The Sun Sessions

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The Sun Sessions
File:Elvis Presley-The Sun Sessions (album cover).jpg
Compilation album by Elvis Presley
Released March 22, 1976
Recorded July 1954 - July 1955
Genre Rockabilly, rock and roll
Length 39:47
Label RCA Victor
Producer Sam Phillips
Elvis Presley chronology
Elvis: A Legendary Performer Volume 2
(1976)Elvis: A Legendary Performer Volume 21976
The Sun Sessions
(1976)
From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee
(1976)From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee1976

The Sun Sessions is a compilation of Elvis Presley recordings at Sun Studios in 1954 and 1955. It was issued by RCA Records in 1976, and had been issued and charted as The Sun Collection in the UK the previous year. It features liner notes by Roy Carr of the New Musical Express.

Making of the album

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The album features most of the tracks recorded at Sun studio by Sam Phillips, the head of Sun Studios. Phillips signed Presley after hearing a song that he had recorded for his mother on his birthday. It includes "That's All Right" one of the few recordings regarded as "the first rock and roll record."

Phillips said that Presley was rehearsing with his band, Scotty Moore and Bill Black, when Presley started singing the song, a blues song written by Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup. Phillips said that the version of the song was what he was looking for when he signed Presley, and turned the tape recorder on.

Elvis recorded more than 20 songs at the Sun studio, including some private recordings. Of these, 15 appear on this album.

Missing songs:

  • "Harbor Lights"
  • "Tomorrow Night"
  • "When It Rains It Really Pours"
  • "I Got a Woman" (tape lost)
  • "Satisfied" (tape lost)
  • The earlier private recordings

Chart success

The Sun Sessions was released in March 1976 and reached #76 on the pop and #2 on the country charts.

The single "Baby, Let's Play House" combined with "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" reached #5 on the country charts in 1955. Also, RCA Victor saw that Elvis was rapidly building a reputation for his live performances. They offered Sun Records $35,000 to buy out Presley's contract.

The single "That's All Right" did not chart in the US when released in 1954, and it was never issued as a single in Great Britain during Presley's lifetime. In 2004, the song became the focus of attention when it was the subject of a great deal of publicity because of the 50-year anniversary. There was a special ceremony on July 6, 2004 featuring Isaac Hayes, Justin Timberlake, Moore which was beamed live to 1200 radio stations. The song went top five in the UK and Canada and also charted in Australia. The Sun Sessions was also re-released in 2004 (in Japan only) to celebrate the anniversary.

Reception and legacy

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 5/5 stars[1]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music 5/5 stars[2]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide 5/5 stars[3]
Sputnikmusic 5/5[4]

When The Sun Sessions was first released in 1976 by RCA Victor, Village Voice critic Robert Christgau hailed The Sun Sessions as "the rock reissue of the year", writing in that along with Chuck Berry's Golden Decade, its songs represented the wellspring of rock music.[5] In 2003, the album was ranked #11 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.[6] In 2001, the TV channel VH1 named it the 21st greatest album of all time.[7] Music scholar Michael Campbell called it "quintessential rockabilly" with Presley's voice "the magical element" drawing on country and rhythm and blues but confined to neither,[8] while AllMusic critic Cub Koda said "what we ultimately have here is a young Elvis Presley, mixing elements of blues, gospel and hillbilly music together and getting ready to unleash its end result -- rock & roll -- on an unsuspecting world."[1]

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll included two tracks from the album: "Mystery Train" and "That's All Right." In 2002, The Sun Sessions were chosen by the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress to be included in its archives given their importance to the development of American popular music. This album is the very first Elvis album to feature "I Don't Care If The Sun Don't Shine", which was only previously issued as a single. After more than 20 years, The Sun Sessions marked the song's official debut on LP.[citation needed]

Track listing

Side one
No. Title Writer(s) Recording date Length
1. "That's All Right (Mama)" (from single, 1954) Arthur Crudup July 5, 1954 1:57
2. "Blue Moon of Kentucky" (from single, 1954) Bill Monroe July 7, 1954 2:04
3. "I Don't Care if the Sun Don't Shine" (from single, 1954) Mack David September, 1954 2:28
4. "Good Rockin' Tonight" (from single, 1954) Roy Brown September, 1954 2:14
5. "Milkcow Blues Boogie" (from single, 1955) Kokomo Arnold November-December, 1954 2:39
6. "You're a Heartbreaker" (from single, 1955) Jack Sallee November-December, 1954 2:12
7. "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" (from single, 1955) Stan Kesler, William Taylor February-March 1955 2:37
8. "Baby Let's Play House" (from single, 1955) Arthur Gunter February-March 1955 2:17
Side two
No. Title Writer(s) Recording date Length
1. "Mystery Train" (from single, 1955) Junior Parker, Sam Phillips July 21, 1955 2:26
2. "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" (from single, 1955) Stan Kesler, Charlie Feathers July 21, 1955 2:30
3. "I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin')" (RCA 1956) Jimmy Wakely September, 1954 2:26
4. "I Love You Because" (RCA 1956, 1st version) Leon Payne July 5, 1954 2:33
5. "Tryin' to Get to You" (RCA 1956) Rose Marie McCoy, Charles Singleton July 21, 1955 2:33
6. "Blue Moon" (RCA 1956) Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart August 19, 1954 2:41
7. "Just Because" (RCA 1956) Sydney Robin, Bob Shelton, Joe Shelton September, 1954 2:34
8. "I Love You Because" (RCA 1956; 2nd version) Leon Payne July 5, 1954 3:25

Note: The last six tracks are original Sun recordings, but were not released until 1956 on Presley's first album by RCA. They were never released on Sun.

Personnel

Charts

Chart (1976) Peak position
US Billboard 200[9] 76
US Country Albums[9] 2
Chart (1977) Peak
position
UK Albums Chart[10] 16

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 AllMusic
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  4. Sputnikmusic review
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External links