Sunday, May 24, 2009

LOSS OF A KING: HOW DID ELVIS DIE?


Elvis Presley died on August 16, 1977 in the bathroom of his Graceland mansion in Memphis, Tennessee. He was 42. He had been on the toilet, but fallen off onto the floor, where he lay in a pool of his own vomit. Panicked, his staff contacted an ambulance, which rushed him to nearby Baptist Memorial Hospital, where, after several attempts to revive him, he died at 3:30 pm CST. His autopsy was performed at 7:00 pm.

The official coroner's report lists "cardiac arrhythmia" as the cause of Presley's death, but this was later admitted to be a ruse entered into by the Presley family along with autopsy physicians Dr. Jerry T. Francisco, Dr. Eric Muirhead and Dr. Noel Florredo to cover up the real cause of death, a cocktail of ten prescribed drugs, taken in doses no doctor would prescribe:

The painkillers Morphine and Demerol.
Chloropheniramine, an antihistamine.
The tranquilizers Placidyl and Vailum.
Finally, four drugs were found in "significant" quantities: Codeine, an opiate, Ethinamate, largely prescribed at the time as a "sleeping pill," Quaaludes, and a barbituate, or depressant, that has never been identified.

It has also been rumored that Diazepam, Amytal, Nembutal, Carbrital, Sinutab, Elavil, Avental, and Valmid were found in his system at death.

The phrase "cardiac arrhythmia," in the context of the coroner's report, means little more than a stopped heart; the report initially tried to attribute the arrhythmia to cardiovascular disease, but Elvis' own personal physician has stated that Presley had no such chronic problems at the time. Most of Elvis' many health problems can and have been traced back to rampant abuse of prescription drugs.

Elvis had visited his dentist on August 15th to have a temporary crown put in; it has also been suggested that the codeine the dentist gave him that day resulted in an anaphylactic shock that assisted in his death. (He had suffered allergic reactions to the drug previously.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

WEDDINGS AT GRACELAND


Graceland's Chapel in the Woods
If you’re considering your options for an Elvis themed wedding, you’re sure to love the Graceland wedding chapel -- a romantic, secluded Elvis wedding chapel adjacent to the grounds of Graceland. The beautiful, Graceland chapel and its facilities offer everything you need for the perfect wedding for just the two of you or up to 50 friends and family. Our professional facilitators, experts at long distance planning, will help you create the Elvis wedding of your dreams in Memphis, Tennessee.





Saturday, May 9, 2009

NEW ELVIS BOOK RELEASE


Following the previous book release, Elvis:Remembering August 16,1977 , author Spike Collamore has teamed up with Joe Krein to publish a second volume. The original book was based on the reactions of Elvis' fans when they heard the tragic news of his death.

Now you, your family members and friends are invited to share stories for this new book. The authors would like to hear your story;

About how you heard the news on August 16, 1977, how you felt when you realized that Elvis was gone for good, how Elvis came into your life -- and did you ever meet Elvis? If so what was he like?

About the Author
Michael Best lives with his wife and their dog in Lincoln, Nebraska. Mike and Spike met at Trinity United Methodist Church and became friends. They decided to work together on this book. He likes to travel, write songs, collect Star Wars figures and attend the Star Wars games, and work on his drawings. He hopes to produce a couple photo books on Jerry Garcia and Johnny Cash . Mike and Spike are currently working on their second book.

About the Editor
Spike Collamore lives with his parents in Lincoln, Nebraska. He graduated from the Tour and Travel program at Hamilton College in January 2005. He likes to collect the Elvis and the Kennedy family photos, the Elvis CDs and DVDs, and enjoys reading American history and biography books. He hopes to produce the 'impossible' Elvis photo books very shortly.

Monday, May 4, 2009

WAS IT A POEM

Was Elvis always conceived as a poem? Or is this the final destination of a sequence of thoughts that never made it into a U2 song? Listening to the finished result 14 years after the words were written, you have to wonder. Not least because Elvis doesn’t sound too far removed from the area of sonic experimentation that U2 inhabited throughout the 1990s in albums such as Zooropa and Pop.

It might sound like an inspired B-side; in reality it’s an accidental collaboration between Bono and Chris O’Shaughnessy, the composer who set about creating an apposite setting for the singer’s words. Though the two have never met, it’s hard to imagine Bono being other than flattered by the results.

O’Shaughnessy’s procession of archive material and original incidental music has amplified the scope of Bono’s words beyond any setting that he must have imagined. In Bono’s eyes, the Bible has always been the greatest story ever told, but over the past two decades the story of Elvis has run it close.

Writing for Rolling Stone magazine five years ago, Bono referred to the effect of Presley’s music. “He was already doing what the civil rights movement was demanding: breaking down barriers. You don’t think of Elvis as political, but that is politics — changing the way people see the world.”