
Photo
Courtesy of Elizabeth (Lib) Adams
Booking Eddie
Eddie's CD's-DVD's
Eddie's Jacket
I was born
and raised in Holy Cross, Kentucky
near Bardstown- known
as The Bourbon Capital of the World.
I was one of 8
children, with 3 brothers and 4 sisters.
Growing up,
there was always music in my family.
I was playing
guitar at age 10,
accompanying myself and my siblings.
We would attend talent shows as “The Miles Kids”
at the
ages of 5, 6, 8, and 10.
Later on, we formed a band and
played
venues all over central Kentucky.
My father was
not musically inclined, but he loved music.
My Mom was
the musical one,
who sang to us from the time we were
born.
Elvis, of course, was my biggest musical influence.
But I grew up on the legendary country singers,
and they
are still among my favorites.
Hank Williams, Johnny
Cash, Conway Twitty,
Merle Haggard, Marty Robbins and
George Jones
are some of my biggest country influences.
I also grew up listening to those great groups
from the
60's rock ‘n’ roll era.
I am a huge fan of the Beatles’
music,
Creedence Clearwater, Stones, Motown.
But,
again, Elvis’ music, to me, was a step above all the
rest.
Stage fright is something all performers deal with.
I had it terribly at first, as a child of 10 to 12 years
old,
to the point of actually 'throwing up' before going
on stage,
and sometimes after coming off stage, too.
And
still, after all these years and thousands of shows,
I
have that nervousness before going on that usually
disappears
once I get on stage. The nervousness just
comes from
wanting to present a good show for an
audience,
and wanting to present Elvis’ music
and image
in the best possible way.
That is, and always will be,
important to me.
My earliest recollection of Elvis was around age 5.
My mom had a couple of 45 rpm records.
And I remember
hearing Jailhouse Rock on the radio.
From then on, I was
hooked all my life.
When I reached driving age and got
my license and first car,
the very first thing I wanted
to do
was to go to Memphis and see where Elvis lived.
So
a friend and I headed to Memphis
on our first adventure
alone driving that distance.
It was a 6-hour drive,
which was a big deal for me,
never having driven or gone
that far before, ever.
We arrived in Memphis, got a
room,
and early next morning went hunting for Graceland.
Got to Graceland around 9 or 10 am.
The sun was shining with beams like from heaven
through those huge majestic trees in front of the house.
From the road, I noticed a figure, all alone,
just in front of the house, standing with arms stretched out,
head looking up, in a purple and gold robe,
with those beams of sunlight hitting all around the figure.
I happened to have a set of binoculars in my car
(back then you could park right on the curb
by the front gate....my car was the only one there
and no one else was around, just me and my friend).
With the binoculars I could see the figure clearly,
still standing perfectly still in this pose,
all by itself, but I could see black hair.
I told my friend, Man, they've got a statue of Elvis
in the front yard. He looked with the binoculars and agreed.
Just then, the arms came down
and the figure began to slowly walk around.
We were just speechless, because we realized
it was actually ELVIS IN THE FLESH, OUTSIDE
WALKING AROUND BY HIMSELF.
We then started saying aloud, “Hey it’s Elvis, Elvis is outside,
I can see him.” It was eerie.
What happened next was more amazing.
We were the only ones there, but after saying aloud,
“Elvis is outside”, it seemed that in a matter of seconds
people came out of nowhere.
Within a few minutes, there must have been
50 people or more who’d come from out of nowhere asking,
"Can you see him? Where is he? Can I use your binoculars?"
It was certainly an experience that I was not counting on.
I just thought I would be lucky enough
to see Graceland Mansion and, if real lucky,
speak to someone from inside the gate,
perhaps a guard or groundskeeper.
But there he was in the flesh. In a few short minutes
several Cadillacs and limos pulled
through the gates
and drove up the winding driveway
where 8 to 10 people got out and Elvis greeted them
(me
still watching every move with my binoculars).
Then
Elvis and some of the others sat on the front steps
by
the columns and after a while they all went inside.
Then, just as quickly as the crowd outside the gate had
appeared,
they disappeared after it was announced
that
Elvis was no longer outside.
