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Jerry Lee Lewis loves his fans. Sign Jerry Lee Lewis’ Official Guestbook by adding your comment below.

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Comments

  1. Tom Henderson says

    October 30, 2020 at 2:48 pm

    88 keys, 10 fingers, 1 boot heel mixed together with a God given talent and you get
    Jerry Lee Lewis. Happy Birthday

    Reply
  2. Nancy McCoy says

    October 30, 2020 at 2:08 pm

    Happy Birthday Jerry Lee!! Have loved your music since I was 4 and I received a 45 of. Great Balls Of Fire for my birthday along with an RCA Victor record player. Best birthday present ever! We took a tour of your home along with 2 couples from Belgium in April of 2019. Your son was a very kind and informative guide. We appreciated his down to earth demeanor. You are a treasure. You are very deserving of the great birthday tribute we just watched. Rock on, Killer!!!

    Reply
  3. Donna says

    October 30, 2020 at 4:00 am

    Happy birthday Jerry Lee!!! I grew up listening to your music in Pittsburgh Pa. I love all your songs and you inspired me to become a DJ!!!!! Thank you and keep on rockin:!!!!!!!!

    Reply
  4. Jean-Christophe Dorp says

    October 29, 2020 at 12:03 pm

    Hi Jerry Lee
    You’ve inspired me since I started to play piano.
    Now, I try to play with the spirit of your music
    Here is my channel,
    Thanks for all you gave me through music
    Jean-Christophe

    Reply
  5. Rene says

    October 29, 2020 at 6:21 am

    Happy Birthday Mr. Lewis!

    Reply
  6. David says

    October 29, 2020 at 1:11 am

    Hello Jerry Lee, We love everything you have ever done. The Bluegrass State of Kentucky loves you, brother. Thank you for all of the great entertainment. You’re the best ever. The King of the eighty eights. You mastered the piano.

    Reply
  7. john betts says

    October 29, 2020 at 12:23 am

    we love your music! my girl friend amanda and i have been fans for a long time!

    Reply
  8. Jadir says

    October 28, 2020 at 9:27 pm

    The killer aurrrrrrrrrrrrr

    Reply
  9. Aaron says

    October 28, 2020 at 5:13 pm

    Just watched your 85 th birthday party , awesome ,
    Last time I saw you live was a couple of years ago at Viva Las Vegas at the Orleans hotel you were awesome there as well.
    Lots of love from the U.k
    Keep on Rockin

    Reply
  10. Gladys Rosana says

    October 28, 2020 at 2:31 pm

    Feliz cumpleaños ! desde Argentina Buenos Aires saludándolo.

    Reply
  11. Tony estrada says

    October 28, 2020 at 2:19 pm

    The true king of rock and roll, the absolute Legend, the man who doesn’t play rock and roll he is rock and roll. We love you Jerry Lee Lewis

    Reply
  12. Jane Phillips says

    October 28, 2020 at 1:58 pm

    I love all your music. I go on withdrawal if I dont here it every day!

    Reply
  13. Scott Waller says

    October 28, 2020 at 11:16 am

    Jerry Lee, you ARE rock and roll. So many generations of rock and roll fans thank you for what you have given us. You are a blessing. Your gift keeps on giving.

    We love you Mr. Lewis.
    Scott Waller.

    Reply
  14. Gennady says

    October 28, 2020 at 9:47 am

    С днем. Рождения дорогой Джери ,здоровья и энергии , мне уже 71 год ,но твоя музыка заставляет забыть о возрасте. Спасибо тебе огромное !!!

    Reply
  15. Johnny Langenegger says

    October 28, 2020 at 8:05 am

    Genius Jerry Lee – thank you for your music !

    Reply
  16. Mark says

    October 28, 2020 at 2:31 am

    A total original and a genuine trailblazer! In a contest/survey, I put you in my personal “dream supergroup” with Paul McCartney on bass, Don Henley on drums, Pete Townsend and Chrissie Hynde on guitars and you, of course on piano. (You all sing lead and you all write.)
    I really hope I get a chance to see you live sometime.

