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JERRY LEE LEWIS
Yes, he really married his cousin

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Jerry Lee Lewis, the self-proclaimed "Killer," is a man of prodigious
appetites and talent. Egocentric and self-absorbed, Jerry Lee is the last
of the original '50s wildmen. A child prodigy who quickly mastered his
instrument, Lewis claims to have no influences, but his stylistic quirks
point to boogie-woogie master Cecil Gant and country-piano man Moon
Mullican. After being run out of Nashville (where he was told he could be
signed if he strummed a guitar instead), he came to Memphis, where his
audition tape got him hooked up to Sam Phillips's Sun label. In the space
of four singles released in a year's time, the Killer was suddenly running
neck and neck with Elvis
for the crown as King of Rock & Roll honors. When Lewis
married his 13-year-old cousin in 1958, his career promptly ground to a
halt, leaving him to eke out a bleak existence in the honky-tonks of
America. It took 12 years of his life to fight his way back, but Lewis is
nothing less than American music's consummate survivor, and his
reemergence (via the county charts, with a string of smashes) was no less
than his due.
There are few originals in '50s rock & roll, most taking
their cue from Elvis
or Little Richard, but Lewis is one of the major
stylists in the history of American popular music -- period. His
distinctive piano style is tightly woven into the fabric of that
instrument, while his vocal style is easily recognizable as well, whether
tackling a mournful country weeper or storming through his prodigious
catalog of rock & roll/R&B favorites, putting his individual stamp on each
and every one. As he'll be the first to tell you, there is simply no one
quite like the Killer. We shall not see the likes of him again in our
lifetime.
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