Amarillo ’77 for completists only

Amarillo '77I originally planned to write a full review of Follow That Dream’s Amarillo ’77, but I just don’t have the heart to do it. I enjoy much of the 1977 material on Elvis In Concert, Spring Tours 77, and Unchained Melody, so I was looking forward to this release.

I’ve played it twice now, and I’m going to have to put it away for awhile. It pains me to write this, but Amarillo ’77 is the worst Elvis concert album I’ve ever heard. I don’t own every FTD release, so perhaps there are some worse ones out there. If so, I don’t need to hear them. I have never felt like this after listening to an Elvis album. Unless this is the last CD you need to complete your collection, I can’t recommend Amarillo ’77.

Despite its misleading title, Amarillo ’77 is actually a compilation of songs from five different concerts. While it could be said that the performances on Spring Tours 77 were cherry-picked to cover only highlights, I believe the opposite is true of Amarillo ’77.

This is one of only four official albums ever released that is devoted to 1977 material. Given how rarely this Elvis year is visited, why were these particular performances chosen? Rather than picking cherries, I believe someone intentionally plucked a bunch of sour grapes this time.

I don’t believe in kicking a man while he is down, even if it is 34 years after the fact, so I’m just going to leave my thoughts on this depressing disc at the above.

I can really use a good laugh right now, so I’m going to pull out FTD’s All Shook Up, which covers Elvis’ August 26, 1969, Midnight Show at the International Hotel in Las Vegas. It features Elvis in good spirits and at the top of his game.

Back In Richmond

An Elvis Presley concert recorded in Richmond, Virginia, will soon become an official album. In September, Sony’s Follow That Dream collectors label will release 48 Hours To Memphis, a CD that captures Elvis’ March 18, 1974, concert at the Richmond Coliseum.

In the 1970s, Elvis performed live on four dates at the Richmond Coliseum. The March 18 concert was only six days after his March 12 appearance there that same year. The tour swung back through Richmond due to a rapid sell out of the earlier show. An audience sign in 1972’s Elvis On Tour modified the state tourism slogan to say, “Virginia Is For Elvis Lovers.” This clearly was still the case two years later.

I’m glad that they gave this CD a creative title, rather than just slapping a song name on it. Richmond is about 13 hours from Memphis by car – and much shorter, obviously, by plane. The 48 Hours To Memphis title reflects that Elvis closed out the tour two days later with a concert in Memphis on March 20. An edited version of the Memphis show became the July 1974 album Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis.

To the point of sounding like a broken record, I’ve noted several times here that I missed out on seeing Elvis perform live due to being only two years old when he passed away. I have intentionally avoided the bootleg versions of concerts like this for years in hopes of someday enjoying official releases. 48 Hours To Memphis will be a very special way to think of what might have been. Thank you, FTD.

REVIEW: Stage Rehearsal CD (FTD)

Stage Rehearsal (FTD CD)

August 10, 1970. The MGM camera crew has been following Elvis around for almost a month now. This afternoon, it’s time for one final rehearsal before the opening show later tonight. No camera crew allowed this time, but RCA is rolling tape in preparation for the concert recordings. Follow That Dream Records’ latest release, Stage Rehearsal, takes us behind the scenes of this event.

One of the things I’d been wondering about this release was how FTD would deal with the fact that most of the songs from this rehearsal were incomplete, due to having a “late start.” The first several seconds of these songs were not recorded. After all, RCA never intended this rehearsal for release.

The way I saw it, FTD had at least three options:

1.) Leave the recordings alone and let them start in progress — a bit jarring, but historically accurate
2.) Fade the songs up slightly as they start in progress — a little less jarring
3.) Repair the beginnings using recordings from other summer 1970 rehearsals — requires more work and is not historically accurate

I usually try to avoid reading the opinions of others when I’m planning to review something. That way, my expectations and reactions do not get swayed one way or the other in advance. Sometimes, this is impossible with FTD releases because I am in the United States, and we tend to receive them two or three weeks after most of the rest of the world.

