ON THIS DATE (54 YEARS AGO) November 1, 1960 - Elvis Presley - TopicsExpress



          

ON THIS DATE (54 YEARS AGO) November 1, 1960 - Elvis Presley With The Jordanaires: Are You Lonesome To-night? 45 single is released in the US. Are You Lonesome Tonight? is a popular song with music by Lou Handman and lyrics by Roy Turk. It was written in 1926, first published in 1927 and most notably revived by Elvis Presley in 1960 (with the title spelled Are You Lonesome To-Night?). Elviss version was listed at #81 on Billboards Greatest Songs of all time. Morgans version was followed by the best-known recording, by Elvis Presley, recorded on April 4, 1960 along with I Gotta Know, and engineered by Nashville sound pioneer Bill Porter. Colonel Parker (it was one of his wifes favorite songs) persuaded Elvis to record his own rendition of this song. Elvis version was based on the Blue Barron Orchestra version from 1950 with spoken segment. It went on to be one of the biggest-selling singles of 1960, peaking at number one on the Billboard pop chart for six weeks and peaking at number three on the R&B charts. Elvis, occasionally during live performances, would randomly change lyrics to give them humorous connotations. One popular instance was recorded at the International Hotel in Vegas on August 26, 1969. During the performance, instead of singing: Do you gaze at your doorstep and picture me there, he sings Do you gaze at your bald head and wish you had hair. Moments later, he saw a bald man in the audience (as legend has it), and burst into laughter which continued into the next lines. The audience was treated to additional laughter during the spoken verse singing: You know someone said that the worlds a stage, and each must play a part. Seeing the irony of his own lyrics, Elvis was again overtaken by laughter and barely recovered. The audience enjoyed the sincerity of the moment while Elvis regained his composure. Meanwhile the band and backup singers continued to keep the song going. It is speculated that much of Elvis mirth derived from the solo backing singer whose falsetto remained resolute throughout. To this, Elvis comes back just in time for the line: And I had no cause to doubt you followed by more laughter. So overtaken, Elvis encourages the backup singer to sing it, baby drawing even more laughter which nearly brings the house down. In the end, the song is finished to a round of applause as Elvis says, Thats it, man, fourteen years right down the drain...boy, Ill tell ya. Fourteen years just shot there. The version is considered to be a popular underground classic, and was a UK Top 30 hit in 1982 after first being commercially released by RCA in the 1980 box set Elvis Aaron Presley. According to Dr. Demento, who plays the version on his show, there is nothing on the label of the recording to indicate that it is anything other than an ordinary recording of the song--People must have been surprised when they took it home and played it. In 1977, Presley again performed the song for the Elvis in Concert TV special. Similarly to 1969, he also appears to mess up the spoken interlude, ad-libbing jokes throughout. Whether this was intentional or not is unknown; the 1981 documentary film This Is Elvis uses footage of this performance to illustrate Presleys physical deterioration near the end of his life. Darrin Memmers book Elvis Presley - The 1977 CBS Television Special, published in 2001 by Morris Publishing, suggests it was intentional. It is suggested that Elvis would purposely ruin the song because, as stated, it was one of Parkers wifes favorite songs, hence a dig at Parker, who Presley had begun to despise toward the end of his life. youtu.be/_cS5aCozhcA
Posted on: Sun, 02 Nov 2014 07:20:00 +0000

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