REVIEW: Elvis Now CD Set (2010 FTD Edition)

Elvis Now CD set (Follow That Dream Records, 2010)

Elvis Now: What’s in a name?

Apparently, we Elvis fans are not supposed to like Elvis Now. Even the new liner notes provided by Follow That Dream Records in this Classic Albums version of the release seem on the verge of being apologetic.

“With three older recordings, and precious few songs in the folk genre, neither the title of the album nor the original intent is of any importance anymore it seems,” the notes state in an entry about the album’s release in February 1972.

I think some people, including the unnamed author of FTD’s liner notes, get too hung up on the title. Three of the four Elvis releases in the seven months leading up to Elvis Now contained much older recordings, some dating all the way back to the 1950s.

Due to similar cover art featuring Elvis in concert in the early 1970s, the “Now” in Elvis Now simply distinguishes the album from the likes of C’Mon Everybody and I Got Lucky as containing current, post-Comeback Special material.

Additionally, “Elvis Now” was one of the marketing slogans used during his Vegas engagements. To complain about one song out of ten being three years old, and two others being nearly two years old, is to miss the point.

Compared to some of his other efforts at the time, Elvis Now is certainly a mellow album. The closest thing to a rocker is probably the gospel-infused “Put Your Hand In The Hand,” and that is a stretch.

In 1970, Elvis pointed out that he hated to be labeled a “strictly country” singer. The corollary to this is that he also should not be labeled as “strictly rock ‘n’ roll,” “strictly gospel,” or “strictly rhythm & blues.”

Elvis resisted such labels right from the start. “I don’t sound like nobody,” a much younger Elvis told Marion Keisker at the Memphis Recording Service in 1953.

You see, that is the real secret to the appeal of Elvis’ body of work as an artist. Those who judge his career based solely on various rock ‘n’ roll milestones do Elvis a disservice by overlooking his multi-faceted approach to music.

While rock ‘n’ roll mostly takes a back seat in Elvis Now, the album offers slices of some of the other kinds of music that he enjoyed creating. If you are willing to listen in new ways, the album can even be interpreted to include an emotional and thematic journey.

“I don’t want to be alone”

In “Sylvia,” love has been lost – although the hero-singer is in denial. (Side note: Elvis sings, “…here I am on the phone, wondering when she will call.” Uh, Elvis, maybe Sylvia was trying to call you all along but could not get through because you were on the phone!)

Bruce Springsteen once said that Elvis took away people’s loneliness, yet ended up so alone. You can feel this loneliness in the compelling “Help Me Make It Through The Night,” where the hero-singer begs to a lost love – maybe Sylvia, maybe someone before her – to remain by his side just one more night.

With apologies to Kris Kristofferson, had Elvis been a writer, “Help Me Make It Through The Night” sure sounds like a song he might have written to fight some of his own demons.

Though not as strong of a composition, “Until It’s Time For You To Go” shows the hero-singer later that night still wanting to hold on to this doomed romance for as long as possible. “I’m not a king, I’m just a man,” he intones, pleading for understanding.

In “We Can Make The Morning,” the hero-singer continues to fight the darkness, singing, “It’s a long, long lonely night, we can make the morning if we try.” This stunning performance is an often-overlooked gem.

When the couple finally makes it to a new day, “Early Morning Rain,” the album’s best song, reveals that it is not as bright as the hero-singer expected. It is the same as the day before, and he is still down. “I’m stuck here on the ground,” he sings, for as it always does, night will come again – and with it the loneliness.

“Take a sad song and make it better”

Finding no consolation with his lost love, the hero-singer now seeks another cure to his loneliness in “Put Your Hand In The Hand” and “Miracle Of The Rosary.” He places faith in God, seeking the same comfort in music as he sought in life.

Faith leads to hope in “Hey Jude” and the tides begin to change. Much underrated, Elvis recorded this entertaining jam only months after the original release of the Beatles classic. Yes, Elvis mixes up some of the lyrics, but that is all part of the fun. This is another highlight of the album.

The hero-singer realizes his hope by falling in love yet again in “Fools Rush In,” the weakest song here. The mood is vibrant yet cautionary: “When we met, I felt my life begin, so open up your heart and let this fool rush in.”

He has fallen for someone new, but we are left to wonder if she returns this love. Otherwise, this new interest may go the way of Sylvia and lead to yet another long, lonely night.

Were it not for the strength of the other songs on Elvis Country, “I Was Born About Ten Thousand Years Ago” could very well have ruined that album due to the senseless decision to edit it in between each tune. On Elvis Now, the complete song works much better – tying everything up.

“I Was Born About Ten Thousand Years Ago” is a song about mankind and the human experience. In the end, the human experience is what Elvis Now is about, too: loneliness, despair, faith, hope, and love. An exciting album? No. A worthwhile album? Very much so.

Outtakes

Unfortunately, there are not a lot of revelations this time around with the outtakes. The best of the outtakes are takes 7 and 15 of “Help Me Make It Through The Night” (tracks 9 and 17, respectively, on disc 2). Outtakes of “Fools Rush In” prove as mundane as the master version. The outtakes of “Early Morning Rain” are disappointing in their mediocrity – considering the brilliance of the master take.

Bonus Songs

While it’s always great to hear the top-notch songs “I’m Leavin’,” “It’s Only Love,” and “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” the real stand-out among the bonus songs is the unedited master of the “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” jam, clocking in at over nine minutes.

You are there as Elvis and the band take this Bob Dylan song through its paces. Like “Hey Jude,” he does not know all of the words – and, again, that is not the point here. This is Elvis making music with a joy that is noticeably absent from many of the other tracks on this release.