In the case of Stage Rehearsal, I came across a comment revealing that FTD had repaired the beginnings of the songs by using live versions. My initial reaction was shock and dismay. Why would they make such a strange choice?

Once I had the actual CD in hand last week, though, and played it for the first time, it became obvious why FTD chose this path.

The sound quality of the August 10, 1970, stage rehearsal contained on this CD is comparable to the concert recordings that began later that night and continued for the next few days. To my knowledge, there are no other That’s The Way It Is rehearsals that have this level of sound quality. Using subpar sounding rehearsals as lead-ins would have probably been too obvious as splices. Instead, FTD elected to go with the live recordings to more closely match the sound of this rehearsal.

My personal preference would have been that FTD just release the rehearsal as-is, with truncated introductions. This is supposedly a collectors label, after all.

However, I can understand and appreciate their desire to make this a quality listening experience. After all, we were Elvis listeners prior to becoming Elvis historians! In this case, entertainment value won out over historic context. Considering how much I otherwise enjoy this CD, I can forgive them that.

One thing different about this rehearsal compared to some of the others I’ve heard over the years is that it does not feature Elvis really working on the songs. It feels more like a live show in that regard. This may be because this is literally hours before the opening show (captured on One Night In Vegas, a must-have FTD) and most of the kinks have already been worked out, or it could be because the recording was obviously turned off between songs. Two of the songs are repeated, so that’s evidence they were doing some work.

The stage microphones experience feedback a number of times, foreshadowing what would happen later that night during the actual concert. I wonder why this problem was not resolved prior to the show, since it was evident in the rehearsal?

There are many loose, fun moments but, in the end, the real appeal of the 1970 portion is the sound quality. None of the versions are revelations, though “version 1” of both “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” and “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin'” are stellar. Oddly enough, “version 2” of both of these songs splices the exact same live introductions as used on version 1. I suppose the tempo matched better than other alternatives, but this really shows why repairing the audio in this fashion was not the way to go.

A few years ago, Warner Brothers released “The Richard Donner Cut” of Superman II, showing what that director’s version of the 1980 movie may have been like had he not been replaced midway through production. To augment the available footage, screen tests of the main actors were used. This footage looks totally different compared to the rest of the film. Stage Rehearsal‘s “what if” splices between live and rehearsal material reminds me of this.

The 1972 and 1973 bonus songs that comprise the rest of this CD were recorded on a portable tape recorder. Therefore the sound quality is akin to “When The Snow Is On The Roses” and other recordings of that nature. These are definitely listenable, though they suffer a bit in following up the near-pristine-sounding 16-track recordings from 1970. I suggest playing the bonus songs first to avoid this effect.

Finally, here, we get some rehearsal work, which is pretty much lacking from the 1970 portions of this CD.

Any Day Now: By 1972, it seemed that Elvis had all but abandoned the songs he recorded at American Sound Studios only three years earlier, save the obligatory “Suspicious Minds.” Apparently not, though, for here’s Elvis sounding awesome on “Any Day Now,” leaving me to wonder why this apparently did not become part of the show.

True Love Travels On A Gravel Road: This is a good version, but seems less concert-ready than “Any Day Now.” It could’ve worked for occasional use as something different. Who knows, maybe he did use it that way.

Portrait Of My Love: Elvis does a brief, unidentified blues number before launching into “Portrait of My Love” on a whim. This is not so much a “rehearsal,” then, as it is an off-the-cuff song. It’s pretty and probably would’ve been a decent number if further developed. Wonderful to hear a “new” Elvis song, I might add.

I’m Leavin’ It All Up To You: Another “new” Elvis song. This one sounds pretty basic, but I believe that is because Elvis severely shortened it.

The funny thing is, I bought this CD because of the 1970 material, but it is the 1972 and 1973 material that stands out.

Ultimately, Stage Rehearsal is a well-intentioned release that I recommend with reservations. It offers 1970 rehearsals in terrific sound quality, but with unfortunate splicing decisions. It also offers some 1972 and 1973 rarities, but in subpar sound quality. Be aware of what you’re buying so that you won’t be disappointed. Then, just crank it up and enjoy. That’s what Elvis is supposed to be all about anyway.

