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Elvis 75-Good Rockin' Tonight
Elvis Presley
Elvis 75-Good Rockin' Tonight
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (31) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (28) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #4

Here is a glittering collection fit for a king -- in this case, the undisputed, Once and Future King of Rock 'n' Roll. To commemorate the 75th anniversary of the birth of Elvis Aaron Presley, Elvis 75 - Good Rockin' Tonigh...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Elvis Presley
Title: Elvis 75-Good Rockin' Tonight
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony Legacy
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 12/8/2009
Album Type: Box set
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style: Oldies
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaCD Credits: 4
UPC: 886976062521

Synopsis

Album Description
Here is a glittering collection fit for a king -- in this case, the undisputed, Once and Future King of Rock 'n' Roll. To commemorate the 75th anniversary of the birth of Elvis Aaron Presley, Elvis 75 - Good Rockin' Tonight is the definitive retrospective, a remastered Hot 100 of Elvis classics in one beautifully-packaged four-CD boxed set. Spanning the breadth of Presley's monumental, rags-to-riches career, Elvis 75 - Good Rockin' Tonight presents an artist who exploded in the mid-1950s, when he shook up a buttoned-down world with his mold-breaking music, not to mention his sideburns, swiveling hips, flamboyant wardrobe, and raw sexuality. Until his death at 42 in 1977, he would move from rockabilly, rhythm and blues, bluegrass, and rock 'n' roll to country, pop, gospel, and even to light operatic fare to become one of the greatest and most-beloved entertainers the world has ever known. He would also sell several hundred million records. This definitive set has the chart-topping hits, numbers from his movies, deep cuts from various gold and platinum albums, and exciting in-concert performances. Featuring rare photographs and an incisive essay by respected music writer Billy Altman, ELVIS 75 repeatedly demonstrates that, to paraphrase one of his more famous album titles, 50,000,000 Elvis fans -- and counting -- can't be wrong.

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CD Reviews

4-CD anthology shines as brightly as a King's crown
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 12/27/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Elvis was not only the king of Rock `n' Roll (Little Richard's claim on the crown notwithstanding), but in his afterlife he has also become the undisputed king of reissues and anthologies. RCA's four-CD set, spanning from his earliest self-funded acetates through late home recordings and live sides, his last major studio works and a post-mortem remix, offers no new tracks for Presley's legions of collectors, but provides a superb introduction and deep overview for anyone who's heard about, rather than heard, the King. Those who know a few hits or have sat through an Elvis movie or two will find the greatness of his musical catalog measures up to the hype and explains the dedication of his most ardent fans.



Collected here are one hundred tracks, beginning with Presley's very first recording, "My Happiness," waxed on his own dime as a gift for his mother. His earliest commercial sides show how he forged hillbilly, blues and country roots into his personal strand of rock `n' roll, first for Sun with Scotty Moore and Bill Black, and then, with the addition of D.J. Fontana on drums and A-list guests like Floyd Cramer and Chet Atkins, for RCA. These early works aren't so much primitive as they are elemental - the lack of production pomp or circumstance presents Elvis as an unadorned and raw rock `n' roll spirit. The addition of a backing vocal trio, as can first be heard on 1956's "I Was the One," showed a crooning side of Elvis that would continue to reappear even as he continued to explore rockabilly and blues.



From the 50s through the 70s Elvis moved through a variety of producer's hands and a number of different studios, and got something different from each. His studio recordings took him from Memphis to Nashville, north to New York, west to Hollywood, back to Nashville where he worked in RCA's legendary Studio B and back to Memphis for his legendary late-60s sessions at Chip Moman's American Studios. By the early `70s, on the heels of his televised comeback special, Elvis once again became a live draw, and selected sides find him in Las Vegas, Honolulu and on the road in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Elvis waxed his share of clunkers, but with each new direction and in each new setting he seemed to record something worthwhile, and producer Ernst Mikael Jorgensen has done a masterful job of picking highlights.



More importantly, Jorgensen has intermixed iconic hits with lesser known singles and album tracks, showing the depth of Elvis' artistry and the catalog he created. Elvis often overwhelmed the charts with hit singles, leaving terrific performances such as the energized "One-Sided Love Affair," a bluesy cover of Lloyd Price's "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and the gospel "Thrill of Your Love" to languish as album tracks. Even more surprising is a 1962 version of "Suspicion" that pre-dates Terry Stafford's hit by two years. Elvis' soundtracks included their share of dregs, particularly as the `60s wore on, but they also included hits and great album tracks like a scorching version of "Trouble" from King Creole and bluesy covers of Dylan's "Tomorrow is a Long Time" from Spinout and Jimmy Reed's "Big Boss Man" from Clambake.



While other artists reinvented themselves to fit the times, Elvis bent the times around himself (excepting "Yoga is as Yoga Does," thankfully not included here), staying true to his voice as everything around him changed. His producers, songwriters, and musicians kept turning over, but in the center of it all Elvis sang a surprisingly straight line from '53 to `77. Even as his voice matured and the productions were influenced by his Vegas stage show, the fire in his delivery remained. Whether singing rock, blues, country, soul, pop or gospel, his performances found a true line stretched from the Sun sessions through RCA studios in Nashville, New York and Hollywood, a stint in the army, a catalog of often mediocre films, his 1968 resurrection, a triumphant return to Memphis, and country sessions that brought him back to his roots.