Though the same words are repeated over and over, the nine minutes goes by before you know it. I love this kind of thing, so I must have listened to it four or five times in a row. The edited version of this song (shortened to under three minutes) first appeared on 1973’s Elvis (“Fool”) album, so my hope is that the full-length version is presented on Elvis Now because the FTD upgrade of the Elvis album will have too many other outtakes to accommodate it.

Also of note are impromptu versions of the Beatles’ “Lady Madonna” and Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released,” both of which were first released on Walk A Mile In My Shoes. “Lady Madonna” is slightly longer here.

Final verdict

Perhaps the best part of FTD’s Elvis Now is that every song sounds better than it ever has before. If you love Elvis in the 1969 – 1971 era represented by this album and care about audio quality, you will be thrilled with these sound upgrades – particularly on the master takes. Kudos to FTD for much improvement in this area over the years.

Elvis Now is a different kind of listening experience than that of From Elvis In Memphis or That’s The Way It Is. While those two albums are monumental, their greatness should not take away from the understated achievement that Elvis Now represents.

REVIEW: From Elvis In Memphis CD Set (2009 Legacy Edition)

From Elvis In Memphis CD set (Sony Legacy, 2009)

Elvis takes it home

“Take it home, son, take it home,” Elvis proclaims near the end of his 1968 Comeback Special. Just a few weeks after the special aired, Elvis did just that. He had not formally recorded in his adopted hometown of Memphis since his last session for Sun in 1955.

By January 1969, the musical landscape had changed, the entire world had changed, and even Elvis had changed. The 20-year-old kid who last recorded in Memphis as he was on the verge of becoming an unrivaled superstar was now a 34-year-old husband and father looking to continue pounding his way out of a creative slump.

Was the success of the ’68 Special a fluke, or was Elvis truly back on the track? His January and February 1969 sessions at the American Sound Studio in Memphis would help answer that question.

Outside of the hit singles, I first heard most of these songs when my brother gave me The Memphis Record double LP set as a Christmas gift back in 1988. It collects 23 of the best tracks from the sessions, including all of the songs from the original From Elvis In Memphis album.

As an Elvis fan, The Memphis Record changed my life. As I said, I was already familiar with “Suspicious Minds,” “In The Ghetto,” and the other hits, but I remember being blown away right off the bat by “Stranger In My Own Home Town,” “Power Of My Love,” “Any Day Now,” and “After Loving You,” to name just a few.

How had I not heard these songs before? Why wasn’t the radio playing these constantly? Unlike most of the kids my age back then and their favorite music fads, I knew at that moment I was going to be an Elvis fan for the rest of my life.

As I typed those words, I have just realized that I am now 34-years-old, like Elvis during these Memphis sessions. Since I first played The Memphis Record back in 1988, the musical landscape has changed, the entire world has changed, and I have changed. I hear the words to some of these songs differently than I did as a 13-year-old. Yet, here I am, still listening to Elvis. Despite all the change, Elvis is still here.

In the early 1990s, I switched over to the CD format and eventually picked up The Memphis Record on CD and complimented it with Back In Memphis to get some of the remaining songs from the session—which I found I didn’t like as much. Even the Back In Memphis songs I was familiar with sounded “muffled” to me.

In 1993, RCA treated the Elvis world to From Nashville To Memphis: The Complete 60s Masters I, a five-disc set that included all of his non-movie and non-gospel studio master recordings from the 1960s, including the complete 1969 Memphis sessions. While this was probably the most authentic sound to date at the time (I only found out later that the mixes on The Memphis Record were slightly altered to sound more contemporary), I remember being just a touch disappointed by the 1969 Memphis sound again for some of the tracks.

For the thirtieth anniversary of the Memphis sessions, RCA released Suspicious Minds: The 1969 Memphis Anthology in 1999. The sound was improved over 1994, but still muffled and lacking to me at times. I figured that it was the best we were ever going to have, though, and I was content with it.

When I first heard about the Legacy Edition of From Elvis In Memphis, now upgraded to include Back In Memphis and all of the other songs from the sessions, I was not planning to buy it. As much as I loved them, I had bought these songs countless times over. Then, a new press release announced that From Elvis In Memphis—Legacy Edition was going to include the original mono versions of all of the singles.

There, Sony/RCA had hooked me. At first, I planned only to purchase the ten individual mono singles online as legal downloads. However, I realized that just for three or four dollars more, I could buy the entire set of 36 songs by just purchasing the CD in a store (buying Elvis music in an actual store: “it’s been a long time, baby”). I probably wouldn’t need all of those other songs, but at least the packaging looked nice.

I played the mono singles first on Disc 2, and once I heard the quality of their sound, I could hardly wait to go back to Disc 1 and play From Elvis In Memphis proper. I don’t know what Sony/RCA did differently this time, but they finally got rid of that sort of muffled sound some of the Memphis tracks had before. Crystal clear. I’m loving this release! What a great surprise!

Yet, I’m sure this won’t be the last time I buy these songs. Sony’s Follow That Dream Elvis collectors label will undoubtedly release both From Elvis In Memphis and Back In Memphis as part of their Classic Album series in the coming years. The whole world will probably have changed by then, but I’ll still be listening to Elvis.

Songs: 10 (out of 10)

Audio & Mix Quality: 10

Liner Notes: 5

Cover Art: 10

Packaging: 10

Overall Experience: 10

Elvis conquers Vegas: 40 years since the return of the King [The Film Frontier blog]

Forty years ago tonight, only eleven days after astronaut Neil Armstrong took his famous “one small step” on the moon, Elvis Presley took his own giant leap.

