He was born to Elmo and Mamie Lewis on September 29, 1935. Though the family
was dirt poor, there was enough money to be had to purchase a third-hand upright
piano for the family's country shack in Ferriday, LA. Sharing piano lessons with
his two cousins, Mickey Gilley and Jimmy Lee
Swaggart, a ten-year old Jerry Lee Lewis showed
remarkable aptitude toward the instrument. A visit from piano-playing older
cousin Carl McVoy unlocked the secrets to the boogie-woogie styles he was
hearing on the radio and across the tracks at Haney's Big House, owned by his
uncle, Lee Calhoun, and catering to blacks exclusively. Lewis mixed that up with
gospel and country and started coming up with his own style. He even mixed
genres in the way he syncopated his rhythms on the piano; his left hand
generally played a rock-solid boogie pattern while his right played the high
keys with much flamboyant filigree and showiness, equal parts gospel fervor and
Liberace
showmanship. By the time he was 14, by all family accounts, he was as good as he
was ever going to get. Lewis was already ready for
prime time.
But his mother Mamie had other plans for the young family prodigy. Not
wanting to squander Jerry Lee's gifts on the
sordid world of show business, she enrolled him in a bible college in
Waxahatchie, TX, secure in the knowledge that her son would now be exclusively
singing his songs to the Lord. But legend has it that the Killer tore into a
boogie-woogie rendition of "My God Is Real" at a church assembly that sent him
packing the same night. The split personality of Lewis, torn between the
sacred and the profane (rock & roll music), is something that has eaten away
at him most of his adult life, causing untold aberrant personality changes over
the years with no clear-cut answers to the problem. What is certain is that by
the time a 21-year-old Jerry Lee showed up in
Memphis on the doorstep of the Sun studios, he had been thrown out of
bible college; been a complete failure as a sewing-machine salesman; been turned
down by most Nashville-based record companies and the Louisiana Hayride;
been married twice; in jail once; and burned with the passion that he
truly was the next big thing.
Sam Phillips was on
vacation when he arrived, but his assistant Jack Clement put Roland
Janes on guitar and J.M. Van Eaton on drums behind Lewis, whose fluid left hand
made a bass player superfluous. This little unit would become the core of Lewis'
recording band for almost the entire seven years he recorded at Sun. The first
single, a hopped-up rendition of Ralph Mooney's "Crazy Arms,"
sold in respectable enough quantities that Phillips kept
bringing Lewis back in for more
sessions, astounded by his prodigious memory for old songs and his penchant for
rocking them up. A few days after his first single was released, Jerry
Lee was in the Sun studios earning some Christmas money, playing backup
piano on a Carl Perkins session that
yielded the classics "Matchbox" and "Your True Love." At the tail end of the
recording, Elvis Presley showed up, Clement
turned on the tape machine, and the impromptu Million Dollar Quartet jam session
ensued, with Perkins, Presley,
and Lewis all having the time of
their lives.
With the release of his first single, the road beckoned and it was here that
Lewis' lasting stage persona
was developed. Discouraged because he couldn't dance around the stage strumming
a guitar like Carl Perkins, he stood up in
mid-song, kicked back the piano stool and, as Perkins has so saliently
pointed out, "a new Jerry Lee Lewis was born."
This new-found stage confidence was not lost on Sam Phillips. While
he loved the music of Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash,
he saw neither artist as a true contender to Elvis' throne; with Lewis he
thought he had a real shot. For the first time in his very parsimonious life, Sam
Phillips threw every dime of promotional capital he had into Lewis'
next single, and the gamble paid off a million times over. "Whole Lotta Shakin'
Goin' On" went to number one on the country and the R&B charts, and was only
held out of the top spot on the pop charts by Debbie Reynolds' "Tammy."
Suddenly Lewis was the hottest,
newest, most exciting rock & roller out there. His television appearances
and stage shows were legendary for their manic energy, and his competitive
nature to outdo anyone else on the bill led to the story about how he once set
his piano on fire at set's end to make it impossible for Chuck Berry to follow his act.
Nobody messed with the Killer.
Jerry
Lee's follow-up to "Shakin'" was another defining moment for his career, as
well as for rock & roll. "Great Balls of Fire" featured only piano and
drums, but sounded huge with Phillips'
production behind it. It got him into a rock & roll movie (Jamboree) and his
fame was spreading to such a degree that Johnny Cash and Carl
Perkins left Sun to go to Columbia Records. His next single, "Breathless,"
had a promotional tie-in with Dick Clark's Saturday night
Bandstand show, making it three hits in a row for the newcomer.
But Lewis was sowing the seeds
of his own destruction in record time. He sneaked off and married his
13-year-old cousin, Myra Gale Brown, the daughter of his bass-playing uncle,
J.W. Brown. With the Killer insisting that she accompany him on a debut tour of
England, the British press got wind of the marriage and proceeded to crucify him
in the press. The tour was canceled and Lewis arrived back in the
U.S. to
find his career in absolute disarray. His records were banned nationwide
by radio stations and his booking price went from $10,000 a night to $250 in any
honky tonk that would still have him. Undeterred, he kept right on doing what he
had been doing, head unbowed and determined to make it back to the bigs, Jerry Lee
Lewis style. It took him almost a dozen years to pull it off, but finally,
with a sympathetic producer and a new record company willing to exact a truce
with country disc jockeys, the Killer found a new groove, cutting one hit after
another for Smash Records throughout the late '60s into the '70s. Still playing
rock & roll on-stage whenever the mood struck him (which was often) while
keeping all his releases pure country struck a creative bargain that suited Lewis
well into the mid-'70s.
But while his career was soaring again, his personal life was falling apart.
The next decade and a half saw several marriages fall apart (starting with his
13-year-long union with Myra), the deaths of his parents and oldest son, battles
with the I.R.S., and bouts with alcohol and pills that frequently left him
hospitalized. Suddenly the Ferriday Fireball was nearing middle age and the
raging fire seemed to be burned out.
But the mid-'80s saw another jump start to his career. A movie entitled Great
Balls of Fire was about to be made of his life and Lewis was called in to sing
the songs for the soundtrack. Showing everyone who was the real Killer, Lewis
sounded energetic enough to make you believe it was 1957 all over again with the
pilot light of inspiration still burning bright. He also got a boost back to
major-label land with a one-song appearance on the soundtrack for Dick
Tracy.
With box sets and compilations, documentaries, a bio flick, and his induction
to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame all celebrating his legacy, Lewis
still continued to record and tour, delivering work that vacillated from tepid
to absolutely inspired. While his influence will continue to loom large until
there's no one left to play rock & roll piano anymore, the plain truth is
that there's only one Jerry Lee Lewis and American
music will never see another like him. ~ Cub Koda, All Music Guide