Robert Gordon was one of the few major rockabilly revivalists who came on the scene before
Elvis Presley died, albeit by a slim margin --
Elvis passed only four months after
Gordon's first album was released in April 1977 -- and while
Gordon rarely seemed to be emulating
Presley in his glory days, the King was clearly a major influence on him, both as the man who disseminated the hepcat ethos to the world at large, and as a gifted singer whose talent went beyond the strict confines of the rockabilly genre into pop, rhythm & blues and gospel. On
It's Now or Never (once announced for release under the title "The King and I"),
Gordon teams with one of his best instrumental sidekicks, guitarist
Chris Spedding, and records 15 songs made famous by
Elvis Presley with
the Jordanaires, the vocal group that backed up
Elvis on many of his RCA sessions, adding harmonies on several tunes. While
Spedding follows the teachings of
Scotty Moore in his guitar work and the rhythm section similarly aims for a sound that recalls what
Presley did with these songs so many years ago,
Gordon strives hard to give his recordings a personality of their own, and while
Elvis casts a pretty long shadow over this disc,
Gordon actually manages to sound like himself on
It's Now or Never. It helps that he has a lower voice than
Presley, and that his instrument doesn't seem capable of the same gymnastics as
Elvis', which forces him to rethink the vocal lines a bit, but there's an undertow to this album that suggests
Gordon respects this music too much to simply imitate
Elvis. While
Gordon brings the same sort of romantic brio to "It's Now or Never," conjures up a similar lovelorn passion on "Trying to Get to You" and even approaches the spiritual conviction of "Peace in the Valley," he finds a way to spin them his own way, and if he isn't the most original sounding vocalist in creation here, he approaches some of the best known songs in the rock & roll canon and interprets them on his own terms, no small task for any singer, and he does so with a healthy dose of heart and soul. Against all odds,
It's Now or Never ranks with
Gordon's best work since his heyday in the '80s, and finds him singing with strength, confidence and imagination, partly because he's rarely had material this good: maybe he should consider an
Eddie Cochran or
Buddy Holly homage sometime in the future.
–
Mark Deming, Rovi