Side B
1.
(I Can’t Get No)
Satisfaction
2.
Get Off Of My Cloud
3.
As Tears Go By
4.
19th Nervous
Breakdown
5.
Lady Jane
6.
Time Is On My Side
7.
Little Red Rooster
June
16 - Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) (US version)
Side
A
1.
(I Can’t Get No)
Satisfaction
2.
The Last Time
3.
As Tears Go By
4.
Time Is On My Side
5.
It’s All Over Now
6.
Tell Me
Side B
1.
19th Nervous
Breakdown
2.
Heart Of Stone
3.
Get Off Of My Cloud
4.
Not Fade Away
5.
Good Times, Bad Times
6.
Play With Fire
June
16 - Flowers
Side
A
1.
Ruby Tuesday
2.
Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby,
Standing In The Shadow?
3.
Let’s Spend The Night
Together
4.
Lady Jane
5.
Out Of Time
6.
My Girl
Side B
1.
Back Street Girl
2.
Please Go Home
3.
Mother’s Little Helper
4.
Take It Or Leave It
5.
Ride On, Baby
6.
Sittin’ On A Fence
July
14 - Metamorphosis
Side
A
1.
Out Of Time
2.
Don’t Lie To Me
3.
Somethings Just Stick In Your
Mind
4.
Each and Every Day of the
Year
5.
Heart Of Stone
6.
I'd Much Rather Be With The
Boys
7.
(Walkin' Thru The) Sleepy
City
8.
We’re Wastin’ Time
9.
Try A Little Harder
Side B
1.
I Don't Know Why
2.
If You Let Me
3.
Jiving Sister Fanny
4.
Downtown Suzie
5.
Family
6.
Memo From Turner
7.
I'm Going Down
September
15 - Out Of Our Heads (US version)
Side
A
1.
Mercy Mercy
2.
Hitch Hike
3.
The Last Time
4.
That’s How Strong My Love
Is
5.
Good Times
6.
I’m Alright (Live)
Side B
1.
(I Can’t Get No)
Satisfaction
2.
Cry To Me
3.
The Under Assistant West Coast
Promotion Man
4.
Play With Fire
5.
The Spider And The Fly
6.
One More Try
September
15 - Out Of Our Heads (UK version)
Side
A
1.
She Said Yeah
2.
Mercy Mercy
3.
Hitch Hike
4.
That’s How Strong My Love
Is
5.
Good Times
6.
Gotta Get Away
Side B
1.
Talkin’ ‘Bout You
2.
Cry To Me
3.
Oh, Baby (We Got A Good Thing
Goin’)
4.
Heart Of Stone
5.
The Under Assistant West Coast
Promotion Man
6.
I’m Free
October
6 - England’s Newest Hit Makers
Side
A
1.
Not Fade Away
2.
Route 66
3.
I Just Want To Make Love To You
4.
Honest I Do
5.
Now I’ve Got A Witness
6.
Little By Little
Side
B
1.
I’m A King Bee
2.
Carol
3.
Tell Me
4.
Can I Get A Witness
5.
You Can Make It If You Try
6.
Walking The Dog
October
20 - Through The Past Darkly (Big Hits Vol. 2) (UK
version)
Side
A
1.
Jumpin' Jack Flash
2.
Mother’s Little Helper
3.
2,000 Light Years From Home
4.
Let’s Spend The Night
Together
5.
You Better Move On
6.
We Love You
Side B
1.
Street Fighting Man
2.
She’s A Rainbow
3.
Ruby Tuesday
4.
Dandelion
5.
Sittin’ On The Fence
6.
Honky Tonk Women
November
10 - Through The Past Darkly (Big Hits Vol. 2) (US version)
Side
A
1.
Paint It, Black
2.
Ruby Tuesday
3.
She's a Rainbow
4.
Jumpin' Jack Flash
5.
Mother's Little Helper
6.
Let's Spend the Night
Together
Side B
1.
Honky Tonk Women
2.
Dandelion
3.
2000 Light Years from Home
4.
Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby,
Standing in the Shadow?
5.
Street Fighting Man
December
1 - The Rolling Stones No. 2
Side
A
1.
