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The true life story of Elvis's original guitarist, the masterful
Scotty Moore When Elvis Presley first showed up at Sam Phillips's
Memphis-based Sun Records studio, he was a shy teenager in search
of a sound. Phillips invited a local guitarist named Scotty Moore
to stand in. Scotty listened carefully to the young singer and
immediately realized that Elvis had something special. Along with
bass player Bill Black, the trio recorded an old blues number
called "That's All Right, Mama." It turned out to be Elvis's first
single and the defining record of his early style, with a trilling
guitar hook that swirled country and blues together and minted a
sound with unforgettable appeal. Its success launched a whirlwind
of touring, radio appearances, and Elvis's first break into movies.
Scotty was there every step of the way as both guitarist and
manager, until Elvis's new manager, Colonel Tom Parker, pushed him
out. Scotty and Elvis would not perform together again until the
classic 1968 "comeback" television special. Scotty never saw Elvis
after that. With both Bill Black and Elvis gone, Scotty Moore is
the only one left to tell the story of how Elvis and Scotty
transformed popular music and how Scotty created the sound that
became a prototype for so many rock guitarists to follow.
Thoroughly updated, this edition delivers guitarist Scotty Moore's
story as never before. Scotty Moore, Nashville, Tennessee, is the
sole survivor of the Sun Records sessions of July 1954 during which
he, Elvis Presley, and Bill Black, with Sam Phillips at the
engineering sound board, blended country and blues into a new art
form that would shake up American culture for decades to come.
James L. Dickerson, Jackson, Mississippi, is a freelance author and
journalist who has published dozens of books.
With about 70,000 domestic and international adoptions each year in
the United States and Canada, adoption remains a major means of
building families in both countries. Its continued success can be
inferred not only from the yearly statistics, but from a report
issued in 2003 by the U.S. Census Bureau. To the surprise of many,
the report announced the existence of 1.6 million adopted children
in the U.S. under the age of eighteen. Written by a former social
worker who has placed hundreds of children in foster and adoptive
homes and a clinical psychologist who has counseled adopted
children and parents, this book offers a comprehensive look at the
adoption process by merging the best of social work with the best
of psychology. Adoption can be a frustrating and intimidating
undertaking for the unprepared. This guide provides prospective
adoptive parents with the insider information that they need to
navigate the process-and it provides students with the sort of
expert opinion that they need to grasp the academic theory they
receive in the classroom. Highlights include: An insider's look at
the home study process Advice on single-parent adoptions Advice on
gay parent adoptions Advice on parenting adopted children A look at
adoption procedures in both the United States and Canada
Information about international adoptions A directory of adoption
agencies in the United States and Canada
Although her mother, Naomi, and older sister, Wynonna, rose to fame
as the country music duo the Judds, Ashley Judd took her own road
to stardom, becoming one of Hollywood's most successful actresses.
Discover the inside story of the actress who has starred in movies
such as "Heat," "Kiss the Girls," "High Crimes" and "The Divine
Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood." Journey wilth her as she makes
the transition from actress to social activist, addressing the
General assembly of the United Nations on matters of the greatest
importance. Learn the horror and disgust she felt when she learned
her movie career had been crippled by a Hollywood mogul who
orchestrated a smear campaign against her because she would not
have sex with him.
When Dixie's Dirty Secret was first published in 1998, it was the
first book to ever expose the super-secret Mississippi Sovereignty
Commission and the involvement of the government, the right-wing
news media, and organized crime in combating the civil rights
movement. This newly published edition, with nearly 20 years of new
information, is a revised, greatly expanded analysis of that era
that demonstrates how white resistance to racial integration in the
South transformed the Republican Party into a right-wing reflection
of Old Confederacy values. In the United States, the Republican
Party's "Southern Strategy" is now in full bloom, a reincarnation
of Old Confederacy values that are based on states' rights, foreign
isolation and the demonization of blacks. Dixie's Dirty Secret
traces the moral and political disintegration of the Republican
Party, beginning with a 1955 secret gathering in Memphis,
Tennessee, and continuing to the present day transformation of the
Republican Party into one that has adopted white identity as its
major platform, in the process losing the respect of both the
majority of Americans and the international community. Inspired by
Mississippi's refusal to ratify the 13th Amendment abolishing
slavery until 1995, GOP Presidential candidate Donald Trump opened
campaign headquarters in Mississippi to learn how the state has
"handled" its blacks. Was the idea to take the Mississippi Plan
nationwide? In this book, learn how the state's white leadership,
has blocked blacks from being elected to statewide offices for 138
years, how they have used the winner-take-all provision of the
Electoral College to nullify black votes for president, and how
through legal and social pressures they have created reservations
for blacks similar to the ones created in another century for
Native Americans. Mississippi has more black elected officials than
any other state, but none of them are empowered to govern beyond
their reservations. Dixie's Dirty Secret exposes the longest
running political gambit in American history and paints a frightful
picture of the future of the United States if the current trend in
politics continues. How did the populist Democratic Party lose its
blue collar and Southern base? How did the elitist, stiff-upper-lip
Republican Party become a vehicle for racism and right-wing
political anarchy?