On that July 31st night in 1969, the singer stepped onto the stage of the International Hotel in Las Vegas and began proving once and for all that he was the greatest and most dynamic performer the world will ever know.

His “comeback” after years of making movies had actually started the year before, with his highly rated and critically acclaimed ELVIS TV special. He rode the tide of that success into his first Memphis recording sessions in nearly 15 years, resulting in smash hits “Suspicious Minds,” “In The Ghetto,” and “Don’t Cry, Daddy.”

Elvis was on top again, and his Vegas engagement was another crown jewel. With two shows a night, seven days a week, for four weeks, the concerts represented his first live appearances in nearly nine years, outside of four studio audience shows for his TV special.

RCA started recording the Vegas shows on August 21, capturing eleven complete concerts in all that summer. Some of the best tracks were selected for an album, Elvis In Person. More recently, several of the shows have been released in full:

  • August 21 Midnight Show on 2007’s Elvis: Viva Las Vegas (Limited Edition) Disc 2
  • August 22 Dinner Show on 2008’s Elvis In Person (FTD Edition) Disc 2
  • August 23 MS on 2003’s Elvis At The International
  • August 24 DS on 2001’s Live In Las Vegas Disc 1
  • August 26 MS on 2005’s All Shook Up

These recordings are some of Elvis’ best available concerts. To commemorate the fortieth anniversary of this engagement, author Ken Sharp (Writing for the King) next month is releasing ELVIS: Vegas ’69, a 200-page hardcover book examining the concert series in text and photos.

REVIEW: Elvis In Person at the International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada CD Set (2008 FTD Edition)

Elvis In Person At The International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada CD (Follow That Dream Records, 2008)

“I’ve appeared dead before, but this is my first live one.”

By the time RCA Records and producer Felton Jarvis arrived to start recording some of his shows on August 21, 1969, Elvis Presley had already conquered Las Vegas. As another piece of his comeback that started with the 1968 ELVIS television special and continued with his first Memphis recordings since the mid-1950s, Elvis had been performing to sold-out crowds in the newly-opened International Hotel’s main showroom since July 31.

With a grueling two-shows-a-night, seven-days-a-week, schedule, Elvis had performed over 40 triumphant concerts in just three weeks. He was starting the last week of an engagement that, outside of four shows for small studio audiences during his TV special, represented his first live concerts in nearly nine years.

Starting with the August 21 Midnight Show and running through the August 26 Midnight Show, RCA recorded eleven complete concerts. They also made test recordings during a rehearsal and the Dinner Show on August 21. From all of this material, RCA edited together twelve recordings from the August 24 & 25 Midnight Shows and the August 25 & 26 Dinner Shows to create Record 1 of that November’s From Memphis To Vegas/From Vegas To Memphis release, which was Elvis’ first double album. Record 2 consisted of additional material from his Memphis sessions, a follow-up of sorts to June’s From Elvis In Memphis album.

A year later, RCA re-released Record 1 by itself, as Elvis In Person At The International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada. Record 2 also earned a solo release, as Back In Memphis.

This 2008 2-CD edition of Elvis In Person is part of Follow That Dream Records’ Classic Albums series. Since the original Elvis In Person album was a re-release, you could say this FTD edition is actually a re-release of a re-release. However, if any re-release deserves the label “classic,” it is Elvis In Person.

Elvis In Person was actually the second Elvis record I ever owned. The first was Return of the Rocker, which I won on a radio call-in contest. My older sister gave Elvis In Person to me for my twelfth birthday in 1987. I loved this album so much that I later bought a cassette tape version that, incidentally, had the songs in a different sequence than the original album and a 1992 CD version. Just about the only versions I haven’t owned of this album are the 8-track version and the MP3 version. Though I rarely play the vinyl record she gave me anymore, I still associate this album, even on CD, with my sister. I’m sure this 2008 FTD version won’t be the last time I buy Elvis In Person, either. It’s just that kind of album.

Disc 1

The Original Album

Considering the space restrictions of the 1969 double album, the twelve tracks that make up the original album are well-chosen. Elvis’ between-song banter is also nicely edited to achieve an effective concert package. The only thing I would do differently would be to replace the August 26 Dinner Show version of “Suspicious Minds” with the August 26 Midnight Show version, which can be heard on FTD’s All Shook Up and may well be the best-ever performance of the song.

The sound quality of the original Elvis In Person tracks on this FTD release is about the same as on the main label’s 1992 CD edition. If you are hoping for a sound and mix upgrade along the lines of FTD’s Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis, you will be disappointed.

The CD tracks have been divided differently on this FTD version, though. Elvis’ spoken introductions to most songs now appear at the end of the previous track, rather than at the beginning of the relevant track. Oddly, FTD does not follow this convention on Disc 2, however, where most of the spoken introductions are at the beginning of the relevant track rather than at the end of the previous track. Attention to detail has never been FTD’s strong point, though. They rely instead on the power of the underlying Elvis content.

Bonus Songs & Rare Performances

Disc 1 is rounded out by seven other previously-released tracks from the 1969 concerts. Two first appeared on the misleadingly named On Stage – February, 1970 album. The others first appeared on 1991’s Collectors Gold, though the sound quality here is superior.

Unfortunately, these seven tracks are poorly edited together to form a mini-concert. It would have been cleaner to simply fade up and down each track during the applause and treat them separately, especially given the little care that was taken here to edit these songs together.

