Elvis Mania 2014 Tournament: Time for Round 2

Elvis Presley in 1957

Elvis Presley in 1957

Round 1 of The Mystery Train Blog’s Elvis Mania 2014 tournament is in the books. The tournament will crown the Best Elvis Song, based on your votes. To view the results of the first round, which eliminated 32 songs from contention, check out the tournament’s page on Challonge.com.

Now, it is time to start Round 2, which pits the 32 remaining songs against one another. Vote for your favorite in each of the 16 matches below. If you have difficulty viewing the embedded version of the matchups, access them directly using this link.

Anyone can vote, not just those who made predictions or participated in the previous round. You do not have to register.

If you thought choosing songs in that first round was tough, just wait until you try this one out.

Round 2 voting will end in three days, on Tuesday, March 25.

[March 25, 2014, Update: Round 2 voting is now closed.]

Elvis Mania 2014 Tournament: Round 1 Begins

The Mystery Train BlogPredictions have been locked in, so now it is time to begin The Mystery Train Blog’s Elvis Mania 2014 tournament! The tournament will award the title of Best Elvis Song, based on your votes.

Round 1 pits 64 Elvis songs against one another. Vote for your favorite in each of the 32 matches below. If you have difficulty viewing the embedded version of the matchups, access them directly using this link.

Anyone can vote, not just those who made predictions. You do not have to register.

Round 1 voting will end in three days, on the evening of Friday, March 21.

[March 21, 2014, Update: Round 1 voting is now closed.]

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS Legacy Edition out today, with bonus Richmond concert

Before we begin, a reminder that there are less than 13 hours left to lock in your predictions bracket for Elvis Mania 2014. The person with the highest score will receive a Sony Legacy Edition CD of an Elvis title, courtesy of The Mystery Train Blog. See yesterday’s post for more details. [Update: Predictions are now locked.]

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Forty years ago today, on March 18, 1974, Elvis Presley rocked the Richmond Coliseum in Virginia. A live recording of the concert features on the second CD of a new Legacy Edition of Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis, in stores today from Sony.

The first CD features a complete version of the March 20 Memphis concert at the Mid-South Coliseum that RCA first released in an edited form in 1974. Elvis earned his third and final Grammy Award for his performance of “How Great Thou Art” in Memphis on that original 1974 album.

The Follow That Dream collectors label for Elvis fans restored the missing tracks from the Memphis concert and removed unnecessary audience overdubs in a 2004 Classic Albums CD release of the title, including a new mix. The same label also issued the expanded show in vinyl format as a 2-record set last year. This new 2014 Legacy Edition features yet another new mix of the Memphis concert.

The Richmond concert made its debut in 2011’s Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis on the FTD label. This new release features the same mix of the Richmond show as on the 2011 collectors CD.

The Elvis Presley Show crisscrossed back and forth from Virginia to Tennessee on that leg of his tour. Tickets for a March 12 appearance at the Richmond Coliseum sold out so quickly that Elvis’s management re-routed the tour to accommodate a second show there on March 18. Elvis performed four shows in Memphis on March 16 and 17, hit Richmond, Virginia, again on March 18, and then returned to Tennessee for concerts in Murfreesboro and Memphis on March 19 and 20, respectively.

RCA professionally recorded the March 20 Memphis concert for the album project. It is a 16-track recording (audio elements recorded on separate channels) that can be tweaked for optimum sound quality. The Memphis show is presented in stereo.

Though the background story remains mysterious, the March 18 Richmond concert was supposedly captured as a 16-track recording, too. If so, it remains missing from the Sony vaults – lost, stolen, or erased.

The Richmond concert audio source on both the 2011 and 2014 releases is a tape copy of a mono mix-down of the 16-track recording, with artificial reverb applied. In other words, no further changes can be made to the Richmond mix or reverb since the 16-track original is unavailable.

While Elvis’s sound engineers often made informal reference tapes of his shows from the soundboard mixing console, the Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis liner notes in 2011 only speculated about why RCA apparently recorded the Richmond concert in multitrack. The 2014 Legacy Edition refers to the Richmond show as a “test run concert” for the subsequent Memphis recording.

Five selections from an August 16, 1974, rehearsal at RCA Hollywood for an upcoming Las Vegas engagement round out the second CD of the release. Captured on a personal cassette recorder, the rehearsals are in comparatively poor sound quality. The five tracks were among twenty from the rehearsal included as part of the 2009 FTD release From Sunset To Las Vegas.