Chips Moman's genius began in the studio, where he instituted
technical innovations that forever changed the recording industry,
but it expanded from there with an uncanny ability to recognize hit
songs when he heard them as rough demos, and then blossomed with an
unsurpassed string of hit records. He rescued Elvis Presley's
career with his recordings of "Suspicious Minds" and "In the
Ghetto," and he provided Willie Nelson with one of his most
memorable signature songs, "Always on My Mind." Not bad for a
Georgia country boy who dropped out of school in the eighth grade
and hitchhiked to Memphis in search of the American Dream. "I think
the Chips Moman story has provided me with the best book I have
written since Colonel Tom Parker, which was purchased by Warner
Bros. for its Elvis film starring Tom Hanks," says author James L.
Dickerson. "I anticipate great interest in a movie based on Moman's
story. Small wonder. He has been called the "Steve McQueen of the
music business.'" By any measure-sales, multi-genre capability,
number of hit records, technical innovation, artistry, etc.-Lincoln
"Chips" Moman was the most important record producer in American
history. With several hundred hits to his credit in pop, country,
rhythm & blues, and rock, both from record production and
songwriting, Chips Moman is legendary within the music industry.
This biography is the story of his life. Early on, Chips Moman was
a co-founder of Memphis's Stax Records, along with Jim Stewart and
Estelle Axton. Moman found the location for the studio, organized
the recording system, recruited the early talent and produced the
legendary soul music record label's first two hits-"Gee Whiz" by
Carla Thomas and "Last Night," an instrumental by the Mar-Keys. As
a record producer, he rescued Elvis Presley's career with hits such
as "Suspicious Minds, "In the Ghetto," and "Kentucky Rain." He
produced music icons such as Petula Clark and Dionne Warwick. In
rock and pop he is associated with the Gentrys ("Keep on Dancing"),
the Box Tops ("The Letter"), Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline," Sandy
Posey ("Born a Woman" and "Single Girl" ), Paul Revere & The
Raiders ("Goin' to Memphis"), Dusty Springfield ("Son of a Preacher
Man"), Ringo Starr (an unreleased album which the author listened
to and considers among Ringo's best; the album ended up in a
celebrated court case); B.J. Thomas ("Hooked on a Feeling," "The
Eyes of a New York Woman," and "(Hey Won't You Play) Another
Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song." In country music, he produced
Willie Nelson's "Always on My Mind" and numerous other albums; he
originated the super group the Highwaymen (Johnny Cash, Waylon
Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Kristofferson) and produced two of
their three albums; Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard (Pancho &
Lefty), plus albums with Tammy Wynette, Gary Stewart, Brenda Lee
and others. Moman also recorded a country album, as of now
unreleased, with actor Robert Duvall, who got permission from Moman
to use him as a model for the character he played in Tender
Mercies, a role for which he was awarded an Oscar.
Screening applicants for adoption or foster homes has life-altering
consequences for the children involved, yet there are incredibly
few programs available to train screeners. The educational system
that certifies thousands of social workers each year does not
understand the specialized training required to screen adoptive and
foster parents; social work schools provide minimal interview
training and what training they do provide focuses on therapeutic
interview techniques rather than screening skills. There is a clear
need for a book like Adoptive and Foster Parent Screening, one that
can be incorporated into course requirements and used by working
social workers and psychologists involved with adoption and foster
parent screening. Adoptive and Foster Parent Screening, written by
a former social worker, who has placed hundreds of children into
adoptive and foster homes, and a clinical psychologist, meshes the
best of psychology and social work experience into a definitive
guide for screening adoption and foster home applicants. The book
provides information on: evaluating aberrant behavior and unhealthy
parenting attitudes interview techniques psychological testing.
