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Presley Elvis - Suspicious Minds 2CD (CD)
Presley Elvis - Suspicious Minds 2CD (CD)
€22,00
”Kaikki 1969 Memphis American session äänitykset! Repikää tästä: 3 Platinum sinkkua; In The Ghetto, Suspicious Minds, Don`t Cry Daddy 2 kultasinkkua; Kentucky Rain ja Mama Liked The Roses ja 10 Ennenjulkaisematonta esitystä. 1969 oli mahtava vuosi Elvikselle. Parasta kamaa __________________________________________________Editorial ReviewsAmazon.com Elvis Presley never sounded better than he does on these recordings made in Memphis at Chip Moman’s American Sound Studios in January 1969. The artist was still on an incredible high following the success of his legendary NBC-TV ”comeback” special, which had aired a little over a month earlier. Eager to record some relevant music after a decade of horrible movie soundtracks, Presley decided to work with Moman’s smash-making (122 hits in three years) Memphis house band. Indeed, four charting singles came from these sessions–”Suspicious Minds,” ”Don’t Cry Daddy,” ”In the Ghetto,” and ”Kentucky Rain”–as well as two critically acclaimed albums, From Elvis in Memphis and Back in Memphis. This two-disc set includes all the music the King recorded during that stint at Moman’s studio, ranging from Neil Diamond, Bobby Darin, and Beatles covers to current and old country hits (”Gentle on My Mind,” Johnny Tillotson’s ”It Keeps Right On A-Hurtin'”) to a cover of Chuck Willis’s classic ”Any Day Now” that tops the R&B original. Of special note is ”Long Black Limousine,” a song about a huge star returning to his small hometown in a hearse. All the originally released American recordings are available on the From Nashville to Memphis box set. RCA fleshes out this collection with previously unreleased alternate takes (including the in-between studio chatter), as well as the Darin tune (”I’ll Be There,” a hit for Gerry & the Pacemakers) and a snippet of one previously unheard tune, ”Poor Man’s Gold.” There’s been much debate about the mix, but these tracks sounded great on vinyl in the late 1960s, and they’ll continue to sound great for years to come, no matter the format. –Bill Holdship”
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