Disc 2

The Complete August 22, 1969, Dinner Show

Given that the original Elvis In Person album was compiled from the August 24 & 25 Midnight Shows and the August 25 & 26 Dinner Shows, one might logically expect Disc 2 of this release to feature the complete version of one of these source concerts with upgraded sound and mixing. Instead, FTD delivers up the August 22 Dinner Show, for which all tracks but two are previously unreleased.

While it’s always nice to have a new 1969 show, the relevance of this show to the Elvis In Person album is not entirely clear. It contributed in no way to the original album. Fortunately, FTD did not follow this rather bizarre methodology on 2004’s Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis, one of the first Classic Albums releases. If they had, Disc 1 would have been the 1994 CD release of the edited concert with original sound and Disc 2 would have been some other random but unreleased 1974 concert. Instead, they gave us the complete version of the same Memphis show with improved sound and mix, and did it with a single disc. They did not bother including the edited album and original mix, since they were aware back then that those who collect FTD CDs would already have this material.

With all that being said, the August 22 Dinner Show is fine. It is pretty much a standard 1969 show, similar to two or three of the other full-length releases that preceded it. Outside of a questionable mixing choice on a track or two, most of the sound is fantastic.

Like the other concerts in this series, Elvis tends to ramble on a lot between songs. The distracted nature of many of his quirky comments would be a real detriment to these concerts if the songs he eventually gets around to singing just weren’t so damned incredible.

When it comes to concerts, I definitely prefer a talkative, interactive Elvis (think the August 1970 That’s The Way It Is concert series) versus a quiet, distant one (think the January 1973 Aloha From Hawaii concert), but sometimes his talking on these 1969 shows is too much even for me. As I said, the fantastic performances more than make up for it, though.

Even now, it is hard to believe that a mere eight years after these dynamic shows, the Elvis world would be in mourning and this wonderful entertainer would be forever gone.

* * *

“Blue Suede Shoes”

  • Disc 1, Track 01, Live Master—8/25/1969 Midnight Show (MS) [2:05]: With trumpets blaring, the show begins with Elvis’ rockin’ take of this Carl Perkins classic. This is Elvis’ best live version of this song from the 1969-1977 era.
  • Disc 2, Track 01, Live—8/22/1969 Dinner Show (DS) [2:26]: There’s a bit of audio trickery going on, either in this release or Disc 2 of the 2007 Elvis: Viva Las Vegas release. Though the tracks are not completely identical, at least some of the audio from what was supposedly the August 21 Midnight Show appears on this supposedly August 22 Dinner Show track, or vice-versa. Presumably, the “Blue Suede Shoes” audio was damaged or missing for one show or the other. I am not expert enough to figure out to which show this song really belongs, and since Elvis isn’t kind enough to mention the date and time of the show he is performing during the song, I can’t tell you for sure. What I can say is that this is another great version of “Blue Suede Shoes,” no matter when it was recorded.

“Johnny B. Goode”

  • Disc 1, Track 02, Live Master—8/24/1969 MS [2:19]: Up next on the original Elvis In Person album is another rocker, this one originally by Chuck Berry. Again, Elvis’ best version. The 1972 version on Elvis On Tour: The Rehearsals is nearly as good, though.

“All Shook Up”

  • Disc 1, Track 03, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [2:07]: By 1972, this song had become a throw-away, but in 1969 Elvis still rocked his 1957 hit. At the end of this track, Elvis notes that “This is my first live appearance in nine years,” which led me to wrongly believe as a kid that Elvis In Person was a recording of his opening night in Vegas. Now we know that Elvis said a variation of this phrase in every 1969 concert released so far. There is even a famously mis-titled bootleg floating around out there due to this line, so I don’t feel so bad.
  • Disc 2, Track 03, Live—8/22/1969 DS [3:18]: Another great version, nearly the same as the Elvis In Person master from a few nights later except that overall sound quality is better on this 2008-mastered track.

“Are You Lonesome Tonight”

  • Disc 1, Track 04, Live Master—8/24/1969 MS [3:15]: As a kid, I used to float the balance on my stereo to the left to eliminate the soaring female vocal in the background on this track. As an adult, I appreciate the singer’s near-operatic approach and now consider this a beautiful arrangement. The end of this track contains part of Elvis’ introduction to “Hound Dog” from the August 24 Dinner Show, released in full on Live In Las Vegas, though the “Hound Dog” that follows on the next track here is actually from the August 25 Midnight Show. Those clever RCA people.
  • Disc 2, Track 13, Live—8/22/1969 DS [2:42]: “Where’re you goin’?” asks Elvis to someone early on in this song, ruining an otherwise decent version. The best “serious” version is from the August 24 Dinner Show, released on Live In Las Vegas. The “laughing” version from the August 26 Midnight Show trumps all others, though. I wonder if there was ever any consideration of using that one on Elvis In Person? Probably not.

“Hound Dog”

  • Disc 1, Track 05, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [1:53]: For the 1969-1977 phase of his career, this is the definitive live version of “Hound Dog.” Though this would also eventually become a throwaway, Elvis really kicks the song into high gear here. My all-time favorite “Hound Dog” released so far, though, is his June 5, 1956, live version from The Milton Berle Show, available on A Golden Celebration.
  • Disc 2, Track 07, Live—8/22/1969 DS [4:00]: Elvis rambles on for over two minutes to introduce his “message song” for the night. At least he doesn’t do the frog and lily pad bit this time. There is also some sad irony here, as Elvis correctly notes, “Man, I tell you, if this comes out on record, I’m dead, I tell you for sure, boy.” Sound quality on “Hound Dog” is again better than on the Elvis In Person track, but Elvis’ performance is not quite as good.

