A daughter connects with her father's
music:

When Nancy Shockley was 4 or 5, she would sometimes
awaken in the night to the sound of her father coming home from work,
his big "doghouse" bass bumping the furniture. Sometimes she would
climb on it and ride it like a pony before her mother chased her off.
To the world, her father was Bill Black, bass player for Elvis Presley
in those early, heady days of the mid-1950s when Elvis was swiveling
and shaking his way toward a music that would rock the world.
To Shockley, 56, Black was a doting dad, a working-class guy who could
give her only a little time before he died of a brain tumor in 1965.
His studio and instruments were sold when she was still a child. She
now lives in Covington with her husband, William Shockley, where they
own a company that levels ground and prepares sites for construction.
She never knew what happened to the bass until the late '70s when
Rolling Stone reported that Paul McCartney had it.
Last month, about 30 years later, Shockley and the bass were reunited
in a remarkable interlude spent with McCartney, the former Beatle, at
his studio in England. Sir Paul sang to her, posed for photos and even
plucked a few notes of her dad's old part on "Heartbreak Hotel."
Shockley's first attempt to reach McCartney after
seeing the article in the '70s was unsuccessful. She let it go. But
the bass did not let her go. Years later, in Oct. 2006, it turned up
again in the arms of McCartney on an episode of PBS's Great
Performances. A clip that spotlighted the bass circulated on
Youtube.com where a friend found it and sent it to Shockley.
In the clip McCartney, performing at London's Abbey Road studios,
literally unveiled the instrument and presented it as the "original
Elvis Presley bass," with its "dashing white trim," he said, that was
"played by Bill Black." The bass, identified as a Maestro M-1 Kay
model, by scottymoore.net, the Web site of Elvis' guitarist Scotty
Moore, was taped at the edges, probably for protection at first, then
painted white. McCartney said when Elvis, Moore and Black toured the
region, Elvis drove and the bass rode on the roof of the vehicle.
McCartney then sang and played "Heartbreak Hotel" on the bass.
Shockley said Gail Pollock, longtime friend and assistant to Moore,
gave her a contact for McCartney. Shockley wrote and this time
received a letter inviting her to visit McCartney in England. She and
her husband arrived in London, Nov. 14, for a four-day stay. The
couple, traveling south by train, were "collected," as the English
say, by an assistant to McCartney and taken in a van to a recording
studio overlooking the English Channel.
Shockley said she wasn't told the name of the studio and declined to
provide full details out of concern for McCartney's privacy. But she
was almost certainly at his Hogs Hill Mill studio in a restored
windmill in a village near Hastings. The couple was offered tea and
sandwiches in a kitchen there, and as Shockley gazed out the window,
she heard a voice behind her that seemed to come out of the past, say,
"Nancy has come to see her daddy's bass."
It was McCartney, casually dressed in jean and loafers. "I almost
cried he was so nice," said Shockley. "I immediately felt like this
was someone I should have met a long time ago. It was like seeing an
old friend."
McCartney led the couple to an upstairs room,
apparently an office, where the old bass waited. Shockley choked back
tears, and McCartney told her, "Let it go, love."
The three remained there for a time saying little. For Shockley, the
silent bass played memories of her father, a former employee at the
old North Memphis Firestone plant, who had a musical bent. He was also
funny and his stage clowning was often crucial in warming up 1950s
crowds for what seemed then like a pretty wild Elvis. The Blacks lived
near the Firestone plant until Shockley was about 5 years old, she
said, then moved to Pikes Peak Street, off Jackson and a few years
later to Frayser. Her mother was Evelyn Steele Black, who died in
2002. Shockley has a sister, Leigh Ann Porterfield of Memphis, and a
brother Louis Black of Atoka.
Shockley remembers Elvis coming to her house on Pikes Peak when she
was a child and talking business with her dad. She wondered why his
car, parked outside, drew curious folks from the neighborhood, and why
women had written phone numbers on it with lipstick.
Even after Bill Black left Elvis in 1958, Black was still on the road
with his band Bill Black's Combo, and had several hits, including
"White Silver Sands" and "Josephine." Shockley knew him mostly during
the last two years of his life, after he stopped touring. Shockley
imagines the bass stirred memories for McCartney too. It was a gift
from Linda McCartney, his wife of 29 years.
Black had sold his bass around 1962 to Mike Leech of The Memphis Boys,
according to Moore's Web site, and it remained in Leech's attic until
sometime in the late '70s when it was sold to music publisher Buddy
Killen, possibly for purchase by Linda McCartney. A PBS.org article
states that McCartney used the vintage bass on "Free as a Bird" and
"Real Love," songs he recorded in 1995 with the two remaining Beatles,
George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
McCartney later posed for photos with the Shockleys and played a
little of "Heartbreak Hotel" for them. "That's why I have a big grin
on my face," said Shockley, about one of the photos. Later he showed
them some of the instruments in the studio, including some used in
original Beatles' recordings, and played and sang a bit of "Lady
Madonna." The visit lasted about 11/2 hours, said Shockley, and then
the couple was taken back to the train station.
James Roy of Boston, who maintains Moore's Web site, and is an
authority on vintage guitars, notes that most of the instruments from
Elvis's '50s performances are privately owned or lost. Moore has not
been in possession of his guitars from that time in many years, said
Roy. Two are reportedly in private hands.
Graceland owns Elvis' 1956 Gibson. Only one of his Martins used from
1954-56 has surfaced, said Roy, and was owned by a Seattle man the
last time he heard. Shockley said folks in the Memphis music community
sometimes ask her about the bass and whether she would like to have it
back in the family. Sure she would, she said.
"But it's in the best hands it could be right now," with McCartney,
she said. "He takes care of it. He loves it. He keeps it alive. And I
would like it to stay with him." (Thanks Andylon)
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