When I think about Elvis standing
perfectly still
in those beams of sunlight,
which were majestically
shining through those huge trees,
with his arms
stretched out, in that purple and gold robe,
head back,
looking up into the heavens,
looking God-like himself,
I
believe he was communicating with God,
his maker, in
prayer and meditation.
It is a picture I will never
forget.
Before I started entertaining full time,
I had a
variety of jobs. I drove trucks
while working for a
construction company
and an oil company, served in the
US Air Force,
worked a short time with the US Postal
Service.
For several years, I worked the Fair Circuit.
I
played the Missouri State Fair several times,
Iowa State
Fair several times,
County Fairs all over the Midwest,
just trying to work and get started.
Got off the road in
1990 with opening
the Memories Theater in Pigeon Forge,
Tennessee.
I performed in Pigeon Forge on a regular
basis until l996
when I opened the Eddie Miles Theater
in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
The Eddie Miles Theater was a dream comes true.
I had
always dreamed of my own theater
with my name on it.
In
1995, I heard of a 1000-seat theater in Myrtle Beach
that had been closed for a little over a year
and was
available for lease.....so I invested all the
capital
that I had and the majority
of the rest of the capital
needed came
from a close friend and business partner.
In
October 1996, the Eddie Miles Theater was opened.
An
unimaginable amount of work and effort
went into putting
together a management team
and a band of top notch
entertainers.
We put together a show that I was very
proud of
and it received a lot of acclaim.
I was there
and ran the theater from 1996 until early l999,
when I
had to leave and give up the theater
due to a serious
spinal injury that required 2 surgeries.
After many
months of recovery and recuperation,
I decided to try to
get back to entertaining, which led to what I currently
do –
a lot of shows out on the road.
I still make it
back to Myrtle Beach for concerts
once a month at the
world famous Alabama Theater,
and I also perform on a
cruise ship during my annual
“Eddie Miles’ cruise. See
www.eddiemiles.com
for my current road schedule and special 2006 Cruise to
Hawaii.
I had the opportunity of working with JD Sumner
and
The Stamps on many occasions
and with Ed Enoch and The
Stamps after JD passed away.
While I had the Eddie Miles
Theater in Myrtle Beach,
I had JD and The Stamps there
many times.
Performing with them on stage was
indescribable....
that wall of vocal sound that they
produced was unbelievable.
Backstage was just as much
fun.
JD and Ed Enoch were always telling stories
of
their days with Elvis.
Both of them were always more
vocal than the others,
and I got to know them more.
They
both always had wonderful compliments
about my show and
that always made me feel great
about what I was doing.
JD passed away in Myrtle Beach
while there for a week
long engagement with us.
I was walking and talking with
Ed Enoch
on the beach during that time and we looked
over
and JD was waving from the beach house balcony,
smoking a cigarette, and Ed Enoch said to me,
"Eddie, I
don't think our Little Buddy is
gonna be with us much
longer."
(Ed Enoch often called JD Little Buddy ).
And a
day or two later JD died during the night.
What a sad
time that was.
JD Sumner is a legend in his own right
and I feel honored to have shared a stage with him.
JD
and all The Stamps left me with some of the
greatest and
proudest musical memories of my life.
I try to bring back Elvis' music and image to the
stage
in the most entertaining and reverent way that I
can......
but, off stage, I am as “Eddie” as I can be.
I’m just who I am....I like to think of myself
as an ole
country boy from Kentucky,
doing the best I can to
entertain and
make a living with this very, very
wonderful music.
Those who have seen my show
can explain
this maybe better than I.
I open my own show with a
singing salute
to all the Country Legends that I
mentioned earlier...
and, of course, the biggest part and
highlight
of the performance is my Salute to Elvis.
Elvis'
music has given me the opportunity
to travel all over
the world,
and provide me with experiences
that I would
most likely not have had otherwise.
I have performed in
Canada, Ireland, Sweden,
and traveled to Holland, France
and Germany....
also performed in Bangkok, Thailand.
But
I still have to say, nothing beats performing
in the
Good Ole USA.
