The Sun Sessions |
|
Released: March 22, 1976 Recorded: August 1953 to October 1955 Peak: 76 US, 16 UK, 1 DF Sales (in millions): 1.0 US Genre: early rock and roll |
Tracks:Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts. There have been a variety of releases covering Elvis Presley’s Sun Records’ era. See the “Notes” section on this page for a breakdown of some of those collections. Below are the five singles (A and B-sides) released by Sun. First single released July 19, 1954:
Second single released September 25, 1954:
Third single released January 8, 1955:
Fourth single released April 10, 1955:
Fifth single released August 20, 1955:
These five songs were recorded at Sun Records but not released until Elvis Presley’s first RCA album.
The Players:
|
Rating:4.506 out of 5.00 (average of 25 ratings)
Quotable:“The quintessential Elvis Presley album and the birth certificate for rock’s once and future king.” – Clarke Speicher, The ReviewAwards:(Click on award to learn more). |
The Quintessential Elvis“Who doesn’t need this in their record collection?” AM “Presley was one of the most naturally gifted performers his genre ever knew, and was the performer who truly brought the music to the people as no one had before or since.” AM “The Sun Sessions stands as the quintessential Elvis Presley album.” RV“Elvis never made coherent albums, and any collection of his greatest hits dissolves into lovable fluff.” EW’93 However, this collection of the first songs he recorded is “another story – soaring, fresh, and, thanks to their drop-dead confidence, more staggering than any music he ever made later.” EW’93 This collection “captured a force of nature: untutored, unsophisticated, but somehow brilliant.” BL These songs are “full of raw vitality and youthful attitude” EW’12 and serve as “the birth certificate for rock’s once and future king.” RV This is “the most important collection of rock ‘n’ roll tracks ever recorded.” CC Music That Changed the World“There aren’t many rock albums that feature music one can honestly say changed the world as we know it, but that is, if anything, a modest appraisal of the contents of Elvis Presley’s The Sun Sessions.” AM “Elvis certainly didn’t invent rock & roll, and he wasn’t even the first white guy to play it,” AM but he “was (with little room for argument) the single most important artist in the history of rock & roll.” AM “Much as Louis Armstong did for jazz, Elvis created a distinctive new way to play the music that combined a number of influences,” AM including R&B, country, pop, blues, and gospel. He found “a common ground between them that was his and his alone.” AM That “hybrid has become a commonplace of American popular culture [such that] it is difficult to understand how alien his music was in 1954.” CE-59Sun RecordsIn the summer of 1953, Elvis Presley entered what was then called Memphis Recording Service to record “My Happiness” as a gift for his mother. TM He also performed “That’s When Your Heartache Begins” “to his own simple guitar accompaniment.” CC He was back in January 1954 to record “Casual Love Affair” and “I’ll Never Stand in Your Way.” CCThe singer had an impact on Sam Phillips, the head of Sun Records, and brought him back again. While Presley didn’t do much with the song “Without You,” Phillips and guitarist Scotty Moore “heard something…and were intrigued enough to book another session.” TM That date – July 5, 1954 – would become one of the most important in rock and roll history. That night, Elvis, Moore, and bassist Bill Black “worked through many of the tunes Presley knew, mostly middle-of-the-road pop like ‘Harbor Lights.’” TM The trio then started riffing on Arthur Crudup’s “That’s All Right” while Phillips was away from the boards. When he returned, he asked them to do it again. “After a handful of takes, Elvis Presley’s first single was on tape, and the world of popular music was changed forever.” CCElvis had “connected the rhythmic gait of rock and roll directly to that of jump blues and R&B, and made the result sound like the most natural thing in the world.” TM Phillips “once boasted that if he could find a white singer that could sing, sound and feel ‘'like a negro’ that he’d make a million dollars.” AD Phillips had much to do with shaping Elvis’ early sound. Phillips produced five singles with Elvis that were released in 1954 and 1955. The impact of those singles wasn’t immediately felt, but once Elvis hit big, his work with Sun Records resurfaced, largely filling out Elvis’ early albums for RCA Records. As for that million dollars, Phillips fell short, making $35,000 when he sold Elvis’ contract to RCA. However, the value these songs had in shaping rock and roll is priceless. The SongsThe Sun Sessions gathers his five singles from the Sun years and, adds various outtakes from the era, depending on the version of the collection. The resulting “album captures Elvis in his