Gillian
Gaar, the US writer and author of several books on Elvis, has taken me to task
for making sweeping generalisations about Elvis’ post-Army career, of
which I am guilty. So after ‘Mystery Train’ I listened to some later Elvis on
the way home last night and will now put the record straight.
The immediate post-army LP Elvis Is Back (1960) captures some of
the excitement of his best fifties work, and the gospel albums His Hand In Mine (1960) and How Great Though Art (1967) convey genuine
sincerity. The famous come-back ‘Singer’ TV special in 1968 signalled a massive
upturn in Elvis’ fortunes, and rightly so, while his shows during the early
years in Vegas were electrifying, and not just because seeing Elvis on stage
again was a thrill in itself.
Elsewhere, there are isolated high
points before the 1969 Memphis sessions, most notably his recording of
‘Tomorrow Is A Long Time’, the Bob Dylan song, which appears on the otherwise
worthless Spinout LP (1966) and which
in a subsequent interview Dylan chose as his favourite interpretation of his
own material. There is at least an album’s worth of classy tracks from the
dozen or so studio albums Elvis released in the early seventies – try ‘How The
Web Was Woven’, ‘Mary In The Morning’, ‘Promised
Land’, ‘I Just Can’t Help Believing’, ‘Always On My Mind’ (surely addressed to
Priscilla), ‘Hurt’ and ‘Burning Love’ for starters. Finally, if you’re prepared
to wade through them all, the many concert albums released during Elvis’ final
decade offer glimpses of how the King could still kick up a storm when he was
in the right mood.
Still
prefer ‘Mystery Train’ though.
2 comments:
What, no "From Elvis In Memphis" (1969) ?
I mention the Memphis sessions the post below, and this was a review of all bar those recordings.
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