    Reply
  17. Mari Hendrickson says

    October 27, 2020 at 9:37 pm

    HAPPY BLESSED BIRTHDAY to you Jerry Lee Lewis. God has blessed you with an amazing talent. You have brought joy to both young and old. Thank you for sharing your talent, I am Grateful that I was able to hear you entertain may you have an awesome night God-bless you.

    Reply
  18. Debby Manning says

    October 27, 2020 at 9:34 pm

    I love you, your music !!! You are a true legend!!! I wish, I could see you & Mickey Gilley in concert!!!!!! Keep Rocking!!! Happy happy birthday & many more!!!!

    Reply
  19. Becky says

    October 27, 2020 at 9:28 pm

    Happy Birthday Jerry Lee. Wish Uncle Dave was here to celebrate with ya. I know he’s looking down on you smiling. Love ya Killer

    Reply
  20. Matti Piipponen says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:34 pm

    Happy 85-Birthday Jerry Lee from Finland

    Reply
  21. Nell D. Simmons says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:30 pm

    Jerry Lee, I loved you then and I love you now. You are the greatest, the one and only Killer! Thank you for all the years of your great music. I have had the opportunity of seeing you in person so many times and have pictures of your concerts. Happy 85th Birthday and may you have many more.
    I will say that I am so disappointed that you have not be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Shame on them. Your contributions to Country Music has been just as amazing as your Rock n Roll legacy. Keep on Rocking Killer and I will continue to listen to all my Jerry Lee Lewis library!!!!
    NDS

    Reply
  22. Melody J Patterson says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:22 pm

    Happy Birthday Jerry !!!!!!!!!!!!!! There is still a whole lotta shaking going on , Um Goodness Gracious Great Balls of Fire !

    Reply
  23. Frank Moravcik says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:16 pm

    Happy birthday Jerry Lee! You have been a big inspiration to me! I play accordion and piano and play a few Jerry Lee songs everywhere I go! People love your music and so do I.. Again, happy birthday, and wish you many many more!! Your the best!

    Reply
  24. Bobby says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:15 pm

    God Bless You Jerry. Love your music. You are one of the greats!

    Reply
  25. the ricky leighs family says

    October 27, 2020 at 8:11 pm

    love you love you love you love you love you
    you are our hero you gave us the value of good music
    you inspired my son lucas leigh to learn to tear up a piano
    lucas has lived in Nashville for the last 10 years but he
    recently relocated his businesses to Oxford, Mississippi.
    love you buddy,
    the ricky leighs family
    hernando, mississippi
    you really impressed us tonight, fantastic show. all our best to you Mr. Lewis.

    Reply
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Official Website of Jerry Lee Lewis | Copyright © 2022 Jerry Lee Lewis. All rights reserved.

Website by John Gehrig

Somewhere in the world, in a mean little honky-tonk or big music hall or church basement rec room, someone is playing a Jerry Lee Lewis song. Wherever there is a piano, someone is shouting…

You shake my nerves and you rattle my brain
Too much love drives a man insane…

“But they won’t play it like the Killer,” Lewis liked to say, as if he needed to make sure the whole world was hearing him right, hearing the pounding genius of it, in songs like “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” “Breathless” and “Great Balls of Fire.”
“’Cause,” he liked to say, “ain’t but one of me.”

You broke my will
But what a thrill…

Lewis, perhaps the last true, great icon of the birth of rock ‘n’ roll, whose marriage of blues, gospel, country, honky-tonk and raw, pounding stage performances so threatened a young Elvis Presley that it made him cry, has died.

He was there at the beginning, with Elvis, Johnny Cash, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Carl Perkins, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, and the rest, and watched them fade away one by one till it was him alone to bear witness, and sing of the birth of rock ‘n’ roll.

“Who would have thought,” he said, near the end of his days, “it would be me?”

Goodness gracious, great balls of fire!

He suffered through the last years of his life from various illnesses and injuries that, his physicians have often said, should have taken him decades ago; he had abused his body so thoroughly as a young man he was given little chance of lasting through middle age, let alone old age.

“He is ready to leave,” his wife Judith said, just before his death.

Lewis, who performed everything from “Over the Rainbow” to Al Jolson, who played the Opry and the Apollo and even Shakespeare, was 87 years old.

