Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Elvis Presley Pictures
Artist:
Elvis Presley
Origin:
United States, Memphis - Tennessee (Born in Mississippi)United States
Born date:
January 8, 1935
Death date:
August 16, 1977
Elvis Presley Album: «Elvis Presley (1st Album)»
Elvis Presley Album: «Elvis Presley (1st Album)» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.8 of 5)
  • Title:Elvis Presley (1st Album)
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Review - Product Description
MONO issue of his first GREAT album remastered and expanded with 6 bonus tracks. Booklet has light 'pinch' mark. Scuffs and tiny spots on disc will not affect play. SM.
Customer review
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
- Elvis Presley: The First Rock'n'Roll Album ?

I have an appreciation for many forms of music but my musical growth stemmed from this one seed. This was the first album I ever bought when I was 9 or 10 years old (1973). Of all the music I've enjoyed in my life, my favourite genres are Rhythm & Blues, Rockabilly and Rock'n'Roll. And in the center of this musical era, you can't avoid Elvis Presley. If you collect the finest albums of the Rock'n'Roll/Rock period, this album is a must!

At the time that this album was originally released (March-April 1956), Elvis was a singles artist having only his smash hit single 'Heartbreak Hotel'/'I Was the One' on the national charts. RCA Victor's A&R man, Steve Sholes (supervisor of country and R&B recordings and the man who purchased Elvis and his Sun recordings from Sam Phillips in 1955) assembled this album from the collection of Sun singles and new RCA Victor Nashville recordings (Elvis' first RCA recording session, January 1956) where Sholes hoped to replicate the Sun sound.

The result is an album that documents an emerging new sound that will not only excite millions of young ears but will also influence many Rock, Pop and Country music artists all around North America and, more interestingly in terms of Rock history, overseas. The new sound here is Rockabilly and what we're hearing is a classic '50s Rockabilly quartet: Scotty Moore on electric, lead guitar, Bill Black on acoustic "doghouse" bass, D.J. Fontana on drums (lots of snare), and Elvis as the centerpiece, with vocals, acoustic guitar, and, for the stage audiences, gyratin' visuals. Elvis envisioned himself as a Pop ballad singer (a la Dean Martin) but this was the new style and sound that Sam Phillips, who originally produced and recorded black R&B talent at Sun Records, convinced him would make him stand out and be noticed. From 1954 to 1956, Elvis and the band honed this sound to a unique style through the sessions at Sun and through continuous live performances throughout the South. This, now, is the point where Elvis and his new sound is moving from being a regional phenomenon (via the regional Sun singles recordings, live stage performances and local radio play) to a becoming a national sensation (via a big-time record label, along with its publicity machine, and national television appearances).

Elvis came to form in a truly unique period in American music history and his style and tastes were formulated from many musical sources available to him in the early- to mid-1950s Memphis, Tennessee region: Gospel, black Rhythm & Blues/Rock'n'Roll, Pop, Country and Hillbilly (from which he helped develop Rockabilly). These sounds merged at this time and Elvis did not discriminate. He was infuenced in them all and he let them pour out developing his own style and genre.

Most of the selections were covers of other records by other artists but it's the sound that was cutting-edge, new and exciting. Five of the selections are Sun Session recordings on an album for the first time. The others are new Country and Rockabilly recordings including then-Rockabilly king, Carl Perkins' 'Blue Suede Shoes' which was one of Elvis' staple live-performance numbers along with the Ray Charles, Little Richard, Joe Turner and Lloyd Price R&B covers included in the selection. I find it interesting that his covers of the R&B tunes are the most hard-hitting rockabilly numbers on the album. Critics of Elvis who diminish his contributions to Popular/Rock music due to his frequent use of cover tunes, especially those of black R&B artists. Elvis was never about "writing his own songs." Elvis was about style, performance, talent and originality. Let the Beatles and the Rolling Stones be famous for writing their own songs (even though many of their early recordings were cover songs). For me, Elvis has been the focal point from which I have been able to research my fond interests in black Rhythm & Blues music (c. 1941-62) and old Country (c. 1928-70).

Selections 3 through 14 make up the original selections from this classic album. The remaining six tracks are bonus selections which were originally three 7-inch singles recorded during the same session period.

And the album cover! It was a uniquely simple creation, a '50s-style design classic in itself!

Each time I listen to this seminal album, I am awed to be taken back to a truly original sound that would launch a great new era of music that has become known to us as the Rock Era! To complete the journey, I recommend this CD along with one of Elvis' Sun Session collections.

'Elvis Presley': The new sound of Rock'n'Roll, the "fad" that never died!

Customer review
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
- Not the original album, but just as great

This has 6 extra tracks which were recorded at the same time as the original 12, so this isn't an exact duplicate of RCA's first gold record or the first rock 'n roll album to hit #1 on the charts.

As such, I consider this a landmark album along with the Sun Sessions, Memories: The '68 Comeback Special, That's The Way It Is, and 30 #1 Hits. Each of these captures a very important side of Elvis.

This album is the still raw Elvis, maybe a bit more polished than during his Sun days, and more into a mixture of R&B, country, and rock than in his basically rockabilly days, although some of those are here too.

Some of his best such as "Heartbreak Hotel", "Blue Suede Shoes", "Tutti Frutti", "Shake Rattle And Roll", "I Got A Woman", and "Money Money" are here.

If you don't have any Elvis at all, I recommend Elvis 30 #1 Hits first, but follow that one up with this great CD.

Customer review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- When his talent was raw and incomparable.

This expertly produced collection of his early hits offers the listener a tantalizing glimpse of the originality and depth of his awesome talent BEFORE his voice was homogenized for mass consumption. Upon listening to this very special collection, it will instantly become your favorite Elvis album as it speaks to you of the hope and promise that once was.

Customer review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- Go, go, go!

This is a reissue of Elvis Presley's first album. The album featured seven songs recorded in January of 1956, and five Sun Records songs that were previously unissued (some of which dated back to 1954). The album almost perfectly mirrored Elvis' taste. Only gospel music went unrepresented. There were current hits and almost-current hits, R&B classics, country standards, pop standards and original songs submitted before the sessions. It's all really great stuff. The CD adds six bonus tracks, which were recorded between January and April of 1956. Highly recommended.

Customer review
- The Birth of Rock 'n Roll

Rock 'n Roll basically is a fusion between (white) country and (black) rhythm & blues. Elvis was the first to perfect this combination and perform it in such a way that both strands were equally cherished and not used for commercial gain.

Elvis had a genuine love of black music and his first recordings are definite odes to that music style that he grw up with in Memphis, and not a ploy to tap black music to make more money in the white market (aka Pat Boonism).

The choices for covers are for songs that were already big hits in the r&b field and important already. Ray Charles' 'I Got A Woman', Llord Price's 'Lawdy Miss Clawdy', Little Richards' 'Tutti Frutti' are all great examples. He also sings 'Shake, Rattle & Roll' which another white singer had done before him, but where Bill Haley takes all the sex out of the song Elvis leaves some in.

It's not the collected Sun Sessions who are truely remarkable. There are some shimmers here already of the schmalzy pop singer he would become, but his versions of 'Blue Moon' and 'Heartbreak Hotel' are historic.