"I loved Carl Perkins, Jerry lee Lewis... not only were they personal friends"
About this Quote
Name-checking Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis isn`t nostalgia; it`s a power move. Wanda Jackson is doing what women in early rock and rockabilly rarely got to do on the record: placing herself inside the boys` club without asking permission. The phrase "I loved" reads warm, even casual, but it carries the voltage of credibility. Love here isn`t fandom. It`s proximity, apprenticeship, and mutual recognition in a scene that has often treated women as decoration rather than architects.
Then comes the pivot: "not only were they personal friends". That "not only" quietly anticipates skepticism. Jackson knows how her story is often received - as an outlier, a novelty, the "queen" title that flatters while isolating. By emphasizing friendship, she`s asserting access to the backrooms of the culture, not just its spotlight. These weren`t distant heroes on a jukebox; they were peers she could call, laugh with, share bills with, maybe compete with. The subtext is an insistence that her history isn`t secondhand.
There`s also a protective softness in the framing. Perkins and Lewis are loaded names: genius, chaos, Southern mythology, scandal. Jackson sidesteps gossip and canonization alike, choosing a human scale. That choice matters because it reframes the era away from legend and toward labor: touring circuits, shared influences, the messy intimacy of making a new sound. She`s reminding you that rock history wasn`t inevitable; it was built by relationships, and she was in the room.
Then comes the pivot: "not only were they personal friends". That "not only" quietly anticipates skepticism. Jackson knows how her story is often received - as an outlier, a novelty, the "queen" title that flatters while isolating. By emphasizing friendship, she`s asserting access to the backrooms of the culture, not just its spotlight. These weren`t distant heroes on a jukebox; they were peers she could call, laugh with, share bills with, maybe compete with. The subtext is an insistence that her history isn`t secondhand.
There`s also a protective softness in the framing. Perkins and Lewis are loaded names: genius, chaos, Southern mythology, scandal. Jackson sidesteps gossip and canonization alike, choosing a human scale. That choice matters because it reframes the era away from legend and toward labor: touring circuits, shared influences, the messy intimacy of making a new sound. She`s reminding you that rock history wasn`t inevitable; it was built by relationships, and she was in the room.
Quote Details
| Topic | Friendship |
|---|
More Quotes by Wanda
Add to List
