The Complete Elvis Presley Masters

~ Release by Elvis Presley (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

1CD: 1954–1956
2CD: 1956
3CD: 1957
4CD: 1957–1958
5CD: 1960
6CD: 1960–1961
7CD: 1961
8CD: 1961–1962
9CD: 1962–1963
10CD: 1963–1964
11CD: 1964–1965
12CD: 1965–1966
13CD: 1966
14CD: 1966–1967
15CD: 1967–1968
16CD: 1968
17CD: 1969
18CD: 1969
19CD: 1970
20CD: 1970
21CD: 1970–1971
22CD: 1971–1972
23CD: 1972
24CD: 1973
#TitleRatingLength
1Also Sprach Zarathustra
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live recording of:
Also sprach Zarathustra, Introduction (Elvis Presley's 1971-1976 concert intro; from 2001 A Space Odyssey) (on 1973-01-14)
version of:
Also sprach Zarathustra, op. 30: I. Einleitung (Sonnenaufgang)
1:11
2See See Rider
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
See See Rider Blues (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
[traditional] (special purpose artist)
part of:
Roud Folk Song Index (number: 10056)
2:59
3Burning Love
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Burning Love (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Dennis Linde
publisher:
Combine Music, Copyright Control (not for release label use! this is only for copyrights and publishing relationships), EMI Songs Ltd. and Sony/ATV Songs LLC
3:08
4Something
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Something (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
George Harrison (The Beatles)
publisher:
EMI Music Publishing (do not use as a release label!), Harrisongs Ltd. and Nichion Synch Division (NICHION, INC. Synch Division)
3:28
5You Gave Me a Mountain
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
You Gave Me a Mountain (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Marty Robbins
publisher:
Mariposa Music Inc. (publisher) and Mojave Music Inc.
3:14
6Steamroller Blues
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Steamroller Blues (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
James Taylor (singer-songwriter and guitarist)
publisher:
Country Road Music, Inc. (ASCAP-affiliated) and EMI Blackwood Music Inc.
3:02
7My Way
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
My Way (Frank Sinatra song) (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist:
Paul Anka (Canadian singer, songwriter and actor)
composer:
Claude François and Jacques Revaux
previously attributed to:
Gilles Thibaut
translator:
Bobby Cruz
publisher:
Babel Music S.A., Chrysalis Standards Inc., Don C. Publications Inc., Eddie Barclay, Jeune Musique Éditions, Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc., Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc. (song publisher, never a release label), Spanka Music, Spanka Music Corp., Thibout Music, Warner Chappell Music France, Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996), ワーナー・チャペル音楽出版 Synch事業部 (Warner/Chappell Music Japan K.K., Synch Division), ヤマハミュージックパブリッシング (Yamaha Music Publishing) (until 2017-03-31) and ヤマハミュージックエンタテインメントホールディングス (Yamaha Music Entertainment Holdings, Inc., holding company – do not use as release label) (from 2017-04-01 to present)
translated version of:
Comme d’habitude
3:49
8Love Me
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Love Me (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist:
Jerry Leiber
composer:
Mike Stoller
publisher:
Hornall Brothers Music Ltd. (limited company), Jerry Leiber Music, Mike Stoller Music (ASCAP), Quintet Music (Leiber & Stoller) and Sony/ATV Songs LLC
1:55
9Johnny B. Goode
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Johnny B. Goode (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Chuck Berry (in 1955)
publisher:
Arc Music (U.S. rock & blues publisher), Arc Music Corp. (U.S. rock & blues publisher), Isalee Music, Jewel Music Publishing Co. Ltd. (publisher; do NOT use as release label) and ロックンロール ミュージック (Rock ’n’ Roll Music)
part of:
Back to the Future: the Musical
1:43
10It’s Over
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
It’s Over (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Jimmie Rodgers (1950s pop/country singer, born in 1933; “Honeycomb”, “Kisses Sweeter Than Wine”)
publisher:
Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. (existed only since ca. 1998)
2:08
11Blue Suede Shoes
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Blue Suede Shoes (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Carl Perkins (American pioneer of rockabilly music) (in 1955)
publisher:
Aberbach (London) (publisher), Carl Perkins Music Inc., Carlin Music Corp., EMI Music Publishing (do not use as a release label!), Hi Lo Music, Hill and Range Songs, Inc. (publisher), Unichappell Music, Unichappell Music, Inc. and Wren Music Co.