first flush of greatness,” AM collecting “his first, and arguably most important, recordings into one convenient package.” AM “One can hear the thrill of discovery and experimentation on every cut” AM as “Elvis [is] first learning to put his ideas together in the recording studio.” AM He “burst into these sessions, raring to go… his delivery is tense sounding, a result of nerves perhaps, but this tension is released into a collection of stunning vocal performances.” AD “If Elvis would sound stronger and more savvy with time, he never sounded freer or more excited with the possibilities of his own voice as he does on this material.” AM “The sheer enthusiasm Elvis brings to these Sun recordings is audible” AD as he is about to unleash rock and roll on the world.Here are thoughts on the individual songs from the album. “My Happiness” and “That’s When Your Heartache Begins” “Harbor Lights” “and “I Love You Because” “That’s All Right” The song was “That’s All Right,” an R&B tune recorded by Arthur Crudup in 1947. Elvis infused it with his country twang, marrying the country music of typically white performers with the R&B music of typically black performers. “It still sounds audacious, as if the players themselves can’t believe what they’re doing.” TL They “transformed the song from a laboured complaint into a celebratory jubilee.” CC “It came together so perfectly, so seemingly accidental…so pure in its essence.” PG-115
“Blue Moon of Kentucky” “So taken was Bill Monroe by The King’s interpretation…Monroe re-recorded the track to make it sound like Presley.” RV On these and others, Elvis “forever burn[s] his imprint into classic spirituals and bluegrass favorites.” RV
“Good Rockin’ Tonight”
“I Don’t Care if the Sun Don’t Shine” This was “the first record to bear evidence of the Presley swagger. He is playful, obviously full of energy and enthusiasm.” CE-72 The song also features the first use of percussion on a Presley record – either bongos played by Phillips’ neighbor Buddy Cunningham or Presley thumping on the back of his guitar. CE-72 “You’re a Heartbreaker” It was written by Jack Sallee, the manager of the Ruffin Theatre in Covington, Tennessee. He went to Sun to record some promos for a hillbilly jamboree he hosted on Friday nights. Phillips lamented to him that he needed some original material for Elvis and Sallee made a demo of “You’re a Heartbreaker.” It was his first and last published composition. CE-72 “Milk Cow Blues Boogie” This was originally the 1930s’ blues song “Milk Cow Blues” by Kokomo Arnold. It had been covered many times, “most notably in western swing versions by Bob Wills and his brother Johnnie Lee. Here Elvis makes it his own, with a beautiful slow beginning that should prove once and for all what a great blues singer he could be.” PG-121 “I’m Left, You’re Right, She’s Gone” “Baby Let’s Play House” Elvis’ version was “marketed as a country record, though it fit few definitions of country music.” CD-75 It was his “most aggressive performance on disc to that point.” CE-75It “introduces a note of pure play” PG-125 with “its utterly uninhibited, unpredictable, insensate declaration of joy.” PG-125 Scotty Moore enhanced it “with two bristling solos that were light-years from his fingerpicking roots. The car radio had obviously been tuned to R&B stations along the road.” CE-75
“I Forgot to Remember to Forget” “Mystery Train” “Mystery Train” “overflows with such spontaneity and excitement, it feels like it must have been done in one take. The song rocks and rolls with such rollicking grittiness.” RV It is “as pure, full, and perfect as any record that had ever topped the charts.” CE-78
Notes:Regarding the multiple variations of the Sun recordings: they started with The Sun Collection in 1976. This collection included alternate versions of “That’s All Right” and “Milk Cow Blues.”Then came The Sun Sessions, which bumped those two extra versions in favor of alternates of “I Love You Because”, “I’m Left, You’re Right, I’m Gone,” and “When It Rains, It Really Pours.” In 1987, The Complete Sun Sessions was released, adding “Tomorrow Night,” “Harbor Lights,” and “When It Rains, It Really Pours” to the original collection as well as alternate takes, bringing the total song count to 28. In 1999, a 38-song, double-disc collection called Sunrise included all of Elvis’ recordings at Sun. The first disc is devoted to the original takes while the second is focused on alternate takes, including live cuts from 1955 and private demos from ’53 and ’54. Songs that had not appeared on The Complete Sun Sessions included “My Happiness,” “That’s When Your Heartaches Begin,” “I’ll Never Stand in Your Way,” “It Wouldn’t Be the Same without You,” “Fool, Fool, Fool,” “Shake, Rattle & Roll,” “Money Honey,” “Tweedle Dee,” and “Hearts of Stone.” |
Resources:
Related DMDB Pages:First posted 3/22/2013; last updated 11/26/2024. |
No comments:
Post a Comment