Adoptive and Foster Parent Screening is based on case histories,
research data, and interpretive analysis. The book is written in an
accessible style free of technical language, thus making it
appropriate for college-level students and professionals who don't
have time to sift through empirical data to obtain accessible
information that they can adapt to their profession.
A collection of stories shared by 25 country music stars in which
they were embarrassed, often in the middle of a performance.
Country music fans will enjoy this look at the occupational hazards
of being an entertainer.
Chips Moman's genius began in the studio, where he instituted
technical innovations that forever changed the recording industry,
but it expanded from there with an uncanny ability to recognize hit
songs when he heard them as rough demos, and then blossomed with an
unsurpassed string of hit records. He rescued Elvis Presley's
career with his recordings of "Suspicious Minds" and "In the
Ghetto," and he provided Willie Nelson with one of his most
memorable signature songs, "Always on My Mind." Not bad for a
Georgia country boy who dropped out of school in the eighth grade
and hitchhiked to Memphis in search of the American Dream. "I think
the Chips Moman story has provided me with the best book I have
written since Colonel Tom Parker, which was purchased by Warner
Bros. for its Elvis film starring Tom Hanks," says author James L.
Dickerson. "I anticipate great interest in a movie based on Moman's
story. Small wonder. He has been called the "Steve McQueen of the
music business.'" By any measure-sales, multi-genre capability,
number of hit records, technical innovation, artistry, etc.-Lincoln
"Chips" Moman was the most important record producer in American
history. With several hundred hits to his credit in pop, country,
rhythm & blues, and rock, both from record production and
songwriting, Chips Moman is legendary within the music industry.
This biography is the story of his life. Early on, Chips Moman was
a co-founder of Memphis's Stax Records, along with Jim Stewart and
Estelle Axton. Moman found the location for the studio, organized
the recording system, recruited the early talent and produced the
legendary soul music record label's first two hits-"Gee Whiz" by
Carla Thomas and "Last Night," an instrumental by the Mar-Keys. As
a record producer, he rescued Elvis Presley's career with hits such
as "Suspicious Minds, "In the Ghetto," and "Kentucky Rain." He
produced music icons such as Petula Clark and Dionne Warwick. In
rock and pop he is associated with the Gentrys ("Keep on Dancing"),
the Box Tops ("The Letter"), Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline," Sandy
Posey ("Born a Woman" and "Single Girl" ), Paul Revere & The
Raiders ("Goin' to Memphis"), Dusty Springfield ("Son of a Preacher
Man"), Ringo Starr (an unreleased album which the author listened
to and considers among Ringo's best; the album ended up in a
celebrated court case); B.J. Thomas ("Hooked on a Feeling," "The
Eyes of a New York Woman," and "(Hey Won't You Play) Another
Somebody Done Someone Wrong Song." In country music, he produced
Willie Nelson's "Always on My Mind" and numerous other albums; he
originated the super group the Highwaymen (Johnny Cash, Waylon
Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Kristofferson) and produced two of
their three albums; Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard (Pancho &
Lefty), plus albums with Tammy Wynette, Gary Stewart, Brenda Lee
and others. Moman also recorded a country album, as of now
unreleased, with actor Robert Duvall, who got permission from Moman
to use him as a model for the character he played in Tender
Mercies, a role for which he was awarded an Oscar.
SOON TO BE MADE INTO A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE Based on unprecedented,
original research and interviews with insiders, this authoritative
biography of Colonel Tom Parker (1909-1997), Elvis Presley's
lifelong manager, includes new revelations and insights into the
music industry's most notorious and mysterious manager.
