Review: LOVE LETTERS FROM ELVIS 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.


Love Letters From Elvis (RCA), recorded by Elvis Presley, produced by Felton Jarvis. Recorded June 4-8, 1970, RCA Studios (Nashville). Released: May 1971. Re-released: 1992 (CD).

Despite the fact that Love Letters From Elvis was billed as an album of romantic songs, this is not “Love Me Tender” to the 12 power. In fact, along with the ballads, there are two religious songs and three up-tempo songs that are delivered equally as well as the love songs.

“Love Letters” is a re-recording of his 1966 single and is superior to that version. By far, the best song on this album is “This Is Our Dance,” which is very different from Elvis’ post-1971 ballads which tend to be sentimental pieces reflecting his problems with Priscilla.

Elvis picks up the pace with “Cindy, Cindy,” a song previously recorded with slightly different lyrics by Ricky Nelson under the title “Get Along Home, Cindy.”

The album concludes with “Life,” a song that manages to tell the complete story of the universe in under four minutes.

Love Letters From Elvis suffers from overpowering instrumentation on many tracks, a problem which was corrected for the most part on his future albums.

Songs:

  1. “Love Letters”
  2. “When I’m Over You”
  3. “If I Were You”
  4. “Keep Your Hands Off Her/Got My Mojo Working”
  5. “Heart Of Rome”
  6. “Only Believe”
  7. “This Is Our Dance”
  8. “Cindy, Cindy”
  9. “I’ll Never Know”
  10. “It Ain’t No Big Thing”
  11. “Life”

Rating: 7.5 out of 10

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

The Boss and the King [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 17 when I wrote this article back in 1992 for The Elvis Beat #3, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


“There have been a lot of tough guys. There have been pretenders, there have been contenders. But there is only one King. Everything starts and ends with him. He wrote the book,” rock legend Bruce Springsteen once said of Elvis.

If one were to trace Jersey-born Springsteen’s musical influences back, Elvis really would be at the start. According to Springsteen, it was after seeing Elvis on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1956 that he decided to become a singer. Although he was only seven at the time, he began to work toward that goal.

Springsteen struggled for years to make it in the music industry. In 1975, his Born To Run album finally brought him national attention. In a rare occurrence, he appeared on the covers of both Newsweek and Time during the same week.

It was during his “Born To Run” tour the following year that he tried to meet Elvis. Springsteen told the story at a 1985 concert in Hampton Roads, Virginia:

“We were in Memphis, and it was about 3:00 in the morning, and I got in this taxi cab – me and Steve Van Zandt. This taxi driver was going to take us some place to eat, but then he took us to Elvis’ house.

“And I remember when I was standing out in front and I saw a light in the window. And I jumped over the wall and ran up in the driveway and tried to get to the door.

“Which, when I look back on it, was a stupid thing to do, because I hate it when people do that to my house [laughs], but I did it anyway.

“And I got to the front door, and these guards came out of the woods, and they asked me what I wanted, and I said I wanted to meet Elvis. And they said, ‘Well, you know, he’s in Lake Tahoe.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, but like I was like on the cover of like Time and Newsweek.’ And they said, ‘Oh yeah, sure you were. Alright, just come with us.’ And they took me and they put me back out on the street.”

On May 28, 1977, at the Philadelphia Spectrum, he saw Elvis live in concert […]. It was only two and a half months later that Elvis passed away. At the Hampton concert, Springsteen described his reaction to the news:

“There’s always events you kind of mark your lives by . . . And I always remember where I was, I was living on this farm, when a friend of mine called me and told me that Elvis Presley had died. I guess it was hard to understand how somebody who came in and took away so many people’s loneliness could have ended up so lonely . . . because he deserved a lot better.”

Elvis’ death was Springsteen’s inspiration for his song “Johnny Bye Bye,” which ends, “You didn’t have to die, you didn’t have to die.”

Springsteen has recorded or performed several Elvis songs, including “Follow That Dream.” In 1989, he recorded “Viva Las Vegas” for a United Kingdom charity album. It was during the same session that several of the songs appearing on Human Touch, one of his two latest albums, were recorded. Although his version of “Viva Las Vegas” was used in the film Honeymoon In Vegas earlier this year, it was unfortunately not included on the soundtrack album.

Recently, in Worcester, Massachusetts, during his August 14 concert at the Centrum, Springsteen said, “For Elvis, fifteen years gone,” before launching into “Follow That Dream,” his favorite Elvis song.

Springsteen said, “(Elvis) came in and kind of told everybody that you’re not alone out there. I guess that was his . . . that was one of his messages. To me, he was as big as the whole country itself, as big as the whole dream. Nothing will ever take the place of that guy.”

Review: ELVIS ON VH-1 [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 17 when I wrote this review back in 1992 for The Elvis Beat #3, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Elvis on VH-1 (VH-1), starring Elvis Presley, directed by Ken Schreiber, aired September 1992.

This VH-1 Elvis special was surprisingly good. Produced for use as part of its Elvis festivities in September, during which he was “VH-1 Artist of the Month,” it featured many other musical stars commenting positively on Elvis, including Billy Joel, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Elton John, Tom Jones, The Beach Boys, Richard Marx, Dwight Yoakam, and Smokey Robinson.

