I’m Going To Graceland,Graceland,Memphis Tennessee


The Mississippi Delta was shining like a National guitar

I am following the river down the highway

through the cradle of the Civil War

I can’t think of a better opening lyric than the first verse of Paul Simon’s song, Graceland, from his acclaimed album of the same name. I’m a Simon fan from way back in the caveman days when he and Art Garfunkle made all the hippies and folkies stop and listen to their lyrics. Simon and Garfunkle were cerebral before it was cool or hip; holdovers from the coffee house Greenwich Village days. One guitar and two voices, no feedback, no pounding drums or wall of sound, just pure, beautiful talent. One could say that Paul and Art ” knew their groceries.” An old Beat term used by the hep-cats.

I’ve played a National Guitar, and it’s a tough hombre. Made from shining chromed steel with a resonator instead of a sound hole, the instrument is a beast that will shred your fingertips in record time. The sound, like the guitar, is unique, so I can see why Simon weaved it into the lyrics. The guitar does shine like the Delta, which I have seen from the air, and it does glow to the point of breaking out the Raybans or at least a $10.00 pair of gas station shades.

Graceland, yes, I have been there too, but it was “back in the day” while Elvis still called it home and was in and out of his kitchen making “peanut butter and nanner” sandwiches when he wasn’t shooting up color televisions or yukking it up with his entourage of buddies.

Memphis, back in the 1960s, when I used to visit, was once a happening city, and Graceland was in a good part of town. Now, you had better be packing if you visit that neighborhood. Beall Street was legendary, Sun Records was still operating, and the best rock n roll acts came to town like clockwork. Perhaps the city intrigued Simon when the boys played there in the 60s. He was biding his time, waiting for the right moment to pen a great tune about the southland. Having South African musicians on the album was the mint in the julip.

Paul and Art are old men now; aren’t we all that played music back then? I doubt there is much more left in the two of them, but man…those guys gifted us with some great music and lyrics that made us stop and think about a winter day in a deep and dark December, being an island, riding a bus while watching the moon rise over an open field, and writings on subway walls. Let’s see if anybody beats that.


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10 Replies to “I’m Going To Graceland,Graceland,Memphis Tennessee”

  1. Yes they are great opening lines – as soon as you hear them you know the song.
    Sun Records always has me immediately thinking of Johnny Cash.

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  2. Good piece Phil. Always liked the Simon song. The whole Elvis thing has it’s own vibe. So many ways it can go. Good, bad, cheesy but never boring. Also like you’re connection to a duo that I never gave much time. It’s that personal connection to music that I like to hear people talk about. I see and hear it differently after that. Good stuff fella. You are opening up my mind (a little)

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    1. Thanks CB. Glad you liked the read. I got a story about Elvis and Graceland that may be coming soon. I was in and out of Memphis a lot from 67-69, visiting and also playing rock music. I did encounter E only once, and that was good enough for me. Spent some time on a cotton plantation in Tunica MS, his home town, man it was going back to the civil war days. More to come.

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  3. S&G were very creative indeed. “The Sounds of Silence” still echo in my mind to this day. I can’t hear well, so I don’t listen to music anymore. But I doubt there’s anyone writing and singing stuff like that today.

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  4. Interviewed Elvis in 1976. Had to pinch myself. There at Graceland. I even went through the back kitchen door with Uncle Vester & the office where Vernon (& sweet secretary Becky Yancey, who i met) worked.
    In my mind, there is not a finer song writer than Paul Simon. Thanks for the memories.

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