“I Can’t Stop Loving You”

  • Disc 1, Track 06, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [3:19]: This is a fine version of “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” though I prefer the August 24 Dinner Show. He performed this one better in 1970, anyway.

“My Babe”

  • Disc 1, Track 07, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [2:05]: Elvis really rocks this Willie Dixon blues classic. This is definitely one of the highlights of this album. This is easily the best of the three versions released thus far.

“Mystery Train/Tiger Man”

  • Disc 1, Track 08, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [3:43]: At the beginning of this track, FTD mixes Elvis’ introduction to “Mystery Train” from Side 2 of the original album over the “My Babe” applause fade out that ended Side 1. This makes for a sloppy transition. Even the 1992 CD release handled it better than this. Anyway, forget all of that, though. This is a fantastic version of the “Mystery Train” and “Tiger Man” medley that keeps the rocking spirit of this album moving. I prefer the excitement of the 1969 and 1970 live versions of “Tiger Man” over the version performed for the 1968 TV special.
  • Disc 2, Track 09, Live—8/22/1969 DS [4:23]: Elvis and the band are just not quite as hot here as on the superior Elvis In Person and August 22 Midnight Show (Collectors Gold) versions. This is a nice mix, though, emphasizing both the percussion and guitar, while other mixes of this medley tend to emphasize one or the other.

“Words”

  • Disc 1, Track 09, Live Master—8/25/1969 MS [2:45]: Elvis slows things down a bit with this beautiful cover of the 1968 hit by the Bee Gees. I prefer his August 1970 versions, but this is probably the best 1969 version.

“In The Ghetto”

  • Disc 1, Track 10, Live Master—8/25/1969 DS [2:55]: Next up, Elvis performs a great version of his then-current hit. At the February 1970 Vegas engagement, Elvis appropriately preceded “In The Ghetto” with Joe South’s “Walk A Mile In My Shoes” in a medley, though RCA edited “In The Ghetto” out of the original On Stage album.
  • Disc 2, Track 16, Live—8/22/1969 DS [2:51]: Elvis’ vocals on this track sound a bit muffled at times. Listen out for Jerry Scheff’s impressive bass work on this version, though.

“Suspicious Minds”

  • Disc 1, Track 11, Live Master—8/26/1969 DS [7:45]: As the show nears its end, Elvis next introduces his new single, “Suspicious Minds.” I remember being fascinated by the length of this live version as a kid. Most Elvis songs I had been exposed to up until that point were about two minutes long, so this felt like four songs in one to me. Though this version is okay, it is one of the weaker ones from this engagement. As noted above, I prefer the August 26 Midnight Show version. Perhaps RCA did not want a superior live version to overshadow the single, which became his biggest seller in years.
  • Disc 2, Track 17, Live—8/22/1969 DS [7:17]: This is one of many tracks that makes you wish these 1969 shows were professionally filmed. It must have been something to see. A great version, Elvis’ performance, the sound quality, and the mix are all top-notch. I love this song. I just hope the neighbors don’t mind hearing it, too.

“Can’t Help Falling In Love”

  • Disc 1, Track 12, Live Master—8/26/1969 DS [2:12]: Elvis closes out the show with a beautiful rendition of his 1961 hit, the best released thus far from 1969-1977.
  • Disc 2, Track 19, Live—8/22/1969 DS [2:11]: An unexceptional version. Elvis sounds tired out from “Suspicious Minds” and “What’d I Say.”

Other Songs (not on original album)

