I want everyone to know what I can really do
~Elvis Presley (to producer Bob Finkel)Elvis delivered an incredible performance throughout the television special. His vocal performances were loose and gutsy…
~John Bush (allmusic.com)
Medley: Heartbreak Hotel / Hound Dog / All Shook Up:
Released | November 22, 1968 |
---|---|
Recorded | June 1968 |
Genre | Rock and roll |
Length | 44:27 |
Label | RCA Records |
Producer | Bones Howe |
Elvis (NBC TV Special) is the thirty-fourth album by Elvis Presley, released on RCA Victor Records in mono, LPM 4088, in November 1968. Recording sessions took place in Burbank, California at Western Recorders on June 20, 21, 22 and 23, 1968, and at NBC Studios on June 27 and 29, 1968. It peaked at #8 on the Billboard 200. It was certified Gold on July 22, 1969 and Platinum on July 15, 1999 by the RIAA.
From allmusic.com – John Bush:
… Although he exhibited more nerves than he ever had in the past — a combination of the importance this chance obviously presented plus the large gap between the psychedelic music culture of 1968 and the rather quaint rock & roll of ten years earlier — Elvis delivered an incredible performance throughout the television special. His vocal performances were loose and gutsy, and his repartee was both self-deprecating and sarcastic about his early days as well as his moribund film career (“There’s something wrong with my lip!…I got news for you baby, I did 29 pictures like that”). He was uninhibited and utterly unsafe, showing the first inkling in ten years that there was life and spirit left in music’s biggest artistic property. The resulting LP, NBC-TV Special, combined sit-down and standup segments, but probably over-compensated on the standup segments. What impresses so much about NBC-TV Special is how much it prefigures the rest of Elvis’ career. Dramatic, intense, driven, and earthy, frequently moving, but not without the occasional cloying note, Elvis during the ’70s was the apotheosis of rock music, a righteous blend of rock and soul, gospel and pop, blues and country…
~Read more over @ allmusic.com
This album also happens to contain one of Elvis Presley’s best songs…..
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I think Elvis' RCA recording of "Tomorrow is a Long Time" is his finest outing on a Dylan song, Nickel Creek's version and Judy Collins Elektra recording are also worthy of note. My own retelling and singing the story of how I first heard it from him in a chance meeting in1962 was posted in 2015. It's now up to 65,300 views, an average of 1,000 views per month. This video was filmed in one take at The Shedd Studios in Grand Junction, Colorado. . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiPBnKph70w
I like this song by everyone that I’ve heard it by, but the best version in my book is by Rod Stewart. Rod turns a song of pure melancholy into the perfect mix of melancholy and hopeful optimism. I’m surprised no one has mentioned this one.