You’ll never guess who put this Elvis career retrospective together

With literally thousands of performances from which to choose, it is difficult to distill Elvis’ entire career down into a single disc.

One of Sony’s most recent attempt to do just that was the release Elvis 75, from 2010.

Here’s another list of songs chosen by someone else, many years before the Elvis 75 release:

  • That’s All Right
  • Tryin’ To Get To You
  • I Got A Woman
  • Hound Dog
  • Don’t Be Cruel
  • Love Me
  • Teddy Bear
  • Jailhouse Rock
  • It’s Now Or Never
  • Are You Lonesome Tonight
  • Hawaiian Wedding Song
  • Can’t Help Falling In Love
  • Little Sister
  • What’d I Say
  • How Great Thou Art
  • Johnny B. Goode
  • See See Rider
  • I Really Don’t Want To Know
  • Early Morning Rain
  • You Gave Me A Mountain
  • My Way
  • Fairytale
  • And I Love You So
  • Hurt
  • If You Love Me

Other than one or two out-of-place songs, this is a single-disc retrospective I could get behind. I like the way it incorporates well-known hits with some rarities (to the mainstream, general public, that is).

Take another look at this list. It should be familiar to most of you.

These songs have indeed appeared together on an album. Way back in 1977. It was the first album released after Elvis passed away.

That’s right, you are looking at the songs from Elvis In Concert, which compiled two shows from Elvis’ final tour.

Elvis receives a lot of criticism from fans for his concert set lists, particularly in later years.

Sometimes, looking at something in a different way – or sequence – can shed new light on a subject.

We can debate the quality of his performances, but the songs Elvis selected during those two nights represented a look back at his entire career. Sadly, they also became a final farewell.

Hey Sony, isn’t it about time for an Elvis On Tour boxed set?

I started to do this in reply to Mike Hermenet’s comment on my Trilogy post, but decided to make a new post about it instead.

Though the 40th anniversary of That’s The Way It Is in 2010 essentially went unobserved by both the main Sony label and its Follow That Dream collectors label, I’m with Mike in hoping that the 40th anniversary of 1972’s Elvis On Tour will capture Sony’s imagination in 2012.

Elvis On Tour deserves a 3-CD treatment on the main label:

Disc 1: April 9, 1972, Evening Show, Hampton Roads, VA
Disc 2: April 10, 1972, Richmond, VA
Disc 3: April 16, 1972, Greensboro, NC

And then, to complement the above, there should be an Elvis On Tour: The Rehearsals – Volume II CD on the FTD label.

Or perhaps swap out one of the concerts from the set and release it on FTD, and put the disc of newly released rehearsals on the main label boxed set instead – since some may find three concerts from the same week to be too repetitive for a mainstream release (who are these imbeciles?).

After last year’s poorly handled Blu-ray release of the film, I’m not holding my breath for Warner Brothers to release anything new as far as Elvis On Tour video footage next year. I hope I’m wrong on that account, though.

There is, at least, some hope for additional audio releases to go with those from the past.

Thanks for commenting, Mike, and for the quick post idea.

“That’s why I’m saved…”

Let Yourself Go (2006)

Let Yourself Go (2006)

I gave the 2006 FTD release Let Yourself Go! a spin for the first time in quite awhile last weekend.

Due to its primary focus on segments for the production number medleys, it’s probably the ’68 special album I play the least – other than two or three of the rehearsal tracks.

On this listen, however, two of the non-rehearsal tracks demanded my attention.

Recorded for use in the gospel medley, “Saved” features as an alternate take here.

Unlike many of the other medley segments on this release, “Saved” works as a stand-alone track. In fact, it’s really cool finally to have “Saved” by itself!

Elvis’ exuberance on this version is so contagious that I prefer it far and above the comparatively subdued master take used in the medley. On the alternate, he even throws in a “whooh!” at one point, unable to contain himself. That’s what makes the comeback era so special, hearing such pure joy return to Elvis’ music.

