MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — Award-winning author and music critic Peter Guralnick will visit MTSU
Wednesday, Oct. 26, to discuss his new biography of rock ’n’ roll legend Sam
Phillips with Greg Reish, director of the university’s Center for Popular
Music.
The free public event, presented by the center and
MTSU’s Tom T. Hall Writers Series, is set for 4:30 p.m. Oct. 26 in Room 221 of
the McWherter Learning Resources Center. A searchable, printable campus parking
map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap.
Guralnick, who has written books on Elvis Presley,
Sam Cooke, Robert Johnson and other American roots-music topics, co-curated a
recent exhibit at Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame, “Flying Saucers Rock
& Roll: The Cosmic Genius of Sam Phillips.” He also wrote and coproduced a
documentary that shares the name of his new book, “Sam Phillips: The Man Who
Invented Rock ’n’ Roll.”
“Peter Guralnick is one of the most important
living music writers and biographers, a real giant among roots music and rock
historians,” Reish said.
"Building on his definitive two-volume
biography of Elvis Presley, Guralnick’s latest book gives us an astonishingly
detailed account of another seminal Memphis figure, Sam Phillips. He is one of
the most consequential popular music figures of the twentieth century, and Guralnick
illuminates Phillips’ importance richly and beautifully.”
Phillips, a musician, record executive, producer
and disc jockey, founded Sun Studio and Sun Records in the 1950s, helping to
shape early rock ’n’ roll and rockabilly as a refashioning of blues, country
and R&B, fundamentally altering American culture.
He worked in his Memphis studio with artists as
diverse as Presley, Ike Turner, Howlin’ Wolf, Jerry Lee Lewis, B.B. King and
Johnny Cash, bringing together black and white voices for the first time in
American music history.
Guralnick’s book features extensive interviews with
and firsthand observations from Phillips gathered over 25 years, along with
interviews with many of the Sun Records legends.
Along with his two-volume Presley biography, “Last
Train to Memphis” and “Careless Love,” Guralnick has written an acclaimed
trilogy on American roots music, “Sweet Soul Music,” “Lost Highway” and “Feel
Like Going Home”; the biographical inquiry “Searching for Robert Johnson”; and
“Dream Boogie: The Triumph of Sam Cooke.”
He won a Grammy for his liner notes for “Sam Cooke:
Live at the Harlem Square Club” and wrote the scripts for the Grammy-winning
documentary “Sam Cooke: Legend” and Martin Scorsese’s blues documentary “Feel
Like Going Home.” Guralnick also is a recent inductee in the Blues Hall of
Fame.
The Tom T. Hall Writers Series in the College of Media
and Entertainment at MTSU celebrates songwriters, authors, poets and
screenwriters and offers students, faculty, staff and the public a chance to
learn more about the creative process as well as the business end of success.
Previous Hall Writers Series guests have included
country superstar Vince Gill, acclaimed songwriter John Hiatt, bluegrass
impresario Ricky Skaggs, renowned folk music scholar Stephen Wade and famed
"Ya-Ya Sisterhood" trilogy author Rebecca Wells.
The Center for Popular Music is one of the nation’s
largest and richest repositories of research materials related to American
vernacular music. The center and the Hall Writers Series are part of MTSU’s
College of Media and Entertainment.
For more information on MTSU’s Center for Popular Music
and its projects and special events, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/popmusic.
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