  • Disc 1, Track 13, “Runaway” (Live Master–8/25/1969 DS) [2:32]: Despite its recording date, this fantastic version of the 1961 Del Shannon hit was first released on On Stage – February 1970. My favorite “Runaway” version, though, is from the August 21 Midnight Show, released on Disc 2 of 2007’s Elvis: Viva Las Vegas.
  • Disc 1, Track 14, “Yesterday” (Live Master–8/25/1969 DS) [2:29]: As with “Runaway,” this cover of the 1965 Beatles song was first released on On Stage. In his 1969 performances of “Yesterday,” Elvis concluded the song with the repetitious ending of “Hey Jude.” RCA edited this out of the original On Stage version, though restored it for a 1999 re-release of that album. Oddly, this FTD track is the edited version without “Hey Jude.” I can’t say I miss it too much, though. This is one of the only cases where that kind of tampering actually results in a stronger track. I do like Elvis’ 1969 studio version of “Hey Jude,” though, as released on Elvis Now.
  • Disc 1, Track 15, “This Is The Story” (Live Master–8/26/1969 MS) [2:55]: This live version of “This Is The Story” was first released on 1991’s Collectors Gold, as were the next four tracks. It is a slow song that at first sounds like it has potential, but really doesn’t go anywhere. Elvis improves this live version a bit by clowning around. At least it’s better than the 1969 studio version, released on Back In Memphis. Sound quality is better here than 1991, about the same as on FTD’s All Shook Up release.
  • Disc 1, Track 16, “Inherit The Wind” (Live Master–8/26/1969 DS) [3:41]: There is a previously unreleased, longer spoken portion prior to the song, assuming it’s not editing trickery, and sound quality is much better here than 1991. It’s too bad Elvis did not keep this song in the show. With a little more tweaking, it could have been a great number. The 1969 studio version of this Eddie Rabbitt-penned song first appeared on Back In Memphis as well. Both the live and studio versions are not to be missed.
  • Disc 1, Track 17, “Rubberneckin'” (Live Master–8/26/1969 MS) [3:53]: The long false start of this song was first released on FTD’s All Shook Up, and sound quality here is about the same – an improvement over 1991. Again, with some tweaks, this could have made a fantastic permanent addition to the show. The studio version of “Rubberneckin'” actually appeared in Elvis’ 1969 film Change of Habit, his last movie as an actor.
  • Disc 1, Track 18, “Reconsider Baby” (Live Master–8/23/1969 MS) [3:17]: Though this is Elvis’ best live version of “Reconsider Baby” released so far, it is not in the same league as his studio performance of this Lowell Fulson blues song on 1960’s Elvis Is Back, one of the best recordings of his career.
  • Disc 1, Track 19, “Funny How Time Slips Away” (Live Master–8/25/1969 DS) [2:38]: This live version of “Funny How Time Slips Away” actually precedes Elvis’ June 1970 studio version of the Willie Nelson song. Though the Elvis Country studio version is superior, the 1969 live versions are much better than live versions from the 1970s released thus far.
  • Disc 2, Track 02, “I Got A Woman” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:54]: For many of his 1969-1977 shows, “I Got A Woman” was the standard second song. Elvis really rocked the 1969 and 1970 versions of this song, and this track is no exception.
  • Disc 2, Track 04, “Love Me Tender” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:40]: This is one of those versions of “Love Me Tender” where Elvis spends some of the time kissing women in the audience. The best version from this engagement is probably the August 23 Midnight Show, released on FTD’s Elvis At The International.
  • Disc 2, Track 05, “Jailhouse Rock/Don’t Be Cruel” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [3:21]: In my opinion, Elvis’ 1969-1977 performances of “Jailhouse Rock” cannot compare with his 1957 original and 1968 TV special versions. For whatever reason, despite Elvis excelling on some of the other rockers, this one did not work as well in 1969. On this version, Elvis falls a bit behind and seems unsure of some of the lyrics. This medley also contains one of the weaker 1969 versions of “Don’t Be Cruel.” The best version of this medley is the August 24 Dinner Show on Live In Las Vegas.
  • Disc 2, Track 06, “Heartbreak Hotel” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:37]: In 1969, Elvis introduced a slower, bluesier version of “Heartbreak Hotel,” which he continued to use in various live shows through 1977. I must admit, I much prefer the rocking versions from the ’68 special. This particular track is again one of the weaker 1969 versions released to date. The best 1969-1977 version of this song can also be found on the August 24 Dinner Show.
  • Disc 2, Track 08, “Memories” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:50]: An okay version, notable mostly for Elvis recognizing Gladys Tipler in the audience, who tells him that it’s her birthday. “I just blew my mind, man,” says Elvis when jumping back into the song. Mrs. Tipler co-owned Crown Electric, for whom Elvis was a truck driver before gaining fame. “Happy birthday, Miss Tippler,” he states after the song ends.
  • Disc 2, Track 10, Monologue (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [9:09]: After hearing a few of them, you might say that these monologues are interchangeable between the 1969 shows. The main label apparently takes that literally. That’s right, we now have more evidence of audio trickery. This monologue track is identical to one already released on the supposed August 21 Midnight Show, Disc 2 of 2007’s Elvis: Viva Las Vegas. This time, though, we can verify that it actually belongs with the August 22 Dinner Show, as Elvis mentions the Tiplers being in the audience and that it is Gladys Tipler’s birthday. It doesn’t bother me at all that they would splice shows together to create Disc 2 of Elvis: Viva Las Vegas. What does bother me is that they try to pass it off as the August 21 Midnight Show. How many other misplaced tracks are also thrown into that release? Why not just be up front about the source show for each song? Anyway, if you are not familiar with these ten-minute long monologues, Elvis tells a tongue-in-cheek version of the story of his career thus far. In typical Elvis fashion, he does not let facts get in the way of a good story. If he didn’t ramble and sound distracted so much, these might be more interesting. In certain bits, Elvis does demonstrate his gift for comedic timing, at least. My favorite is actually the “Memphis!” version first released on Having Fun With Elvis On Stage.
  • Disc 2, Track 11, ‘“Baby, What You Want Me To Do” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [3:15]: After the ten minute monologue, Elvis treats the audience to “Baby, What You Want Me To Do,” the Jimmy Reed blues song that he had reverted to so many times while filming his 1968 special. The song worked much better in the raw, stripped-down form as recorded for the special than it does in the 1969 arrangement. The best 1969 version is on the August 26 Midnight Show (All Shook Up).
  • Disc 2, Track 12, “Runaway” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:59]: Elvis teases the audience with a tiny snippet of “Surrender” before tearing into “Runaway.” This would be a decent version if it wasn’t for the mix. A male background vocalist is too loud, drowning out Elvis in a number of spots. Because of that, this version quickly becomes tiring.
  • Disc 2, Track 14, “Yesterday/Hey Jude” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [4:37]: “Suddenly, I’m not half the stud-” Elvis sings early on and then pauses to laugh at his joke. The result is a rather typical, distracted-sounding version of “Yesterday.” The “Hey Jude” ending doesn’t help matters, either. Stick with the On Stage version for “Yesterday” (found on Disc 1 of this release).
  • Disc 2, Track 15, Introductions (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [2:59]: I’m not going to get into the business of reviewing Elvis’ band introductions. And if you have a problem with that, Tutt Scheff.
  • Disc 2, Track 18, “What’d I Say” (Live–8/22/1969 DS) [4:11]: Elvis’ second song of the night was a Ray Charles classic, “I Got A Woman,” so it is appropriate that Elvis bookends the show with “What’d I Say,” another Ray Charles classic as the second-to-last song. Actually, this tune from Viva Las Vegas was reportedly the “fake” last song before Elvis returned to sing the real last song, Blue Hawaii‘s “Can’t Help Falling In Love” as sort of an encore. This is one of the weaker 1969 versions of “What’d I Say.” All of the 1969 versions suffer from being too fast, though. His 1963 studio version and 1970 rehearsal, the latter of which is found on Platinum: A Life In Music, are both much better.