Some music historians have wondered if Lewis, regarded by his fans and many music historians as rock’s first, great wild man, might be indestructible; his obituary has been written, re-written, then shelved, gathering dust for a day that seemed inevitable, but seemed to never come. He defied death in his old age just as he shrugged off the hard-driving, self-destructive lifestyle of his younger years, to play his music to a worldwide audience across seven decades, decorate the walls of his home with Grammys and gold records, and spawn a million outrageous stories — most of them true.
Once, when asked by a biographer: “Is it true that…”

“Yeah,” interrupted Lewis, without waiting to hear the particulars, “it probably was.”

His beginnings sounded like myth. His father, Elmo, and mother, Mamie, mortgaged their farm to buy him a piano, after he climbed onto a piano bench and, without ever having touched a keyboard before, began to play. His nickname, Killer, had nothing to do with his playing, but came from a schoolroom fight in Ferriday when he tried to choke a grown man with his own necktie; still, it fit the man, the musician to come, but there was more to him than a barroom piano pounder who sometimes kept a pistol in his pants.

Musicians and music journalists called him a true virtuoso, whose music was so rich and complex that some of them swore there were two pianos on stage instead of one. He played honky-tonk and blues across the same keyboard in the same instant, could play melody with both hands. He sang rockabilly before he knew it had a name, sang blues, gospel and country in the same set and sometimes the same breath, to become No. 24 on Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. Sam Phillips, who launched the careers of Elvis and Lewis at Sun Records in Memphis, called Lewis the most talented person he had ever seen. A talent that made him one of the very few to be inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s first class in 1986 and, most recently this past week, at long last, into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

As Lewis stacked hits on the charts in ’57 and Elvis received his draft notice, the reigning king of rock ‘n’ roll drove to Sun Records in tears, to tell Lewis: “You can have it.”

But if Jerry Lee’s life was a comet that streaked across the sky of American music, it was also a thing that scorched him inside and out, and so many of the people around him.

Judith, his seventh wife, was by his side when he passed away at his home in Desoto County, Mississippi, south of Memphis. He told her, in his final days, that he welcomed the hereafter, and that he was not afraid.

Born into the Assembly of God church in his hometown of Ferriday, Louisiana, he never stopped believing, even when his lifestyle made the specter of hell seem closer. His greatest fear, that he would be condemned to a lake of fire for playing what many in his Pentecostal faith called “the devil’s music,” haunted him. He shared his fear with Elvis, who begged him to never mention it again. Lewis thought Elvis, also a Pentecostal, was the one person who might understand, but he died in ’77, leaving Lewis to wonder, alone.

He had prayed every day across his long life for forgiveness, and for salvation. His was a church that believed in miracles; why, he sometimes wondered, should he not be one of them? He found peace near the end of his life in a simple idea: that a music that brought such joy to so many could only come from God, “and the devil,” he said, “didn’t have nothin’ to do with it.”

“He said he was ready to be with Jesus,” said Judith.

His last album was a gospel record with his cousin, lifetime televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, who had preached against his music when they were younger. In Jerry Lee’s final months, they took turns at the keyboard, singing songs they learned as children: “Old Rugged Cross” and “Lily of the Valley” and “In the Garden.” Lewis, though his voice and body were weakened by his injury and a recent stroke, seemed happy, content.

Much of his life, Lewis had seemed determined to leave the world in the great fire he sang about. He set pianos ablaze, busted hecklers in the head with the butt-end of his microphone stand and rammed the gates of Graceland with his Rolls Royce. He shot holes in the wall of his Memphis office with a .38 revolver, shot his bass player in the chest, “by accident,” with a .357. His life, at different times, was a blur of high-speed chases and Crown Royal. The DEA met his planes on the runway. Fortunes came and went; all the wild rock musicians who came after him, he said, were mostly amateurs. Keith Richards tried to toss up a bottle of Crown Royal and catch it by the neck, like him, “but he never did it right … wasted a bunch of good liquor.”

But if you asked him, in his waning years, what he hoped people would say about him, he had a simple answer.
“You can tell ‘em I played the piano and sang rock ‘n’ roll.”

His career, like his body, seemed doomed a dozen times.