part of:
Million Dollar Quartet (jukebox musical, book by Floyd Mutrux and Colin Escott)
1:15
12I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Hank Williams (country music legend)
publisher:
Sony/ATV Music Publishing (Germany) GmbH (2002–today), Acuff-Rose Publications, Inc. (BMI) (on 1949-10-31) and Sony/ATV Acuff Rose Music (tradename of Sony/ATV Songs LLC) (from 2002 to present)
2:14
13I Can’t Stop Loving You
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
I Can’t Stop Lovin’ You (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Don Gibson (US songwriter and country musician)
publisher:
Acuff-Rose-Opryland Music Limited (UK), Sony/ATV Songs LLC and Acuff-Rose Publications, Inc. (BMI) (on 1958-02-07)
2:28
14Hound Dog
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Hound Dog (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist:
Jerry Leiber (on 1952-08-12)
composer:
Mike Stoller (on 1952-08-12)
previously attributed to:
Johnny Otis
publisher:
Chappell Morris Ltd., Cherry Lane, Cherry Lane Music, Cherry Lane Music Publishing, Elvis Presley Music, Gladys Music, Lion Publishing Co., MCA Music Inc. (US-based music publishers), MCA Music Ltd., MCA Music Publishing (renamed since c. 1996 as Universal Music Publishing Group), Sony/ATV Songs LLC, Universal Music Publishing (use ONLY if no country‐specific information is available), Universal/MCA Music (music publisher; do not use as release label!), Williamson Music Company and Williamson Music, Inc.
0:53
15What Now My Love
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
What Now My Love (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist:
Pierre Delanoë
composer:
Gilbert Bécaud
translator:
Carl Sigman
publisher:
BMG Songs, Inc., Major Songs, Music Sales Corporation (American copyright holder in both popular and classical music), Remick Music Corp. and Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
translated version of:
Et maintenant
3:12
16Fever
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Fever (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Eddie Cooley and John Davenport (songwriter Otis Blackwell)
publisher:
Carlin Music Corp., Chrysalis Songs, Fort Knox Music, Fort Knox Music Co, Fort Knox Music Inc., Jay & Cee Music, Lark Music Ltd., Trio Music (publisher), Trio Music Co., Inc. and Trio Music Company
part of:
The Adjustment Bureau
2:46
17Welcome to My World
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
Welcome to My World (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Johnny Hathcock and Ray Winkler
publisher:
Neillrae Music, Sony/ATV Songs LLC and Sony/ATV Tree Publishing
1:52
18Suspicious Minds
engineer:
Al Pachucki
producer:
Felton Jarvis and Chips Moman
bass:
Tommy Cogbill (on 1969-01-23) and Mike Leech (on 1969-01-23)
drums (drum set):
Gene Chrisman (on 1969-01-23)
guitar:
Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1969-01-23) and Reggie Young (guitarist and songwriter) (on 1969-01-23)
organ:
Bobby Emmons (on 1969-01-23)
piano:
Bobby Wood (American pianist, keyboard player and songwriter) (on 1969-01-23)
steel guitar:
John Hughey (on 1969-01-23)
lead vocals:
Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1969-01-22)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps, The Sweet Inspirations and Kathy Westmoreland
arranger:
Mike Leech and Glen Spreen (Arranger, keyboardist, producer, conductor, and songwriter)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Entertainment (in 1969), BMG Music (in 1969, in 1973), RCA Corporation (formerly Radio Corporation of America till late 1960s, became BMG Music in 1986) (in 1969), RCA Records (not for release label use! for the imprint, please use “RCA” instead) (in 1973) and Sony BMG Music Entertainment (Aug 5, 2004 – Oct 1, 2008) (in 2002)
recorded at:
American Sound Studio ((Defunct) Memphis, TN - American North) in Memphis, Tennessee, United States (on 1969-01-23) and United Recording Studios (Las Vegas) in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States (on 1969-08-07)
part of:
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (as at 2016-06-10) (number: 91) and Billboard: The 500 Best Pop Songs (as of October 2023) (number: 363)
cover recording of:
Suspicious Minds (from 1969-01-23 until 1969-08-07)
lyricist and composer:
Mark James (Francis Zambon, composer of “Suspicious Minds”)
publisher:
Laetrec Music, Press Music Co., Screen Gems–EMI Music, Inc. (USA, affiliated with BMI), Sony/ATV Music Publishing (UK) Ltd. and Sony/ATV Songs LLC
4.14:25
19Introductions by Elvis1:39
20I’ll Remember You
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
I’ll Remember You (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Kui Lee (Hawaii, 1932–1966)
publisher:
Herb Montei Music
2:27
21Long Tall Sally / Whole Lot‐ta Shakin’ Goin’ On
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live medley including a cover recording of:
Long Tall Sally (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Enotris Johnson (on 1955-11-29), Richard Wayne Penniman (on 1955-11-29) and Robert Alexander Blackwell (on 1955-11-29)
publisher:
ATV Music, Blackwood Music Inc. (1953-02-07–1987-12-30), Peermusic (UK) Ltd., Sony/ATV Songs LLC, Southern Music Publishing Company Limited, Unichappell Music and Venice Music
live medley including a cover recording of:
Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Sunny David (US rockabilly pianist & songwriter) and Dave “Curly” Williams
publisher:
Cherio Music Publishers, Inc., EMI Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS‐affiliated), Marlyn Music Publishing Inc. (also displayed as “Marlyn Music Publishers Inc.” on releases), Marlyn Music Publishing Ltd., Ni'Mani Entertainment Co. (ASCAP-affiliated) and Whole Lotta Shakin' Music
2:04
22An American Trilogy
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
An American Trilogy (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and arranger:
Mickey Newbury (American songwriter)
publisher:
Acuff-Rose Publications, Inc. (BMI) and Sony/ATV Acuff Rose Music (tradename of Sony/ATV Songs LLC)
medley of:
Dixie
medley of:
All My Trials
medley of:
Battle Hymn of the Republic
4:29
23A Big Hunk o’ Love
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live cover recording of:
A Big Hunk o’ Love (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Aaron Schroeder (1950s~1960s US songwriter) and Sid Wyche
publisher:
A. Schroeder, Carlin Music Corporation, Cherry River Music, Chrysalis Songs, Elvis Presley Music Inc., Minder Music Ltd., R&H Music, Rachel’s Own Music, Regent Music (BMI) and Williamson Music Company
2:06
24Can’t Help Falling in Love
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14), Elvis Presley (“The King of Rock and Roll”) (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
orchestra:
Joe Guercio & His Orchestra (on 1973-01-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
BMG Music (in 1973)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
live recording of:
Can’t Help Falling in Love (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Luigi Creatore, Hugo Peretti and George David Weiss
publisher:
Aberbach Musikverlag (German publisher), ABG EPE Gladys Music, Carlin Music Corporation, Cherry Lane Music, Chrysalis Music (music publisher, ASCAP-affiliated), Gladys Music, Gladys Music (Joachim Jean Aberbach), Gladys Music Elvis Presley Enterprises LLC, Gladys Music Inc., INTERSONG International Musikverlag G.m.b.H. (German publisher), Luigi Creatore Music (ASCAP) and The Manor Music Co. Ltd.
sub-publisher:
日音 (NICHION INC.) (ended), フジパシフィックミュージック (Fujipacific Music, Inc.), ヤマハミュージックEH(CM) (Yamaha Music EH(CM)) and 日音 Synch事業部 (NICHION, INC. Synch Division)
is based on:
Plaisir d’amour (Romance du chevrier)
2:44
25Blue Hawaii
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
cover recording of:
Blue Hawaii (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist:
Leo Robin (US composer, lyricist & songwriter)
composer:
Ralph Rainger
publisher:
Famous Music Corporation (renamed since 2007‐05 as Sony/ATV Harmony/Melody), Sony/ATV Harmony and ソニー・ミュージックパブリッシング A事業部 (Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc., A Division)
2:31
26Ku‐U‐I‐Po
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
cover recording of:
Ku u i po (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Luigi Creatore, Hugo Peretti and George David Weiss
publisher:
Abilene Music Inc. and The Songwriters Guild
2:04
27No More
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
cover recording of:
No More (on 1973-01-14)
writer:
Hal Blair and Don Robertson (composer & instrumentalist)
composer:
Sebastián Iradier (Best know for “La paloma”)
publisher:
Chrysalis Music (music publisher, ASCAP-affiliated), Don Robertson Music Corp. and Gladys Music Inc.
translated version of:
La paloma (Spanish original)
2:28
28Hawaiian Wedding Song
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
cover recording of:
Hawaiian Wedding Song (on 1973-01-14)
composer:
Charles E. King (known as the composer of “Ke kali nei au”)
translator:
Al Hoffman (in 1958) and Dick Manning (American songwriter) (in 1958)
publisher:
Al Hoffman Songs Inc., Charles E. King Music Co., MCA, Inc. (this was the US media company that became Universal Studios, Inc. in Dec 1996), Universal Music Corp. (USA, affiliated with ASCAP), Universal Music Publishing Group Japan (work publisher – do NOT use as a release label), Universal‐MCA Music Publishing (US) and シンコーミュージック・エンタテイメント (Shinko Music Entertainment Co., Ltd.)
translated version of:
Ke Kali Nei Au
1:54
29Early Mornin’ Rain
bass:
Jerry Scheff (on 1973-01-14)
drums (drum set):
Ronnie Tutt (drummer) (on 1973-01-14)
guitar:
James Burton (guitarist) (on 1973-01-14), Charlie Hodge (on 1973-01-14) and John Wilkinson (known world-wide as the rhythm guitar player of Elvis Presley) (on 1973-01-14)
piano:
Glen D. Hardin (on 1973-01-14)
vocals:
J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (on 1973-01-14), The Sweet Inspirations (on 1973-01-14) and Kathy Westmoreland (on 1973-01-14)
recorded at:
Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States (on 1973-01-14)
cover recording of:
Early Mornin’ Rain (on 1973-01-14)
lyricist and composer:
Gordon Lightfoot
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Early Morning Music, M. Witmark & Sons, Moose Music, Warner Bros. Music Corp., Warner/Chappell Music Ltd. (1996–2019) and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019)
2:53
25CD: 1973
26CD: 1973–1975
27CD: 1975–1977
28CD: Outtakes and Alternates I
29CD: Outtakes and Alternates II
30CD: Outtakes and Alternates III