In U2’s evocative meditations on American music, Elvis Presley emerges as a towering figure—equal parts rebel and relic—whose influence looms large in tracks like “Elvis Ate America” from the Passengers project.
Bono’s lyrics unravel the myth and mania surrounding Elvis, casting him as an emblem of American culture’s obsession with fame, consumption, and self-destruction.
Lines like “Elvis Ate America” capture a biting critique of America’s need to idolize, commodify, and ultimately consume its icons, with Elvis at the heart of this paradox.
Bono’s reflections reveal a profound empathy for Elvis, seeing him as both a revolutionary and a tragic figure—an artist whose charisma and groundbreaking sound reshaped popular music yet left him captive to his own myth.
Bono frames Elvis’s life as a cautionary tale about the corrosive nature of fame, where the pursuit of the American dream becomes inseparable from self-destruction. Elvis’s journey, as Bono sees it, illustrates the price of cultural iconography: the way public adoration can elevate an artist to mythic status while also consuming the very humanity that made them remarkable.
Elvis Ate America
A Room at the Heart Break Hotel
Whilst not specifically about Elvis, the song is a direct reference to Heartbreak Hotel - a song which Elvis famously sang about.Fans of the Rattle and Hum album might be interested to know that U2 recorded song tracks for for the album at Sun Studios in Memphis, where Elvis famously recorded. Room at the Heartbreak Hotel was a b-side to Angel of Harlem single from Rattle and Hum.
Elvis Presley and America
Apparently this was a letter of sorts from Bono to Lisa Marie, Elvis's daughter.+ Two Elvis Covers
Unchained Melody" may simply be a famous Elvis cover song, but its iconic status cannot be denied!