* * *

As is standard for the Classic Album series, the front cover art duplicates the original Elvis In Person re-release. I was hoping FTD might use the 1969 variation of this cover, with the “From Memphis To Vegas” title, rather than going with the 1970 version. Then, it would have made a great companion with a future Back In Memphis Classic Album release with the “From Vegas To Memphis” 1969 cover variation.

FTD did a great job on the grayscale of the underlying Elvis photo this time around, as it is not as washed out as it appears on other versions of this release. I am not sure why RCA in 1969 reverted to using black & white photos of Elvis for album covers. Compare the vibrant color photo on From Elvis In Memphis to the black & white one on Elvis In Person, for instance. Though it is a great photo, it would have been even better in full color.

That wasn’t the only odd choice in 1969, either. Though this album contains 1969 Vegas performances, the cover photo is actually from Elvis’ 1968 TV special. For some reason, a 1969 live in Las Vegas photo was used on the companion Record 2: Back In Memphis album instead – which contained only Memphis studio cuts. I guess there is just no figuring out the logic of record companies, then or now.

Remember when I said that FTD’s strong point was not attention to detail? The back cover art of this release is new. It features a photo of the International Hotel’s marquee from August 1970, a full year after these concerts. Oops.

On the inside of this tri-fold, 45 RPM single-sized packaging is a reproduction of the original back cover art, featuring three black & white photos of Elvis on stage in 1969. It’s probably not, but I always like to imagine that the bottom right photo of Elvis laughing while playing the electric guitar was taken during the “Are You Laughing Tonight?” performance at the August 26 Midnight Show, released on All Shook Up, among other releases.

I have complained in a couple of recent FTD reviews that the CD prongs are misaligned against the underlying images in the packaging. I am happy to report no alignment issues this time.

The enclosed booklet includes over two dozen familiar photos of Elvis from around this period. It also contains the full-track listing and performance dates for most of the songs on the two CDs. “Behind the Scenes” this time around features a partial timeline of the events surrounding the live performances and recordings, as well as the history of some of the more recent releases of this material. Of interest is that the August 21 performance released on the 2-CD version of 2007’s Elvis: Viva Las Vegas is noted as the Midnight Show—which, as I have mentioned in a couple of spots above, may not really end an ongoing debate as to exactly which show or shows that disc contains.

That is it as far as liner notes, though. A complete set list for every recorded concert and each track’s first record/CD release, if applicable, would have been nice—similar to the presentation in FTD’s The Way It Was book for the That’s The Way It Is concerts. At least toss some vintage reviews in there. As it is, the booklet feels hastily assembled and lacking. Perhaps twelve FTD releases a year is about eight too many?

The Final Verdict

Unfortunately, this 2-CD set from FTD is not the “definitive” or “ultimate” Elvis In Person release that it could have been. Of the five complete concerts released thus far from the 1969 shows, none of them contains songs that were used on the original Elvis In Person album. None of the true Elvis In Person concerts have been released as full concerts.

This material is strong enough for a mainstream boxed-set similar to the four-CD ELVIS: The Complete ’68 Comeback Special. Disc 1 could be the complete August 24 Midnight Show, Disc 2 the complete August 25 Dinner Show, Disc 3 the complete August 25 Midnight Show, and Disc 4 the complete August 26 Dinner Show. Then, you would have a definitive, ultimate version of this album.

The bottom line for FTD’s Elvis In Person 2-CD set is that it manages, just barely, to be at least essential.

If, like me, you want to collect all of the material from the 1969 Las Vegas engagement, the first disc is basically a backup copy of tracks you already own, while the second disc is the must-have portion. Still not a bad deal, as the price is the same as buying a single-disc FTD release anyway.

If, on the other hand, you are an Elvis fan who has not been exposed to this material very much before, then you are in for a real treat. Between the two discs on this set, you will have at least one version of every song released from this engagement thus far.

Sit back, crank it up, and enjoy!

Songs: 10 (out of 10)

Audio Quality: 8

Liner Notes: 5

Cover Art: 8

Packaging: 9

Overall Experience: 9

Review: ELVIS IN PERSON CD [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 18 when I wrote this review back in 1993 for The Elvis Beat #4, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Elvis In Person (RCA), recorded by Elvis Presley, produced by Felton Jarvis. Recorded August 22-26, 1969, International Hotel (Las Vegas). Released: November 1970. Re-released: 1992 (CD).

Elvis was at his musical best in the years 1968 and 1969, a period encompassing the ELVIS televions special, the Memphis sessions, and his triumphant return to live performances. The Elvis In Person CD, arguably his best album, captures the Summer 1969 Las Vegas concet engagement that brought him back before an audience after years of movies.

The contents of Elvis In Person had previously been released as Record One of the two-record set From Memphis To Vegas/From Vegas To Memphis in late 1969.

