Showing posts with label Elvis Presley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elvis Presley. Show all posts

Friday, 18 August 2017

Song 186 - Always on my mind - Elvis Presley

You suddenly realise how old you are getting when a song you love was a Christmas number one thirty years ago in the UK. The Pet Shop Boys covered Always on my mind to mark the 10th anniversary of Elvis' death and like Suspicious Minds, it is the cover that I fell in love with before hearing Elvis' version.

Together with Jonny Christopher and Wayne Carson, Mark James would pen a country song that would become a classic Elvis song. First recorded by Brenda Lee and Gwen McCrae in the early 1970s, Elvis released his version of the song in November 1972, the year he separated from Priscilla Presley, as the b-side to his song  Separate Ways in the USA. When it was released in the UK Always on My Mind  became the A-side and was an instant hit. Whether Elvis's personal life difficulties allowed him to bring more emotion to his vocal, I can't say, but Always on My Mind is said to be one of his standout hits of the 1970s, and a favourite with the British Public who voted no.1. in a poll of his hits in 2013.

I am going to leave you today, with both Elvis and The Pet Shop Boys version. Although I am not normally a fan of covers, their version, to me, merits a place in the jukebox.

Elvis sings Always on My Mind

Pet Shop Boy's Cover Version of Always on My Mind

Written by: Jonny Christopher, Wayne Carson & Mark James
Released by Elvis: November 1972
Released by Pet Shop Boys: November 1987


Wednesday, 16 August 2017

Song 184 - Love me tender by Elvis Presley

If anyone ever learnt to play a keyboard in the 1990s, they probably learnt how to play Love Me Tender in volume 2 of the music books that went with them. I remember learning and hearing my mum play Love Me Tender on the keyboard. I also remember the afternoon I spilt tea all over the keyboard,  that definitely wasn't a tender moment between mother and child! Anyway, let's get back to Elvis.

Love Me Tender replaced Hound Dog as a number one hit in 1956. Adapted from a Civil War song, Aura Lee, which dates back to 1861, Elvis is jointly credited with writing the song with Ken Darby, who wrote under the name of his wife Vera Matson.  However, this joint accreditation was more to do with the publishing deal that Elvis's record label had which entitled him to 50% credit for the song production if he recorded it.  However, I don't think this affected the relationship between Elvis and Darby, as the latter would talk about Elvis's brilliance and his ability to be able to take a song and make it his own. Darby, himself, was a magnificent musician and composer in his own right. Having read about him in relation to this song, he belongs in my jukebox in his own right. 

Elvis first performed Love Me Tender on the Ed Sullivan Show on September 9th 1956, shortly before the single was released and a month before the film was released.  The single debuted at number 2, the first time a song had debuted on a chart in this position and would take the top spot from Hound Dog, staying at the top for five weeks.   The song reached number 11 on the UK Chart. The succession of number ones meant the Elvis was top of the charts for 16 years, a record that stood until 2004. 

Like many of Elvis's timeless hits, the song has been recorded by many artists since Elvis's recording. For me, the song stood out in the film Backbeat, which is an adaptation of the Beatles'early years in Hamburg and tells the story of the untimely death of Stuart Sutcliffe. If I hear the song at the right moment, tears will glisten in my eyes as there is something authentic in Elvis's voice and you feel the love & passion in his voice.

For me, out of all Elvis's songs, this is the one I wanted to put in the jukebox on the anniversary of his death.  When his death was announced 40th year ago,  it shocked the world so much that 40 years of conspiracy theories and sighting of Elvis has kept the King alive in so many people's hearts. I didn't really understand why people were so disbelieving in death. But now, having lost people central to my universe, I can understand it better now. To have one more day....

To hear Love Me Tender 

  

Tuesday, 15 August 2017

Song 183 - Hound Dog by Elvis Presley

Hound Dog has been recorded by over 250 artists. A snappy, foot-tapping song that transports you straight to a 1950s dance hall with teddy boys and a milk bar. This week marks the 40th anniversary of Elvis Prestley's death on the 16th August 1977. Elvis should be in everybody's jukebox because so much of what he did inspired the British pop scene in the 1960s. Along with artists like Little Richards, he became one of the front runners in the musical revolution of the youth.