For many listeners, disc four will be the least familiar. Covering 1970 through 1977, these selections find Elvis' singles charting lower, but still delivering the goods. Only "Burning Love" made the top-5, and his other top-10 from that stretch, "The Wonder of You," is not included. "An American Trilogy," is at once bombastic and utterly show-stopping, his version of "Always on My Mind" made the country charts but should have found cross-over success before Willie Nelson ten years later, and his last single, "Way Down," though given to `70s production sounds, finds his gospel fervor undimmed. The beat heavy remix of "A Little Less Conversation" that closes the set shows just how easily Elvis' voice could slide into new contexts (the original film performance from Live a Little, Love a Little is worth searching out on DVD, by the way). These hundred tracks aren't a complete run through every Elvis highlight, but they tell the entire arc of his musical career in a compelling and thorough way.



The box includes an 80-page booklet that features a biographical essay by Billy Altman, numerous photos, reproductions of original record labels, covers and picture sleeves, movie posters, master tape boxes, and detailed recording, chart and personnel data. RCA/Legacy is releasing a companion 26-track single disc that cherry-picks this box, and though it may prove useful as a guide to further Elvis purchases, it doesn't provide the compelling, detailed portrait of this four-disc set. With more Elvis 75th-birthday anniversary reissues on the way (and a terrific 2-CD version of From Elvis in Memphis already out) you may be tempted to put together your own collection, but you'd have a hard time assembling a more compelling introduction than this box. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]"
Elvis 75-Good Rockin' Tonight
Mitchell S. Friedman | Walnut Creek, CA | 12/17/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"As far as I can tell, "Good Rockin' Tonight" may be the most complete Elvis collection yet, beginning with "That's all Right Mama" 1n 1954 and ending with with his 2002 hit which was a remix of a song called "A Little Less Conversation". Included are most of his greatest songs along with some that are not as well known but valid anyway. Unfortunately, two of his greatest tracks, "Trying To Get To You" from 1956 and "The Wonder of You" from 1969 are not on this collection which forced me to buy the MP3 versions, burn them onto CDRs, and put them in the box with the other four CDs. If you can handle picking your favorite Elvis tracks that are not on this collection (and there will be some-let's face it!) and burning them onto CDRs to complete YOUR collection, then "Good Rockin' Tonight-Elvis 75" is well worth the price."
Looks like an essential purchase to me !!!
Matthew G. Sherwin | last seen screaming at Amazon customer service | 01/08/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This awesome and well done compilation is one of the best Elvis box sets out there bar none! Elvis could have belted out the phone book and I'd have been there, standing and applauding all the way through! You'll find so many different styles of music that Elvis loved to perform here: rockabilly, rhythm and blues, bluegrass, rock `n' roll and even more! I like that this four CD box set has that very early recording of "My Happiness" which Elvis had to pay to record for his mother before he became well known; then we get both very big Elvis hits as well as a number of his lesser known gems. The quality of the sound is excellent and the artwork is very nicely done. Inside the box there is an eighty page booklet; there's an essay by Billy Altman along with photos, reproductions of artwork and much, much more.



There's something for every Elvis fan here. Like music from his movies? No problem; there's a lot of that here. Whether it be his music from the movies he starred in "Jailhouse Rock" with Elvis really rocking to that a great beat and a musical interlude that couldn't be better; "King Creole" from the movie of the same name with that male backup that works perfectly as well as "Trouble" and "Head Headed Woman" which come from "King Creole;" and "Viva Las Vegas" from the movie of the same name, Elvis never skips a beat! He never lets go of a single superfluous note and his excellent diction combined with his sophisticated phrasing makes these songs and all the others brilliant. Elvis invariably sings with great passion and you can tell he's singing from the heart with just one listen!



Of course, with four CDs packed to the brim as they are here, there's so much more here by Elvis than just some songs from his movies. I scarcely know how to begin to tell you about all the great hits and lesser known exquisite ballads that make this such a worthwhile addition to your Elvis collection. I really like "(Now and Then There's) A Fool Such As I;" Elvis never sounded better--and how's about those drums? The music fits in perfectly with Elvis' singing but wisely the music never drowns out Elvis; you can easily hear what he's singing and I love it. In addition, "It's Now or Never" stuns me with its natural charm; the poignant "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" showcases Elvis yet again; "(Marie's the Name of) His Latest Flame" has a fine beat that makes this memorable; "Return to Sender" (one of my very favorite all time Elvis tunes); "(You're the) Devil in Disguise;" "In the Ghetto" with Elvis singing faultlessly; "Suspicious Minds" with that incredible arrangement; the awesome "Polk Salad Annie;" the very moving and beautiful "Funny How Time Slips Away;" Elvis' gorgeous rendition of "Always on My Mind" and "Unchained Melody" are just a very few of the magnificent songs on these four CDs. "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You" and "Hound Dog" are equally well done hits from Elvis.



Lesser known but stunning numbers include "I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water;" "I Just Can't Help Believin';" "Steamroller Blues" and "Promised Land." Indeed, much of the fourth CD offers us lesser known tunes that were very well done and it's a shame they didn't chart as well as other Elvis songs did. An excellent example of Elvis' gospel style is found in "Way Down."



Another reviewer notes that "Trying to Get to You" and "The Wonder of You" are not here--and they are right. That's my only disappointment. I really like Elvis singing "The Wonder of You," too. The best thing is to download them and burn them to CD-R--that reviewer gave us an excellent suggestion.



Elvis Presley left us all too soon; today would have been his seventy-fifth birthday. Fortunately, however, we have CDs, CD box sets, his movies and concerts on DVD and more to remember him fondly and most appropriately as The King of Rock 'n' Roll. This is an absolute must-have for Elvis fans."