Elvis Presley
- Totally Stung 1956 and 10 June 1958 sessions from master tapes
Soundboard Recording - 68 minutes - 10
I got stung (take 8 - take 20 (pre-song banter)
A fool such as I (takes 4-5)
Ain't that loving you baby (Medium tempo takes 2-4)
A big hunk o' love (take 2)
A fool such as I (takes 6-8)
I need your love tonight (take 1)
I got stung (takes 15-16)
Lawdy miss Clawdy (take 4)
I was the one (takes 1-3)
One sided love affair (master take 8 with count-in)
Ain't that loving you baby (fast tempo take 8)
I need your love tonight (takes 11-13)
A big hunk o' love (take 3)
I got stung (takes 21-22)
Lawdy miss Clawdy (take 5)
I want you, I need you, I love you (take 14 with take 5 count-in added)
I need your love tonight (take 4)
Ain't that loving you baby (fast tempo takes 9-10)
I got stung (take 11)
I need your love tonight (take 15)
Lawdy miss Clawdy (take 6)
I want you, I need you, I love you (take 16)
Ain't that loving you baby (fast tempo take 11)
I got stung (takes 17-18)
I need your love tonight (takes 16-17, 8-9)
Lawdy miss Clawdy (take 1)
A big hunk o' love (take 1)
Elvis Presley in the fifties What can one say? Roy Orbison, seeing a show in Odessa, Texas
in February of '55, is stunned; there is nothing in popular culture he can reference it to
- this is something brand new.
In less than four years, from his first session in July of 1954 to a final June visit in
1958 while on a pass from the Army, Elvis makes music that changes the world. Even today
these songs, plus related TV and personal appearances, are discussed and analyzed. As
award-winning historian David Halberstam acknowledges in 1993's The Fifties',
"In cultural terms, his (Presley's) coming was nothing less than the start of a
revolution."
Welcome to a look back at that revolution
Even a sophisticated Presley scholar is going to be "totally stung" by these
recently discovered, first-generation source tapes. Background asides and subtle nuances
become apparent as one listens to the man and his music. Presented in master tape quality
for the very first time are prime examples of Elvis' growing studio sophistication, taken
from his final recording session of the fifties, a one night stand in Nashville's Studio B
on June 10, 1958, plus some bonus treats taped in the spring of 1956. The goal of RCA
executive Steve Sholes in 1958 is to cut as many hit sides as possible before Presley goes
overseas until 1960. It proves difficult. With a Tuesday evening in June as the only visit
management approves, Sholes fills the studio with the cream of Nashville's session
players, including Buddy Harman on drums and percussion and the dynamic Hank
"Sugarfoot" Garland on lead guitar. This is the first Presley session for both
musicians and Harman's skill combined with the nimble-fingered magic of Garland result in
timeless rock and roll. The slate is set for cutting five up-tempo tunes; the end result
perhaps Elvis' most rockin' evening in the studio ever.
The first thing one notices about these alternate renditions is the energy and great
spirit in the room. Laughter abounds between takes as they get down to business. Several
performances are only a missed note or beat away from perfection, such is the level of
performance. Hard as it is to believe, Presley ultimately rejects both the marvelous
"mid-tempo" and stunning "punk Rock" versions of "Ain't That
Loving You Baby" and they remain in the can for six and twenty-seven years,
respectively!
This set begins with the superbly syncopated "I Got Stung," take 8. Again, It's
close to master take 24, though perhaps just a bit rushed. The next fifteen minutes whisk
the listener through alternate romps of Elvis' sly cover of Hank Snow's 1953 country hit
"A Fool Such Such As I," the "mid-tempo" "Ainıt That Loving You
Baby" and "I Need Your Love Tonight." With take 2 of "A Big Hunk O'
Love," one of Presley's greatest kick-ass rockers, Floyd Cramerıs Jerry Lee
Lewis-inspired piano solo practically melts the microphone! Backtracking to a New York
studio on a Friday morning in February '56, Elvis, Scotty, Bill, DJ and pianist Shorty
Long tackle Lloyd Price's infectious "Lawdy Miss Clawdy." Previously-unissued
takes 4 and 5 show the twenty-one year-old Presley singing with vigor, but both fall short
because of instrumental breakdowns. It's sure nice to hear them after forty-four years,
Scholar alert: on the pre-song countdown prior to master take 8 of "One-Sided Love
Affair" one may note Elvis playing the exact same bass strings runs on his acoustic
as heard preceding his 1970 recording of "Little Cabin on the Hill"! From the
nearly-derailed-by-a-plane-crash Nashville session in April '56, "I Want You, I Need
You, I Love You" takes 14 (plus some pre-take 5 chatter) and 16 check in. The former
has only "escaped" on 1978's (A Legendary Performer, Volume 2, but finds a much
better home here. Although Presley would apparently grow to hate his #3 pop hit, perhaps
due to a humiliating July '56 Steve Allen TV appearance (Elvis never again sings the tune
after that), he typically gives all of himself to the number in the studio. The B-side to
"Heartbreak Hotel," his fabulous "I Was The One," requires seven
passes, but both takes 2 and 3 heard here sound awfully close.
Returning to June 10th, Elvis and Nashville's "A-team" continue to "paw,
Paw" their way through the fluffy fun of "I Need Your Love Tonight."
Previously unheard takes 16 and 17 confirm that no one finds Presley's vocal flubs more
hilarious than he does. On take 17 of "I Got Stung" Jordanaire Gordon Stoker
frets about the group being unable to hear Presley's vocals, to which Elvis jokes
"Well, here's where we goof up!" Elvis halts the recording. Following a few
choice Presley expletives to end an otherwise rocking take 18, it gets real, real gone for
a change; with take 24, the final track of Elvis' stunning fifties career is in the can.
Presley's amazing career will visit many more peaks and valleys in the next nineteen
years; with discs like this, one may begin to comprehend what all the fuss was about. At
ease!