After soaring to the top of the charts in ’57 with songs like “Shakin’” and “High School Confidential,” he was castigated in the press for his marriage to his 13-year-old cousin, Myra. His rock’n’ roll star seemed to burn out even as it began to rise, and after a few big hits in the early 1960s his career seemed to be over. He responded by loading two cars with instruments and musicians and hitting the road, to play some big rooms, still, but also every honky-tonk and beer joint that would pay him to perform. He fought his way out of beer joints in Iowa, then drove all night and all day to another town and another show.

Sometimes he gave them magic and sometimes, if the mood was on him, he gave them less, but in his old age he swore he gave them the magic all the time. In ’64, record producers taped his show at a Hamburg, Germany, nightclub and made what would become music history. Live at the Star Club would be regarded as one the rawest, wildest, and greatest live albums of all time.

Then, in a twist that surprised many of his rock fans, Jerry Lee Lewis went country. “Another Place, Another Time,” was just the beginning of a string of soulful country chart-toppers that made him rich and famous all over again. He had more than 30 songs reach Billboard’s Top 10, including “To Make Love Sweeter for You” and a haunting “Would You Take Another Chance on Me.” It seemed only natural to Jerry Lee. He had always believed that Hank Williams hung the moon.

In this new stardom he finally played the Grand Ole Opry, the organization that had once snubbed him, and ignored the two-song protocol to play what and for long as he pleased, even playing through the commercials. Then, in perhaps the oddest twist of his musical career, he was cast as Shakespeare’s sinister Iago in a musical production in Los Angeles; he was a natural.

Once again, he flew around the world, sometimes on his own plane, and once again his lifestyle made almost as many headlines as his music. Tragedy followed him; he buried two sons. His health began to fail, marriages failed, but somehow he always rallied, always kept playing, for big paydays, or for free in a Memphis nightclub, living the life he sang about in his songs.

In 2006, his Last Man Standing album sold a million copies, his best-selling album of his long career. He followed that with another success, Mean Ol’ Man. You could hear the ghosts of the old honky-tonks in them, as if Jerry Lee Lewis had, truly, found a way to stop time. He did a duet with Springsteen.

His Lifetime Achievement Grammy was a kind of crowning achievement, and he appeared at Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame shows to accept his due and to school the whippersnappers on how it was done.

In 2012, when he was 76, he fell in love and married Judith, and they lived quietly – quietly for Jerry Lee Lewis – in northern Mississippi, though Lewis continued to do shows here in the U.S. and abroad.  That year they took a trip to Ferriday to visit the family cemetery, and to drive across the bridge to Natchez where, as a boy, Jerry Lee used to dangle over the girders high above the brown water of the Mississippi and the passing boats below. The other boys begged him to get down, but he just hung there, grinning, till they were in tears. When asked if he was scared, a lifetime later, he just looked surprised. The Killer didn’t get scared. But looking down at the river as an old man, he said he might have been crazy.

Later, they drove past the church where he beat the piano to pieces with his cousins Swaggart and Mickey Gilley, who would go on to country music stardom, pounding a little blues and honky-tonk into the hymns they were supposed to be practicing.

Just across town from the tiny church had once stood the other temple of his musical education, a blues joint called Haney’s Big House, where some of the biggest acts in the country came to play. As a little boy, he snuck in the door and hid under the tables to hear rolling blues piano and wicked guitar. And somewhere in between it all, between the hymnals and the beer joints, between Hank Williams and Ray Charles, he found something that was his alone. It was always a waste of breath to ask if he had any regrets.

He had a million, and he had none. It all just depended on the song that was running through his head at the time.

“I’ve had an interesting life,” he said, in his 2014 biography, “haven’t I?”

Written by Rick Bragg

—

Jerry Lee Lewis is survived by his wife, Judith Coghlan Lewis, his children Jerry Lee Lewis III, Ronnie Lewis, Pheobe Lewis and Lori Lancaster, sister Linda Gail Lewis, cousin Jimmy Swaggart and many grandchildren, nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents Elmo and Mamie Lewis, sons Steve Allen Lewis and Jerry Lee Lewis Jr., his siblings Elmo Lewis Jr. and Frankie Jean Lewis and his cousin Mickey Gilley.

Services and more information will be announced in the following days. In lieu of flowers, the Lewis family requests donations be made in Jerry Lee Lewis’ honor to the Arthritis Foundation or MusiCares – the non-profit foundation of the GRAMMYs / National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.