When two music legends finally met, no one expected karate to be involved — least of all The King himself.

Back in the early 1970s, Elvis Presley was deep into rehearsals at RCA Studios in Hollywood. Right next door? The Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson, who was working on a track that just so happened to feature legendary guitarist James Burton. What happened next has become one of the most awkward (and hilarious) celebrity encounters ever—and with Wilson’s passing at age 82, the story has resurfaced in full.
Speaking during Elvis’ 85th birthday celebration at Graceland, Burton shared the bizarre tale:
“I walked into the big studio and Brian Wilson was in there mixing a record that I played on. And he said, ‘Whatcha doing here man?’ [I said,] ‘I’m in the next room with Elvis rehearsing.’ He said, ‘Oh! Please, please take me to meet Elvis.’ I took him in and he walked up to Elvis and was just looking at him. And Elvis stuck his hand out to shake hands and he couldn’t move.”
Memphis Mafia member Jerry Schilling also recalled the surreal moment:
“Elvis always prided himself on our security. There was security at the studio as well. This big, overweight, bearded guy came into the studio and went right up to Elvis and went, ‘Hi Elvis, I’m Brian’. And Elvis was very upset with us thinking, ‘How did this guy get in here and who is he?’ So Brian said, ‘I’m recording next door. Would you come over and listen?’ And Elvis looked at us; it’s almost in spite of us since this guy had gotten through. He said, ‘Yeah, I’ll go over’.”
But it was Brian Wilson himself who gave the most chaotic detail of the encounter when he retold the moment years later on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
“I said Elvis, could you come across the way and listen to what we’re doing, and he goes ‘sure’.
Then I went like this! [mimics karate chop from him on Elvis’ arm and then from Elvis on his] ‘Karate chop!’. I knew he knew karate and he karate chopped my arm so hard and goes ‘I’m leaving! I’m leaving!’ And that was it.”
Brian Wilson, who created some of the most beloved music of the 20th century, may have had one of the shortest and strangest celebrity run-ins in rock history.
And in true Elvis fashion — he left the building.