In recent
years, I’ve been fortunate to be a guest
and perform in
two of the Legends Concerts
that were put on in Memphis
by Darwin Lamm,
of Elvis International Magazine.
The
first concert, during Elvis Week 2002 in Memphis,
commemorated the 25th anniversary of Elvis’ death.
The
show was loaded with too many legends to mention them
all,
but to be on stage with Scotty Moore, DJ Fontana,
The Jordanaires, Millie Kirkham, Boots Randolph,
and
Billy Swan, was just too much to believe.
Performing
with such Legends in a Legends Concert,
especially with
me being the farthest thing from a Legend,
was such a
thrill that I can't describe it.
Just to be in their
presence, was a thrill,
let alone to get to perform with
them
and they let ME close the show. It was a dream
comes true.
I felt blessed and honored to be a part of that.
And if that was not enough, two years later, in 2004,
Darwin Lamm
decided to stage a reunion show
with everybody back
again, plus adding Ronnie McDowell,
to commemorate the
5Oth year of Rock & Roll.
July l954, when “That's All
Right Mama”
was recorded in Memphis at Sun Records by
Elvis,
Scotty and Bill, is credited as the birth of Rock
& Roll.
So 50 years later there is a concert in Memphis
during Elvis Week commemorating
a half a century of Rock
& Roll
with the Legends that started it,
and little ole
ME is a part of it.
Talk about walking around in a
dream.
And get this, the night before the concert,
there is a dinner in Memphis on Beale Street,
and I am
invited. So here I am sitting at a table,
celebrating 50
years of Rock and Roll
with the guys that started it,
Scotty Moore (Member of Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)
and DJ
Fontana and their wives,
Millie Kirkham, some of the Jordanaires,
friends of Elvis’ such as Jerry Schilling,
and Joe Esposito...and others. I
have to say, for
someone like me, sitting there
on that warm August night
in Memphis, Tennessee,
with the real Legends of Rock and
Roll,
enjoying conversation and steak and ribs...
it
doesn’t get much better
(Note: I will be back in Memphis
during Elvis Week 2005..
details on my website).
I’ve
often been asked if I have any advice
for those starting out
doing Elvis shows
and I have strong feelings about this.
I would advise them to just stay true
to the musical voice of Elvis. Work on the voice.
Of course, the moves, looks, costumes are all important,
but it is the voice above all.
Elvis was the greatest singer ever, in my opinion
and in the opinion of many others.
Be a singer before trying to do an Elvis show.
Sing on pitch, get a voice teacher
to critique your voice or someone whose ear you trust
and who you know will be brutally honest
(no critiques from Mamas, girlfriends, etc...).
Not everybody is a singer, or can be a singer.
If you think that you are singing on pitch,
record it and listen and get someone to listen.
Believe me, many guys doing this
think they are singing on pitch but are not even close.
But they can't hear it because they don't have the ear
(they are not able, through no fault of their own,
to determine if a note is flat or sharp.
They don't have that gift).
The world is full of tone deaf people,
nothing wrong with these people,
their talent just lies in another area.
My biggest pet peeve is to hear someone
take an Elvis song, or any song for that matter,
but especially Elvis'
songs, and butcher it,
simply because they don't have an ear for musical pitch.
Elvis' music and his voice are too important
to be treated badly by someone who cannot sing on pitch,
but wants to get up on stage in a white jumpsuit
and black hair and sideburns, just for the attention,
and who bastardizes the vocal part.
Believe me; I am not trying to
discourage anyone from trying.
But this has to be said, there are already too many
out there doing an Elvis show who don’t have
even close to the vocal ability it takes to do a
representation of Elvis’ voice and
give it the justice that it deserves.
In closing, I would like to thank Lady Luck Music
for featuring me and a great big THANK YOU
to all the
fans who give up their time, energy,
and money to
support what we do.
The miles you travel, and the
expense of food,
lodging, and concert tickets,
is the
only thing that makes it possible
for what we do to
continue.
I thank God for you fans.
And I thank God for
Elvis Presley
and his music and the joy that it has
brought the world.
Sincerely,
Eddie Miles
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