In addition to participating retail stores, the 2014 Legacy Edition of Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis is also available from Amazon and other online outlets.

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS (2014 Legacy Edition)

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS (2014 Legacy Edition)

Tracks

Disc One

Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis, March 20, 1974
01. Also Sprach Zarathustra/
02. See See Rider
03. I Got A Woman/Amen
04. Love Me
05. Tryin’ To Get To You
06. All Shook Up
07. Steamroller Blues
08. Teddy Bear/Don’t Be Cruel
09. Love Me Tender
10. Long Tall Sally/Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On/Your Mama Don’t Dance/Flip, Flop & Fly/Jailhouse Rock/Hound Dog
11. Fever
12. Polk Salad Annie
13. Why Me Lord
14. How Great Thou Art
15. Suspicious Minds
16. Introductions By Elvis
17. Blueberry Hill/I Can’t Stop Loving You
18. Help Me
19. An American Trilogy
20. Let Me Be There
21. My Baby Left Me
22. Lawdy, Miss Clawdy
23. Funny How Time Slips Away
24. Can’t Help Falling In Love/
25. Closing Vamp

Disc Two

Recorded Live At The Coliseum, Richmond, March 18, 1974
01. Also Sprach Zarathustra/
02. See See Rider
03. I Got A Woman/Amen [edited with Memphis, March 20, 1974]
04. Love Me
05. Tryin’ To Get To You
06. All Shook Up
07. Steamroller Blues
08. Teddy Bear/Don’t Be Cruel
09. Love Me Tender
10. Long Tall Sally/Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On/Your Mama Don’t Dance/Flip, Flop & Fly/Jailhouse Rock/Hound Dog
11. Fever
12. Polk Salad Annie
13. Why Me Lord
14. Suspicious Minds
15. Introductions By Elvis
16. I Can’t Stop Loving You
17. Help Me
18. An American Trilogy
19. Let Me Be There
20. Funny How Time Slips Away
21. Can’t Help Falling In Love/
22. Closing Vamp

The August 1974 RCA Rehearsals
23. Down In The Alley
24. Good Time Charlie’s Got The Blues
25. Softly, As I Leave You
26. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
27. The Twelfth Of Never

Elvis Mania 2014 Tournament: Create your bracket predictions

[March 18, 2014, Update: Predictions are now locked.]

I spend much time on The Mystery Train Blog giving my opinion of all things Elvis. Now, readers have a chance to stake out their own positions.

Introducing the Elvis Mania 2014 tournament. Sixty-four selections will compete for the title of Best Elvis Song, with readers of The Mystery Train Blog choosing winners in each round. Voting begins tomorrow evening (March 18), so now is your chance to fill out a bracket and lock in your predictions using the link below.

Go to the Elvis Mania 2014 Tournament page on challonge.com

At the end of the tournament, the person with the highest score will receive a Sony Legacy Edition CD of an Elvis title, courtesy of The Mystery Train Blog. The tie-breakers will be number of correct picks and order in which predictions were locked. Though I have created a predictions bracket for fun, the CD will simply go to second place should I happen to achieve the highest score.

Good luck!

Who will win Elvis Mania 2014?

Who will win Elvis Mania 2014?

Alan Leatherwood rocks on with TEX MEX BREAKAWAY

Cover of TEX MEX BREAKAWAY - Alan Leatherwood

Cover of TEX MEX BREAKAWAY – Alan Leatherwood (2013)

Tex Mex Breakaway, Alan Leatherwood’s new album, is available now in CD and digital from the independent Ohio Moon Record Company label.

Leatherwood specializes in rockabilly, folk, Tex Mex, and country music. He is also a virtual encyclopedia of musical knowledge for 1950s & 1960s recordings and artists.

Tex Mex Breakaway is a strong release that celebrates Leatherwood’s 50th year in the music business. He recently hit number one on the Cleveland Reverbnation Folk Charts.

As regular readers of this blog will know, I am a sucker for sad songs, so one of my favorites on this album is “How I Loved You And I,” which mourns the loss of a friend by celebrating time spent together.

“Voice Of An Angel” is another highlight, one of those songs that perfectly fit the mood of the after midnight to predawn hours. It features a haunting vocal by Leatherwood along with adept guitar work by the late Frank Parisi.