Written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Hound Dog is a 12-bar blue song that was originally recorded by Willie Mae 'Big Mama' Thorton.  When 'Big Mama' released it in February 1953, it sold 500,000 copies and seven weeks at number one. Due to Elvis' version, it is now listed as one of the 500 songs that shaped Rock and Roll.

Unsurprisingly, Elvis's recording of Hound Dog, is by far the most popular ever recorded.  Elvis's version came out in July 1956 and sold in the region of 10 million copies worldwide.  The song became a favourite of Elvis' and he would end his live performance with the track.

Elvis recorded the song over a period of seven hours in New York, together with songs Don't be cruel and Any Way You Wanted.  During the recording session, Elvis and his band recorded over 30 versions of the song, which moved the song away from the original way he had performed it live.  Version 28, "an angry hopped-up version", was  eventually chosen for the single, and  Colonel Parker, Elvis's manager, called it though, predicting (rightly) that Hound Dog would rewrite the meaning of a global hit.

On the original release, the song was the B side to Don't be cruel. But it was clear which was the bigger hit and the sides were reversed. On its first release, it sold over 4 million copies and stayed at number one for 11 weeks (a record for the US chart that wasn't broken until 1992) until Love Me Tender replace it.

To hear one of the King's classic number one
Hound Dog by Elvis Presley


Sunday, 18 June 2017

Song 181 - Long Tall Sally by Little Richards


Happy Fathers' Day to one of all.  As well as being Fathers' day, it is also Sir Paul McCartney's 75th Birthday today and I thought I would do a song by Little Richards as he is someone who influenced the Beatles in their early days as the Quarry Men. Also Long Tall Sally is reported to be the first song Paul McCartney performed in public. What's the connection to Fathers' day you may ask, well Paul McCartney is the same age as my dad and my dad is one of my greatest sources of inspirationsin my life but he hasn't written a hit single so he doesn't really fit into a music blog! However, he has got a fantastic sense of musicality and has introduced me to many a good tune over the years.

Release in March 1956, Long Tall Sally by Little Richards is a 12 bar rock and roll song. It is also one of his biggest hits. Little Richards himself, is one of the most influential rock/pop stars in the world as his style in the 1950s laid the foundation for Rock and Roll. Born in 1932, he was discovered in 1947 by Sister Tharp. From that moment on, his life would be about performing music and it took him 8 years to secure a recording deal with Specialty Records, who signed him as their version of Ray Charles. Little Richard's first single release would be  Tutti Fruit, which was followed up by Long Tall Sally, which became his first number 1 on the R&B chart in 1956.  At the time when racial tensions were strong due to segregation laws in the USA, it is said that Little Richard's music brought race together and broke through the tensions.   Tutti Fruit & Long Tall Sally were the first two hit singles for Little Richards and in the space of 3 years he had secured 18 hit singles and was a millionaire. His music was being covered by stars like Elvis Presley and Eddie Cochran and he was invited to guest star in popular films at the day.

The association between Little Richards and The Beatles came in the early 1960s when Brian Epstein approached him to see whether his band could be one of his supporting acts when he was touring Europe in 1962.  They opened for him in Brighton and Hamburg to name two of his venue. During the time the band spent with Little Richards, he taught them how to sing his songs. This would lead to the Beatles covering the song in 1964, for the Long Tall Sally EP.

When I listen to the track, it makes me want to dance and own a vintage 50s dress so I can dance a Teddy Boy all night long.  Listen to it now but promise me you'll listen to it full blast. If you are able to be with your dad today, have a dance with him!

Listen to Long Tall Sally Here:
Long tall song

Written by: Entrois Johnston, Robert Blackwell and Robert Penniman (Little Richards' real name)
Year released: 1956