Investigative journalist and music writer James L. Dickerson looks
at topics such as Parker's illegal entry into the United States,
his work as a carny with Royal American Shows, and his management
of country singer Eddy Arnold, his partnership with Hank Snow, and
how he manipulated Elvis Presley and his family to seize control of
the singer's career. The book examines Parker's greed, his
indebtedness to behind-the-scenes players in Las Vegas, his
gambling addiction, and his fear of deportation played a role in
ruining Elvis's career. Because Colonel Parker was always there
with Elvis, gazing ominously over his shoulder, the book presents
behind-the-scenes glimpses of the entertainer's career that you
will read nowhere else, thanks in part to the author's personal and
professional relationship with Elvis's first guitarist, Scotty
Moore, with whom the author wrote two revealing books. Based on
unprecedented, original research and interviews with insiders, this
authoritative biography of Colonel Tom Parker (1909-1997), Elvis
Presley's lifelong manager, includes new revelations and insights
into the music industry's most notorious and mysterious manager.
Investigative journalist and music writer James L. Dickerson looks
at topics such as Parker's illegal entry into the United States,
his work as a carny with Royal American Shows, and his management
of country singer Eddy Arnold, his partnership with Hank Snow, and
how he manipulated Elvis Presley and his family to seize control of
the singer's career.
Included in this book are photographs, poetry, and narrative
anecdotes looking back on the author's 40-year (and still counting)
career as a journalist, photo-journalist, and author while working
for three Pulitzer Prize winning newspapers in the South. Dickerson
is known for seeking interaction with his photographic subjects.
Featured in this book are portraits of ordinary people who have
distinguished themselves in various ways, such as Lt. Col. Sarah
Deal, the first female pilot for the U.S. Marines Corps (she was
attending air traffic school at the U.S. naval base in Millington,
north of Memphis, when the defense secretary announced that pilot
training would be offered to women in the U.S. Marine Corps.) . . .
an old warrior who got to fly a B-17 bomber again after more than
three decades . . . the midwife birth of a Mississippi Delta baby .
. . the Ghost of Annandale, a spine tingling story associated with
the Chapel of the Cross, one of the most historic churches in
Mississippi . . . and a look Back at Trader Jon's, Pensacola,
Florida's most famous strip joint/safe haven for Navy fighter
pilots and Broadway playwrights and British princes--along with
entertainment celebrities such as Waylon Jennings, Ringo Starr,
Stevie Ray Vaughan, the Fabulous Thunderbirds, the Bangles,
Marshall Chapman, B.B. King, Suzy Bogguss, Rosanne Cash, Marty
Stuart, rock 'n' roll legend Carl Perkins, Jimi Jamison of the rock
group Survivor, Rolling Stone Ron Wood, hit songwriter and
recording artist Deborah Allen, Faith Hill, Leon Redbone, teen star
Tiffany, Lynn Anderson, R&B legend Bobby Womack, Shelby Lynne,
Holly Dunn, Paulette Carlson legendary record producer Chips Moman,
Elvis Presley's first guitarist and co-inventor of rock 'n' roll,
legendary guitarist Scotty Moore, a poem about a female Mississippi
surgeon who operates in the nude (no nudity involved iln the book)
. . . Mississippi author Willie Morris (North Toward Home and My
Dog Skip) and others. Roughly 1/3 of the images in the book relate
to Mississippi, 1/3 relate to Memphis, and 1/3 relate to Nashville.
Katherine Summer had everything in life that she wanted--a loving
husband, a beautiful daughter, an incredible island home in the
Thousand Island region of the St. Lawrence River, an incredibly
bright cocker spaniel named Bessie, and a wildly successful career
as a landscape artist. All that changed in an instant, when a
boating accident seemingly took the lives of her husband and
daughter, leaving Katherine alone and heartbroken on the idyllic
island that previously had provided her with so much joy and
inspiration. Love on the Rocks takes place in the picturesque,
castle-populated Thousand Islands region of Ontario/New York State.
It follows Katherine through the process of sorting out her
emotions as she overcomes her grief and seeks a meaningful new
relationship, only to discover that the path to happiness requires
her to choose between two men--an American psychologist who may
lose his license because of his love for her, and a millionaire,
"bad boy" Member of the Canadian Parliament being groomed for prime
minister, who dazzles her with his charm. A focal point of the
story occurs when Prince Harry and his wife make a cameo at a
banquet and dazzle the guests with previously unknown talents. The
choices that Katherine makes as she attempts to build a new life,
while pursued by the police of both countries for failing to
testify against the psychologist, will take the reader on a
roller-coaster of emotions as she navigates the treacherous rocks
of romance, unable to decide on a future that will not leave
everyone involved shipwrecked by love lost. The surprise ending
will take your breath away.
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