“Anita’s On My Mind” is a fun song led by the guitar of Paul Penfield. “We’re gonna rock it all night, we’ll make everything right,” sings Leatherwood, which sums up rock ‘n’ roll as well as any two lines can.

Other favorites include “Chance,” “Tell Me How,” and “Love You Till I Die.” The mark of a stellar album is that it just seems to get better with every play. Alan Leatherwood’s Tex Mex Breakaway is such an album. Be sure to check it out.

TEX MEX BREAKAWAY CD - Alan Leatherwood

TEX MEX BREAKAWAY CD – Alan Leatherwood (2013)

Tracks

01. Anita’s On My Mind (Leatherwood)
02. I’ve Had My Moments (Orbison/Melson/Rush)
03. My Baby’s Gone (Bowen)
04. Hickory Dickory Dock (Leatherwood)
05. No Teeth And All (Leatherwood)
06. Gotta Lotta That (Bedwell)
07. Loves Made A Fool Of You (Holly/Montgomery)
08. Breakaway (Leatherwood)
09. Paper Boy (Orbison)
10. Chance (Leatherwood)
11. White Bobby Socks (Owens)
12. Sentence Of Love (Leatherwood)
13. How I Loved You And I (Leatherwood)
14. Tell Me How (Allison/Holly/Petty)
15. What To Do (Holly)
16. I Gambled My Life On Rock And Roll (Leatherwood)
17. Love You Till I Die (Leatherwood)
18. Pearly Little Baby (Leatherwood)
19. Voice Of An Angel (Etherial)
20. I Wonder Why (Tharp/Tomsco)

Musicians

Vocals/Guitar: Alan Leatherwood
Drums: Max Bangwell (1-6, 8-10, 12, 15, 17-20), Bill “Smitty” Web (5, 7, 11, 16), Rick Harper (13, 14)
Bass (Acoustic): Randy Chestnutt (5, 11, 16, 19), Slaps Metzger (6, 9)
Bass (Electric): Rick Harper (1-4, 7, 8, 12, 13, 15, 16, 18), Frank Thedford (10, 14)
Lead Guitars (Electric): David Loy (3, 5, 7, 10, 18), Memphis Mike Metzger (4, 6, 11), Paul Penfield (1), Frank Parisi (16, 19), Ricky Santon (7, 10), Tom Fallon (8), Jeff Green (20), Alan Leatherwood (2, 15, 8, 17), Jimmy Murray (13, 14)
Piano/Keyboards: Bobbie Antes (1, 5), Don Heddesheimer (6, 10, 11, 20), Erich Overhultz (12, 13)
Harmonica: Rick Harper
Vocal Harmony: Jimmy Murray (14)

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS Legacy Edition to include Richmond, Virginia concert (Conductor’s Reflections #15)

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS (2014 Legacy Edition)

ELVIS RECORDED LIVE ON STAGE IN MEMPHIS (2014 Legacy Edition)

One of my favorite CD releases on the Follow That Dream collectors label for Elvis Presley fans is 2011’s Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis, which captures a March 18, 1974, concert that Elvis performed at the Richmond Coliseum in Virginia.

The confusing album title reflects that Elvis closed out his tour two days after the Richmond concert with a show in Memphis at the Mid-South Coliseum, portions of which became the 1974 album Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis. Elvis earned his third and final Grammy Award for his stellar performance of “How Great Thou Art” in Memphis on the original 1974 album.

The link between the two shows continues, for Sony announced last week that it will reissue the Richmond concert on the second disc of a Legacy Edition of Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis. While the FTD collectors label has very limited distribution, this new 2-CD release on the main Sony label hits mainstream retail stores on March 18, the 40th anniversary of the Richmond concert. Amazon and other outlets are accepting pre-orders now.

The Elvis Presley Show crisscrossed back and forth from Virginia to Tennessee on that leg of his tour. Tickets for his March 12 appearance at the Richmond Coliseum sold out so quickly that the tour was re-routed to accommodate a second show there on March 18. Elvis performed four shows in Memphis on March 16 and 17, hit Richmond, Virginia, again on March 18, and then returned to Tennessee for concerts in Murfreesboro and Memphis on March 19 and 20, respectively.