Everybody Needs Somebody To Love
(Version 2)
2.
Down Home Girl
3.
You Can’t Catch Me
4.
Time Is On My Side (Version
2)
5.
What A Shame
6.
Grown Up Wrong
Side B
1.
Down The Road Apiece
2.
Under The Boardwalk
3.
I Can't Be Satisfied
4.
Pain In My Heart
5.
Off The Hook
6.
Suzie-Q
December
1 - December’s Children (And Everybody’s)
Side
A
1.
She Said Yeah
2.
Talkin’ ‘Bout You
3.
You Better Move On
4.
Look What You’ve Done
5.
The Singer Not he Song
6.
Route 66 (Live)
Side B
1.
Get Off Of My Cloud
2.
I’m Free
3.
As Tears Go By
4.
Gotta Get Away
5.
Blue Turns To Grey
6.
I’m Moving On (Live)
December
1 - Got Live If You Want It!
Side
A
1.
Under My Thumb
2.
Get Off Of My Cloud
3.
Lady Jane
4.
Not Fade Away
5.
I’ve Been Loving You Too Long
6.
Fortune Teller
Side
B
1.
The Last Time
2.
19th Nervous Breakdown
3.
Time Is On My Side
4.
I’m Alright
5.
Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby,
Standing In The Shadow?
6.
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Coming
In 2024:
The
Rolling Stones, Now!
Side
A
1.
Everybody Needs Somebody To Love
(Version 1)
2.
Down Home Girl
3.
You Can’t Catch Me
4.
Heart Of Stone
5.
What A Shame
6.
Mona (I Need You Baby)
Side B
1.
Down The Road Apiece
2.
Off The Hook
3.
Pain In My Heart
4.
Oh, Baby (We Got A Good Thing
Goin’)
5.
Little Red Rooster
6.
Surprise, Surprise
The
Rolling Stones (UK version)
Side
A
1.
Route 66
2.
I Just Want To Make Love To
You
3.
Honest I Do
4.
Mona (I Need You Baby)
5.
Now I’ve Got A Witness
6.
Little By Little
Side B
1.
I’m A King Bee
2.
Carol
3.
Tell Me
4.
Can I Get A Witness
5.
You Can Make It If You
Try
6.
Walking The Dog
|
|
|
|
Speaking of The Rolling
Stones, we already know that Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr make guest
appearances on the band’s new LP …
But now comes word
that former bassist Bill Wyman will also be on board for a track, described
as a “tribute to Charlie” … which presented sort of a “How can I say no” situation!
(Wyman last
appeared on a Stones album in 1989!
He joined them on stage for a couple of songs as part of their 50th
Anniversary Tour when they appeared in London in 2012 … but even that is
already eleven years ago!)
According to an unnamed source speaking to the Sun, Wyman flew
out to Los Angeles several months ago to join the Stones' recording
sessions in Los Angeles at the invitation of Mick Jagger. "Bill hasn't seen the band together
for years, but always loved Charlie.
This record's really a tribute to Charlie, so he couldn't say
no."
Anxiously awaiting its release! (kk)
ELVIS IS
BACK --- AGAIN ---
Elvis Presley’s Aloha Album is Back!
Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Aloha From Havaii via Satellite |
Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite is the apogee of an
astounding career trajectory that began with Elvis' return to live
performance in 1968 with an electrifying "comeback" television
special that restored him to pop dominance after a seven year hiatus from
the concert stage. By 1973, Elvis was a living legend whose status as the
world's first atomic-powered singer in the 1950s had evolved into movie
stardom before his return to live performance generated a new iconography
of Elvis. His watershed global telecast was the first full-length concert
by any musician to be beamed around the world over communications
satellites newly orbiting the earth in ever increasing numbers. A half
century later, the live album and concert film from that performance are
perhaps the most revelatory documents of the live shows that Elvis poured
so much of his heart and soul into during the 1970s.