He performs every song on this album with the skill of a true master, from rockers like “Johnny B. Goode” to beautiful ballads like “Words.” With only one or two exceptions, each song on Elvis In Person is the greatest live rendition ever released by him. Never before and never again was Elvis so unbelievably awesome as he was in 1968 and 1969.

Although his subsequent live albums certainly deserve merit, none would exceed the magic of this album. After so many years of mediocre movie soundtrack albums, Elvis was finally back.

Songs:

  1. “Blue Suede Shoes”
  2. “Johnny B. Goode”
  3. “All Shook Up”
  4. “Are You Lonesome Tonight”
  5. “Hound Dog”
  6. “I Can’t Stop Loving You”
  7. “My Babe”
  8. “Mystery Train/Tiger Man”
  9. “Words”
  10. “In The Ghetto”
  11. “Suspicious Minds”
  12. “Can’t Help Falling In Love”

Rating: 10 out of 10

Review: BACK IN MEMPHIS CD [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 18 when I wrote this review back in 1993 for The Elvis Beat #4, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Back In Memphis (RCA), recorded by Elvis Presley, produced by Felton Jarvis and Chips Moman. Recorded January 13-23 and February 17-21, 1969, American Sound Studios (Memphis). Released: November 1970. Re-released: 1992 (CD).

Back In Memphis was the second album released from Elvis’ early 1969 Memphis sessions that produced some of his best studio work. The contents of Back In Memphis had been previously released in November 1969 as Record Two of the double album From Memphis To Vegas/From Vegas To Memphis.

As was typical of his entire career, Elvis performs a variety of musical styles on this album, and as usual, pulls it off with perfection. His best performances on Back In Memphis are “Inherit The Wind,” “Stranger In My Own Home Town,” and “You’ll Think Of Me.”

However, Elvis’ best recordings from the Memphis sessions had already been released either as singles or on the first album, From Elvis In Memphis, and when compared to those works, Back In Memphis is a slight disappointment.

Songs:

  1. “Inherit The Wind”
  2. “This Is The Story”
  3. “Stranger In My Own Home Town”
  4. “A Little Bit Of Green”
  5. “And The Grass Won’t Pay No Mind”
  6. “Do You Know Who I Am”
  7. “From A Jack To A King”
  8. “The Fair’s Moving On”
  9. “You’ll Think Of Me”
  10. “Without Love”

Rating: 7 out of 10

Elvis and the Colonel: The Way It Was [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 18 when I wrote this article back in 1993 for The Elvis Beat #4, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


One mistake after another occurred in the NBC television movie Elvis and the Colonel: The Untold Story, which aired in January. On the rare occasions when the movie’s makers did decide to check their sources, it appears the only reference they bothered to use was the 1979 TV movie Elvis starring Kurt Russell and directed by John Carpenter.

Below is a listing of some of the many factual errors which appeared in Elvis and the Colonel:

  • “Elvis” is shown giving his mother a pink cadillac after they were already living at Graceland. In reality, Elvis gave her the car in 1956, while they did not move into Graceland until May 1957.
  • “Elvis” is shown in Elvis and the Colonel filming the movie Change of Habit in the 1950s. In actuality, Change of Habit was filmed in 1969 and was his last acting role.
  • “Colonel Parker” mentions that “Elvis”‘ gold cadillac could be toured while he was in the Army. The real Elvis did not even purchase the gold car until after his service in the Army.
  • Preparations for the taping of the 1968 ELVIS television special (now known as ELVIS: ’68 Comeback Special) are shown occurring in November of 1968. In reality, the special was taped in June of 1968.
  • The ELVIS special is a live broadcast in the movie. In actuality, ELVIS, as mentioned above, was taped in June 1968 and did not air until December of that year. It was the 1973 television special Elvis: Aloha From Hawaii that was broadcast live to some locations around the world.
  • “Elvis” is shown singing “Are You Lonesome Tonight” in a white, double-breasted suit during the ELVIS television special. In reality, “If I Can Dream” was the only song Elvis performed in the special wearing that suit.
  • “Heartbreak Hotel” in the movie concludes the ELVIS special. In actuality, “If I Can Dream” was the final song sung by Elvis in the special.
  • “Also Sprach Zarathustra” (theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey) opens “Elvis”‘ opening night performance in July 1969 at the Las Vegas International Hotel in the movie. The fact is, the real Elvis did not begin using “Also Sprach Zarathustra” until 1971.
  • “Elvis” wears a white jumpsuit for the July 1969 opening performance in the movie. In reality, Elvis wore a simple black outfit for his first concert in years. The jumpsuit worn by the actor is a distorted version of one worn by Elvis in the film Elvis: That’s The Way It Is, which was from an August 1970 performance.
  • “Elvis” sings “The Wonder Of You” at the 1969 concert in the movie, while the song was not really performed by Elvis until 1970.
  • “Elvis” is shown extremely overweight by September of 1971 in the movie, which escalates until a 1973 performance in which he appears obese. In reality, Elvis was at or near his ideal weight during these years, as proven by video and photographs.
  • “Elvis” is shown in the movie complaining to “Colonel Parker” about turning down A Star Is Born in August 1973. In actuality, Elvis had not yet been offered a role in this 1976 movie.
  • “Elvis” and “Priscilla” never divorce in the film! Despite the fact that the real couple divorced in October 1973, the movie “Elvis” tells of a nightmare in July 1976 in which he dreamed that “Priscilla” had left him. In a 1981 courtroom scene, the judge refers to “Elvis” as “Priscilla”‘s late “husband,” instead of “ex-husband.”