Elvis Presley's March 1974 tour schedule (partial)

Elvis Presley’s March 1974 tour schedule (partial)

For space considerations on the original LP, RCA edited several songs out of the March 20 Memphis concert for the 1-record release in July 1974. The album also featured overdubbed audience reactions that detracted from the sound quality. FTD restored the missing tracks and removed the unnecessary overdubs in a 2004 Classic Albums CD release of the concert, including a new mix. The same label also issued the expanded show in vinyl format as a 2-record set last year.

It turned out that RCA chose well in 1974 which performances to use on the original record, though. The performance quality of many of the excised songs was underwhelming, with the exception of a fine rendition of “Steamroller Blues,” first released on Platinum: A Life In Music over two decades later. The energetic Memphis version was superior to his live recording of the song in Hawaii that served as a single in 1973.

This new Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis Legacy Edition will also include the previously omitted songs, but whether a new or an existing mix will be featured is unclear.

In fact, Sony’s press release for this album is riddled with errors, an issue far too common these days in the marketing of Elvis music releases, so it is difficult to trust any of its statements. For that reason, I am not even including Sony’s alleged track listing at this point. Suffice it for now to say that Disc 1 will contain the Memphis show, while Disc 2 will contain the Richmond show and some low-fidelity bonus tracks recorded on a personal cassette player of Elvis rehearsing a few months later for yet another Las Vegas stint.

RCA professionally recorded the March 20 Memphis concert for the album project. It is a 16-track recording (audio elements recorded on separate channels) that can be tweaked for optimum sound quality. Though I enjoyed the 2004 FTD mix over the original 1974 version, another new mix could be revealing. The Memphis show is presented in stereo.

Though the background story remains mysterious, the March 18 Richmond concert was supposedly captured as a 16-track recording, too. If so, it remains missing from the Sony vaults – lost, stolen, or erased.

The Richmond concert audio source on both the 2011 and 2014 releases is a tape copy of a mono mix-down of the 16-track recording, with artificial reverb applied. In other words, no further changes can be made to the Richmond mix or reverb since the 16-track original is unavailable. The Richmond concert is not likely to sound very different from Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis on this reissue, if at all.

While Elvis’s sound engineers often made informal reference tapes of his shows from the soundboard mixing console, the Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis liner notes in 2011 only speculated about why RCA apparently recorded the Richmond concert in multitrack.

However, the 2014 Sony press release refers to the Richmond show as a “test run concert” for the subsequent Memphis recording. Some have theorized that the test copy is in mono due to Elvis’s preference for that format over stereo, though his previous live albums had been stereo releases. Perhaps the accompanying Legacy Edition booklet will reveal new information.

Elvis at the Richmond Coliseum, March 18, 1974 (FTD)

Elvis at the Richmond Coliseum, March 18, 1974 (FTD)

In the years leading up to 1974, many of Elvis’s concerts were superior to this particular show in Richmond. However, as with the Memphis show, the fun concert features Elvis in a fantastic mood interacting with fans. Music highlights in Richmond include “Steamroller Blues,” “Polk Salad Annie,” and “Suspicious Minds.”

Over the course of 21 years, Elvis performed 15 concerts in Richmond. The 14th of these shows was captured on Forty-Eight Hours To Memphis and, from what I have read, this was Elvis’s last great concert in Richmond. He performed in Richmond one final time in 1976, but, by that point, his rising prescription drug addiction and abuse had diminished the power of his shows. Therefore, I consider the March 18, 1974, appearance to be Elvis’s true “last hurrah” in Richmond.

Legacy Questions

I am looking forward to the reissues of both the Richmond and Memphis concerts. Despite my personal enthusiasm as an Elvis fan, I find myself wondering whether these two concerts are appropriate choices for mainstream release in 2014.

I fear that the repetitive nature of these shows compared to other recent Sony releases will use up some of the goodwill shown by music critics in reviews of Elvis At Stax, Prince From Another Planet, and certain other titles released in the last few years.

Will mainstream critics and listeners understand Elvis’s sense of humor? For instance, will some misinterpret his joke in Richmond about it being a pleasure to be back in Hampton Roads as an out-of-it singer not knowing which town he was playing?

By following up 2012’s As Recorded At Madison Square Garden reissue with 2013’s Aloha From Hawaii via Satellite reissue and now 2014’s Elvis Recorded Live On Stage In Memphis reissue, is Sony simply committing the same release blunders in the 2010s that RCA made in the 1970s? Has locking into an “anniversary” theme for release choices doomed them to repeat history’s mistakes going forward?

