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In July of 1954, a guitarist named Scotty Moore walked into Sun Studio in Memphis with Elvis Presley and Bill Black, and the three of them recorded "That's All Right, Mama." The Memphis DJ who played it that night ran it fourteen times in a row. The phone lines collapsed. Within three days, Sun Records had over five thousand orders for the single. The label on that record read: Elvis Presley, Scotty, and Bill. Two years later, Elvis earned over one million dollars. Scotty Moore earned eight thousand. This is the documented story of the man who invented the guitar sound of rock and roll — and was quietly pushed out before most of the world knew his name. DISCLAIMER This video is based on verified historical records. All facts, dates, quotes, and figures are sourced from Scotty Moore's memoir "That's Alright, Elvis," Peter Guralnick's definitive Elvis biography, NPR Fresh Air archive interviews with Scotty Moore (1997), Guitar Player magazine (August 1974), Rolling Stone, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Memphis Music Hall of Fame, and Wikipedia. No details have been invented.