Many Elvis friends or associates also appeared, including Scotty Moore, DJ Fontana, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller, The Jordanaires, George Klein, and Bob Weisman.

Clips from Jailhouse Rock, Viva Las Vegas, Elvis On Tour, and Elvis: The Lost Performances rounded out this entertaining 30 minute special.

Songs include:

  • “Jailhouse Rock”
  • “Baby, I Don’t Care”
  • “Viva Las Vegas”
  • “Love Me Tender”
  • “Can’t Help Falling In Love”
  • “I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water”
  • “Burning Love”
  • “Just Pretend”
  • “Don’t Be Cruel”

Rating: 7 out of 10

Review: ELVIS TODAY CD [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 17 when I wrote this review back in 1992 for The Elvis Beat #3, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Elvis Today (RCA), recorded by Elvis Presley, produced by Felton Jarvis. Executive Producer: Elvis Presley. Recorded March 10-13, 1975, RCA Studios (Hollywood). Released: May 1975. Re-released: 1992 (CD).

The country-flavored Elvis Today has a very sad tone which is probably a reflection of the impact Elvis’ personal life had on his selection of material to record. Two of the best songs on the album, “Pieces Of My Life,” and “Bringin’ It Back,” could be interpreted as messages aimed at Priscilla.

Despite the sad tones, or perhaps because of them, Elvis Today is an excellent album which stands as an example to disprove criticism that Elvis released no meaningful songs or albums after 1970.

This is one of several 1970s Elvis albums which unfortunately had been deleted from the RCA catalog. Thanks to the “Elvis In The 90’s” series, these albums are finally beginning to return, and Elvis Today is one of the first. Its superior sound quality stands a testament to RCA’s new commitment to Elvis releases.

Songs:

  1. “T-R-O-U-B-L-E”
  2. “And I Love You So”
  3. “Susan When She Tried”
  4. “Woman Without Love”
  5. “Shake A Hand”
  6. “Pieces Of My Life”
  7. “Fairytale”
  8. “I Can Help”
  9. “Bringin’ It Back”
  10. “Green, Green Grass Of Home”

Rating: 8 out of 10

Review – ELVIS: THE LOST PERFORMANCES [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 17 when I wrote this review back in 1992 for The Elvis Beat #2, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Elvis: The Lost Performances (Turner Home Entertainment), starring Elvis Presley, directed by Patrick Michael Murphy, released June 24, 1992.

“There was a guy who said one time . . . he said, ‘You never stood in that man’s shoes or saw things through his eyes. Or stood and watched with helpless hands while the heart inside you dies. So help your brother along the way, no matter where he starts. For the same God that made you made him, too – these men with broken hearts.’ I’d like to sing a slong along the same line,” Elvis finishes his beautiful speech and the band breaks into “Walk A Mile In My Shoes.”

Elvis: The Lost Performances is by far the best Elvis video ever. Hours of unseen footage from Elvis: That’s The Way It Is (1970) and Elvis On Tour (1972) were rescued from an MGM vault in Kansas, an abandoned salt mine. From this footage, one hour was chosen for The Lost Performances.

Part one gives the viewer a front-row seat at Elvis’ August 1970 engagement at the International Hotel in Las Vegas. These are the most spectacular parts of this video, allowing fans to relive the excitement, or perhaps experience it for the first time. This is Elvis at his best.

The next segment gives a rare, behind-the-scenes glimpse of Elvis in rehearsal for the aforementioned concerts. These clips demonstrate Elvis’ magnificent personality and sense of humor. Also of interest, Elvis sings several 1950s songs which have never been released in 1970s versions.

Finally, the clock turns to 1972 and Elvis is spotlighted on tour in Hampton, Virginia, and Greensboro, North Caroline. The highlights of this part are Elvis singing “Are You Lonesome Tonight” and “How Great Thou Art.”

A lot of effort was made to produce this video, and it shows. Turner Entertainment Company and Elvis Presley Enterprises are to be commended for their dedication to releasing “pure” Elvis on this video; the songs have not been cut and there is no annoying narration. It’s just Elvis, and that’s all his fans ever wanted.

This video really shows “the great performances” and no fan should be without it.

Songs:

  1. “Introduction/Walk A Mile In My Shoes”
  2. “The Wonder Of You”
  3. “Don’t Cry Daddy/In The Ghetto”
  4. “There Goes My Everything”
  5. “Make The World Go Away”
  6. “Just Pretend”
  7. “Heartbreak Hotel”
  8. “Twenty Days And Twenty Nights”
  9. “Love Me”
  10. “Hound Dog”
  11. “Don’t Be Cruel”
  12. “I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water”
  13. “I Was The One”
  14. “The Cattle Call”
  15. “Baby, Let’s Play House”
  16. “Don’t”
  17. “Money Honey”
  18. “All Shook Up”
  19. “Teddy Bear/Don’t Be Cruel”
  20. “Are You Lonesome Tonight”
  21. “I Can’t Stop Loving You”
  22. “How Great Thou Art”
  23. “Release Me”
  24. “I Can’t Stop Loving You”

Rating: 10 out of 10