This week was the 40th anniversary of the death of Elvis Presley. An event that kicked off a vogue for nostalgia that has never gone away. In 1977, the original 50s teenagers were in their mid-thirties and ready to re-live their youth. The death of their idol created a full rock’n’roll revival. In 1977 far more teenagers were teds than punks and Elvis Presley’s 40 Greatest Hits was No.1 in the UK album charts. Other No.1 albums from 1977 included compilations from Cliff Richard, Connie Francis, The Shadows and Diana Ross & The Supremes. This in turn created a huge demand for original singles from 50s and 60s artists. Just before Elvis died, I’d bought this for 25p at a school fete – on the original 1957 maroon HMV label. After his death, its value rocketed to £50. Can you imagine what it’s worth now? I’ve just seen an identical copy on eBay. For a tenner.
The death of Elvis and the birth of nostalgia.

- Hottest June ...21st Jun 2017
- I love this t...19th Jun 2017
- Sir Billy Con...17th Jun 2017
- Pow!!14th Jun 2017
- Jeremy Corbyn...9th Jun 2017
- Three things ...5th Jun 2017
- It was fifty ...1st Jun 2017
- The Chelsea F...29th May 2017
- RIP Roger Moore24th May 2017
- Save the pray...23rd May 2017
- Crouch End....22nd May 2017
- The LSE.20th May 2017
- We've reached...14th May 2017
- Nike's killer...10th May 2017
- President Mac...8th May 2017 prev next