Keep in mind that the 40th anniversary of Having Fun With Elvis On Stage is later this year as well.

All Those Lonely Times: Elvis Presley’s 20 Best Country Songs

“You see, country music was always a part of the influence on my type of music, anyway. It’s a combination of country music and gospel and rhythm & blues. All combined, that’s what it really was. As a child, I was influenced by all of that. […] Of course, the Grand Ole Opry was the first thing I ever heard, probably, but I liked the blues, and I liked the gospel music – gospel quartets and all that.” –Elvis Presley, 1970

Elvis at the Houston Astrodome, 1970

Elvis discussing country music at the Houston Astrodome, 1970

Elvis would have turned 79 today. In honor of the anniversary of his birth, here is a ranking of what I consider his 20 best country music recordings.

#1 Always On My Mind [Rehearsal] (1972)
This Is Elvis
Other notable version: 1972 Master (Separate Ways)

#2 Tryin’ To Get To You (1955)
Elvis Presley
Other notable performance: 1968 Live [rock ‘n’ roll version] (A Life In Music)

#3 I Really Don’t Want To Know (1970)
I’m 10,000 Years Old: Elvis Country
Other notable versions: 1970 Undubbed Master (I’m 10,000 Years Old: Elvis Country [2008 FTD Edition]), 1977 Live (Elvis In Concert)

#4 Kentucky Rain (1969)
Worldwide 50 Gold Award Hits, Volume 1
Other notable version: 1970 Live (Elvis Aron Presley)

#5 Tomorrow Never Comes (1970)
I’m 10,000 Years Old: Elvis Country
Other notable version: 1970 Take 2 (The Nashville Marathon)

#6 Funny How Time Slips Away (1970)
I’m 10,000 Years Old: Elvis Country
Other notable versions: 1969 Live (Today, Tomorrow & Forever), 1972 Rehearsal (Elvis On Tour: The Rehearsals)

#7 Don’t Cry Daddy (1969)
Worldwide 50 Gold Award Hits, Volume 1
Other notable versions: 1970 Live (Greatest Hits, Volume One), 1970 Live (Polk Salad Annie)

#8 Guitar Man (1967)
Clambake
Other notable performances: 1967 Undubbed/Unedited Master (Elvis Sings Guitar Man), 1968 Re-recording [rock ‘n’ roll version] (ELVIS-TV Special [Track 1]), 1968 Live [rock ‘n’ roll version] (Burbank 68), 1967 Take 5 (Elvis Sings Guitar Man)

#9 Early Morning Rain (1971)
Elvis Now
Other notable version: 1973 Re-recording (Mahalo From Elvis)

#10 Bringing It Back (1975)
Today

#11 Separate Ways (1972)
Separate Ways
Other notable version: 1972 Rehearsal (Elvis On Tour: The Rehearsals)

#12 It’s Midnight (1973)
Promised Land

#13 Good Time Charlie’s Got The Blues (1973)
Good Times
Other notable versions: 1973 Undubbed/Unedited Master (Good Times [2009 FTD Edition]), 1973 Take 7 (Good Times [2009 FTD Edition])

#14 You Don’t Know Me (1967)
Clambake

#15 Long Black Limousine (1969)
From Elvis In Memphis

#16 Pieces Of My Life (1975)
Today
Other notable version: 1975 Rough Session Mix (Today [2005 FTD Edition])

#17 Make The World Go Away (1970)
I’m 10,000 Years Old: Elvis Country
Other notable versions: 1970 Take 3 (Welcome To My World), 1970 Live (That’s The Way It Is [2000 Special Edition])

#18 For Ol’ Times Sake (1973)
Raised On Rock

#19 Clean Up Your Own Backyard [Undubbed Master] (1968)
Double Features: Live A Little, Love A Little/Charro/The Trouble With Girls/Change Of Habit
Other notable versions: 1980 Remix (Guitar Man), 1968 Master (Almost In Love)

#20 You Asked Me To [Take 2B] (1973)
Rhythm & Country
Other notable version: 1973 Master (Promised Land)

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While it is fun to make themed lists, a performance does not always fit within a definitive genre, particularly when it comes to Elvis music. Some of these selections, therefore, may not be considered “strictly country.” When in doubt, refer to the Elvis quote at the top of this post.

Happy Elvis Day 2014, everyone! May the Music be with you, always.