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D. J. Fontana, longtime Elvis Presley drummer, has died

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Fontana rose from strip joints in his native Shreveport, Louisiana to the heights of musical history as Presley’s first and longtime drummer.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — D. J. Fontana, a rock ‘n’ roll pioneer who rose from strip joints in his native Shreveport, Louisiana to the heights of musical history as Elvis Presley’s first and longtime drummer, has died at 87, his wife said Thursday.
Karen Fontana told The Associated Press that her husband died in his sleep in Nashville Wednesday night. She said he had been suffering complications from breaking his hip in 2016.
“He was loved by everybody all over the world. He treated everybody like everybody was his friend,” she said.
Presley’s former wife, Priscilla Presley, issued a statement calling him “a tremendously talented musician and a wonderful man.”
Fontana, a member of the Rock Hall of Fame, was the last surviving member of Elvis’ original core of musicians. He met Presley and the others on the Louisiana Hayride, a popular and influential radio and TV country music program based in Shreveport. Fontana, the staff drummer, asked to join his group for a session broadcast in October 1954.
A regional act at the time, the 19-year-old Presley had been recording and touring since the summer with guitarist Scotty Moore and bassist Bill Black, the musicians Sun Records founder Sam Phillips brought in after Elvis turned up at the Memphis, Tennessee-based label’s studio.
“The Blue Moon Boys,” as they called themselves, had been playing a blend of blues, pop and country that was unique at the time; but it was missing something crucial.
In this Oct. 16,2004 file photo, longtime Elvis Presley drummer D. J. Fontana performs at the 50th anniversary celebration concert of Elvis Presley’s first performance at the Louisiana Hayride in Sherveport, La.| Robert Ruiz/The Shreveport Times via AP
“Elvis and Scotty and Bill were making good music, but it wasn’t rock n’ roll until D. J. put the backbeat into it,” the Band’s Levon Helm told The Associated Press in 2004.
Elvis returned often to the Hayride, and in 1955 Fontana became a permanent member of the group, working with Presley through much of the 1960s.
In a 2010 interview with the Sun-Times, Fontana talked about the process of making music with Presley, Black and Moore. “It’s hard to get three or four guys on the same wavelength, but when it happens you just feel it and it works out beautifully, and that’s how it was with us. Elvis didn’t have a lot of suggestions; he was more like, ‘Guys, you just play it like you feel it. If you don’t like it tonight, we’ll change it tomorrow night.’ He was never critical. [Elvis] knew exactly what he wanted. He’d hear it in his head and he could sit down and explain it to us for the record. He would never scream and holler like a lot of artists would do. He would always say if you get nervous in the studio, you can’t do your best on the record.… We never rehearsed that I know of. Never picked up guitars or drums to rehearse. Somehow we just knew what we were gonna do.”
Influenced by such big band drummers as Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa, Fontana was admired by Helm, Ringo Starr, Max Weinberg and many others for his power, speed and steadiness, which he honed during his time with the Hayride.
“I heard Scotty and Bill and Elvis one night and knew that I couldn’t mess up that sound,” Fontana later said. “I think the simple approach comes from my hearing so much big band music. I mixed it with rockabilly.”
Fontana was there for Presley’s extraordinary first wave of success, from such hit singles as “Hound Dog” and “Jailhouse Rock” to his increasingly frenzied live shows and hip-shaking appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show” and other TV programs.
He played on many of the soundtracks — and was occasionally seen on camera — for Presley’s movies in the ’50s and ’60s.
He was on the “comeback” Christmas TV special of 1968 that featured Presley and fellow musicians jamming on a tiny stage before a studio audience, with Fontana keeping time on a guitar case.
In that same 2010 interview with the Sun-Times, Fontana recounted the use of the case.”Someone made [Elvis] that leather cover for his case and I just used it because there was something about the sound that case had. There were a bunch of records that I played on that thing. “Don’t Be Cruel” is drumming on the case. A lot of people don’t know that. “All Shook Up” is the guitar case. Go back and listen to it.”
Widely cited for reviving Presley’s career, the comeback show was his first live performance in years and the last time Moore and Fontana worked with Elvis, who died in 1977.
“Elvis would always want to go back and talk about the early days when there were four of us in a car, Me, Scotty, Bill and Himself,” Fontana later told the fan site Elvis Australia.
“And he told me one day, he said ‘You know, I wish I wasn’t Elvis.’ And that struck me funny — even back then. You know he kinda wanted to get away for a while. I think he should have retired for about 7 or 8 years, and then come back — you know. And then he might still be with us.”
Fontana also played on Starr’s solo album “Beaucoups of Blues,” and worked with country artist Webb Pierce and rockabilly star Gene Vincent among others. More recently, he and Moore were joined by Helm, Keith Richards and other guests for the 1997 Presley tribute album “All the King’s Men.”
In 2000, he played on Paul McCartney’s cover of an early Presley hit, “That’s All Right.”
Born in 1931, Dominic Joseph Fontana began playing drums as a teen in his high school marching band and would also jam with his cousin while listening to big band recordings.
By his early 20s he was performing at strip joints and spending enough time around the Hayride that he was hired fulltime, although at first he was asked to play behind a curtain because drums were scorned by country audiences.
Presley’s Sun Records contract was purchased by RCA Victor late in 1955 and he became a sensation around the country, and beyond.
During an interview with Elvis Australia, Fontana recalled a 1957 show at a Canadian football stadium, when Presley did his best to honor the owners’ wishes to keep the crowd off the grass and away from the stage.
“So Elvis came on, did a few songs, and said: ‘We’d like for you to get back in your seats.

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