Incidentally, if you have never heard LaVern Baker’s original 1959 version of “Saved,” do yourself a favor and find it somewhere. She does an incredible job on the song.

Anyway, I don’t remember the alternate vocal track of “Memories” jumping out at me when I first played Let Yourself Go! way back when. For some reason, this time, it really stood out. The difference between it and the master was not nearly as striking as it was for “Saved,” but the song is just beautiful.

Hearing a slightly different inflection on a few lines of a song I’ve played so often makes it feel new again. The sound quality on both of these tracks is superb.

I love re-discovering songs that have been in my collection for awhile. I wonder what will turn up next?

That’s The Way It Is: Rehearsals – The Official Audio Releases

My favorite Elvis event is 1970’s That’s The Way It Is, with 1968’s ELVIS (comeback special) a close second. That’s why I’m looking forward to the new Stage Rehearsal CD, coming later this month from Follow That Dream Records.

The core of Stage Rehearsal will be songs recorded during Elvis’ August 10, 1970, final rehearsal before the opening show later that night (the concert captured on FTD’s One Night In Vegas). MGM did not film this particular rehearsal for the movie, but I still consider it part of That’s The Way It Is.

To this point, official releases of That’s The Way It Is rehearsals have been scattered on various titles. Below is a listing of what we have so far.

This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the audio recordings made for That’s The Way It Is rehearsals. I hope Sony and FTD release the remaining That’s The Way It Is material over the next several years as we approach the film’s 50th anniversary in 2020.

Elvis Aron Presley (1980)
(August 10)
You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’
Sweet Caroline

Walk A Mile In My Shoes (1995)
Alla En El Rancho Grande (July 15)
Froggy Went A-Courtin’ (July 29)
Stranger In My Own Home Town (July 24)

A Life In Music (1997)
(July 29)
I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water
I Was The One
The Cattle Call
Baby, Let’s Play House
Don’t
Money Honey
What’d I Say

That’s The Way It Is: Special Edition (2000)
Peter Gunn Theme (July 15)
That’s All Right (July 15)
Cottonfields (July 15)
Yesterday (July 15)
I Can’t Stop Loving You (July 15)
Such A Night (July 29)
It’s Now Or Never (July 29)
A Fool Such As I (July 29)
Little Sister/Get Back (July 29)
I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water (July 24)
Johnny B. Goode (July 24)
Mary In The Morning (July 24)
The Wonder Of You (July 24)
Santa Claus Is Back In Town (August 4)
Farther Along (August 4)
Oh Happy Day (August 7)

One Night In Vegas (2000)
(August 4)
Words
The Cattle Call/A Yodel
Twenty Days And Twenty Nights
You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me
Bridge Over Troubled Water

The Way It Was (2001)
Words (July 14)
The Next Step Is Love (July 14)
Ghost Riders In The Sky (July 15)
Love Me (July 15)
That’s All Right (July 24)
I Got A Woman (July 24)
I’ve Lost You (July 24)
I Can’t Stop Loving You (July 24)
Just Pretend (July 24)
Words (July 29)
I Just Can’t Help Believin’ (July 29)
Something (August 4)
Polk Salad Annie (August 7)
Mary In The Morning (August 7)

One thing I didn’t realize until compiling this list is that it’s been a decade since Sony or FTD have released any new That’s The Way It Is rehearsal material. Time sure does fly.

* * *

Below is the track listing for Stage Rehearsal, which will add to the That’s The Way It Is legacy.

August 10, 1970
01 You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me
02 I Just Can’t Help Believin’
03 Something
04 Sweet Caroline
05 Polk Salad Annie
06 You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’
07 I’ve Lost You
08 Bridge Over Troubled Water
09 Patch It Up
10 Can’t Help Falling In Love
11 You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me
12 You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’
Bonus Tracks
13 Any Day Now (August 2, 1972)
14 True Love Travels On A Gravel Road (August 3, 1972)
15 The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (August 3, 1972)
16 Fever (August 3, 1972)
17 Portrait Of My Love (August 3, 1972)
18 I’m Leavin’ It All Up To You (January 25, 1973)

* * *

Primary Research Sources