About me
Emmy and Grammy Award winning writer Robert Gordon is the author of 6 books, and producer/director of 8 feature documentaries. He has focused on the American south—its music, art, and politics—to create an insider’s portrait of his home that is both nuanced and ribald.
Gordon’s most recent documentary, Best of Enemies, won an Emmy in 2017 for Outstanding Historical Documentary. It’s a film about the nationally televised enmity between William F. Buckley Jr. and Gore Vidal, and how their 1968 nationally televised debates augured the age of spectacle television. Other films as director/producer include Stranded In Canton, a collaboration with photographer William Eggleston, and Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story, a story of the Civil Rights Movement and the rise of Black Power through the lens of southern soul music. Johnny Cash’s America featured interviews with former Vice President Al Gore and US Senator Lamar Alexander, and with Snoop Dogg and Ozzy Osbourne. It’s about the unifying forces in the life of Johnny Cash.
In 2018, Gordon published Memphis Rent Party, an interconnected collection of profiles and magazine pieces about artists forging their own shadowy paths. It’s something of a sequel to Gordon’s first book, It Came From Memphis, which careens through the 1950s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, riding shotgun with the weirdos, winos, and midget wrestlers who were the forces that created rock and roll. Elvis was a marginal figure in that book, but Elvis’ estate, Graceland, contracted Gordon for two books: The King on the Road, the first project to have access to Col. Parker’s archives, and The Elvis Treasures. Gordon wrote the definitive biography of blues great Muddy Waters, Can’t Be Satisfied, and his book, Respect Yourself, about Stax Records—the home of Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding and the Staple Singers—was published to great acclaim in late 2013 and has been optioned in Hollywood.