", mentioning Blue Suede Shoes.
- Eldridge Cleaver references the song in Soul On Ice.
- The Grateful Dead performed the song during sound checks on December 1 and 12, 1973 and referenced the song in "U.S. Blues" ("Red and white, blue suede shoes, I'm Uncle Sam, how do you do?").
- Chuck Berry mentions "Blue Suede Shoes" in his song "Roll Over Beethoven" in the lines: "Early in the mornin'/I'm a'givin you the warnin'/Don't you step on my blue suede shoes." "Roll Over Beethoven" has been covered by many other artists including the Beatles and Electric Light Orchestra.
- Buddy Holly's recording "Rock Around with Ollie Vee" contains the lyric "Ollie Vee says she's gonna do me right tonight / I'm gonna wear my blue suede shoes tonight."
- Larry Williams, in the song "Short Fat Fannie", mentions "Blue Suede Shoes".
- King Crimson refer to the "old fruitjar" in their song "Easy Money".
- The David Essex song "Rock On" mentions about jumping up and down in her "Blue Suede Shoes".
- Blue Suede Shoes
is also the title of a 1980 documentary film about the British rockabilly scene.
- The Nintendo DS game Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney makes a reference to the song, in a sequence where the character mistakenly refers to Detective Gumshoe as "Detective Suedeshoes".
- Brian Setzer also refers to it in The Stray Cats' song Built for Speed.
- The Beach Boys quote lyrics from the song in Rock and Roll to the Rescue written by Mike Love and Terry Melcher ("Well it was one for the money now and two for the show, Baby you better get a'ready now and go cat go!").
- George Harrison painted his psychedelic 1961 Fender Strat guitar with the words "Go, Cat, Go", which he is shown playing in the movie Magical Mystery Tour (1967)
- Gene Summers and Shawn Summers refer to "Blue Suede Shoes" in their song "Gonna Drive 'em Up A Wall" with the lyric "gonna slick up my hair wear my blue suede shoes/gonna rock all night to the boppin' blues". ("Reminisce Cafe" CD, 2008)
- The Motörhead song "Just 'Cos 'You've Got the Power" makes a reference to Blue Suede Shoes
- In The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, blue suede shoes can be both stolen from some houses and taken off the bodies of some non-player characters that the player kills.
- The game World of Warcraft has a pair of Blue Suede Shoes dropping from Kaz'rogal [22], a raid boss in the game's expansion The Burning Crusade.
- In Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, a cheat code BLUESUEDESHOES can make all pedestrians look live Elvis.
- The first song of Chuck E.Weiss's album Extremly Cool is called "The Devil with Blue Suede Shoes"
- The Swedish band Blue Swede allude to the song in their name
- Van Morrison references the song in "The Street Only Knew Your Name" ("And you walk around in the heart of town/ Listening for that sound/ Blue suede shoes, it was the blue suede shoes").
- Blue Suede Clues
is a murder mystery by Daniel Klein.
- George Jones mentions the song and quotes from the lyrics in "Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes" ("God bless the boys from Memphis, Blue Suede Shoes and Elvis... They tore up the '50s... 'Go, Cat, Go!' still echoes through the years").
- Bill Haley and the Comets mention the song in the 1956 single "Hot Dog Buddy Buddy".
- Eddie Cochran mentions the song in his recording "Jeanie, Jeanie, Jeanie" ("Jeanie, Jeanie, Jeanie, I've got my blue suede shoes").
Notes