The 50th anniversary edition of Elvis Aloha from Hawaii via
Satellite — newly remixed and remastered for the occasion — will
be available in a 3CD + Blu-ray combined package as well as in 2LP and
digital configurations on August 11, 2023. |
|
|
Yep …
RCA Records
celebrates the 50th Anniversary of Elvis Presley’s “Aloha From
Hawaii” concert and album … with a new commemorative set that captures the
full live performance (plus some bonus studio tracks), the afternoon
rehearsal show, and a BluRay of the concert itself as it was beamed via
satellite all over the world. (I bought the Quad 2-Record LP Set when it first came out in 1973 ... only quad album in my entire collection ... ever!!! I guess it just never caught on. Most people probably have their copy sitting on top of their Betamax machines these day, right next to their 8-track players.) kk
Harvey Kubernik
tells us …
RCA Records & Legacy Recordings Celebrating the
50th Anniversary of Elvis Presley's Monumental Aloha from Hawaii via
Satellite Worldwide Broadcast & Top-Selling Double Album with Release
of Definitive Deluxe Edition on Friday, August 11
Elvis
Presley Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite
50th Anniversary January 2023; 1973 Event Viewed by 1.5 Billion People;
Harvey Kubernik Reissue Producer Interview
with Ernst Mikael Jorgensen
-- Harvey Kubernik Copyright © 2023
RCA
Records and Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music
Entertainment, will release the definitive 50th anniversary edition of Elvis
Presley's monumental Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite record-setting global
concert telecast/double live album on Friday, August 11.
The
50th anniversary edition of Elvis Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite -- newly
remixed and remastered for the occasion -- will be available in a 3CD + Blu-ray
combined package as well as in 2LP and digital configurations.
A
press announcement from RCA/Legacy Recordings describes the upcoming product.
"Elvis Presley’s Graceland in Memphis will present Elvis: Aloha from Hawaii 50th Anniversary
Concert on August 16, 2023 as part of Elvis Week 2023. In
addition, earlier that day, Sony will present a free Aloha from
Hawaii Q&A and Listening Event at the Guest House Theater at 1:00 pm.
Tickets for the concert and free listening event are available
at ElvisWeek.com.
"Recorded live on January 12 and 14, 1973 at the Honolulu
International Center Arena (capacity approximately 6000) and beamed into an
estimated billion-plus television sets around the world, Aloha from Hawaii via
Satellite made a new kind of broadcast history as Elvis and emerging global
satellite technology instantaneously connected a major artist with his audience
in previously unprecedented numbers.
"Initially, Elvis' January 14th concert was telecast live via
satellite to viewers in Asia and Oceania and presented with a delay in January
in Europe. Needing to avoid a programming conflict with Super Bowl VII while
also acknowledging that the film "Elvis on Tour" was enjoying an actively
successful run in US movie theaters, NBC decided to air their ninety-minute
version of Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite (featuring bonus performances
recorded for the stateside broadcast) on April 4, 1973. Aloha from Hawaii
became NBC's highest-rated program of the year.
"Feeling the heat from the Aloha
from Hawaii via Satellite global telecast, RCA Records fast-tracked a
companion double album soundtrack into production with first pressings hitting
US stores on February 4, 1973. The album was Elvis' first #1 in years, peaking
at #1 on the Billboard pop and country charts, becoming the fastest-selling
chart-topping album of Elvis' career.
"The 50th anniversary edition of Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite is produced by Ernst Jørgensen and
newly mixed by Grammy® Award-winning recording engineer Matt-Ross Spang. The
set includes the original concert, rehearsal show and unique after-show
recordings and rehearsals including "Blue Hawaii," "Hawaiian
Wedding Song," "No More" and "Early Morning Rain."
"The deluxe set includes a 28-page booklet featuring in-depth liner
notes penned by lifelong Elvis fan/respected music critic Randy Lewis, rare
photos and memorabilia from the event, and the first-ever visual release of Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite on
Blu-ray.
"Aloha from Hawaii via
Satellite is the apogee of an astounding career trajectory that began with
Elvis' return to live performance in 1968 with an electrifying
"comeback" television special that restored him to pop dominance
after a seven year hiatus from the concert stage. By 1973, Elvis was a living
legend whose status as the world's first atomic-powered singer in the 1950s had
evolved into movie stardom before his return to live performance generated a
new iconography of Elvis. His watershed global telecast was the first
full-length concert by any musician to be beamed around the world over
communications satellites newly orbiting the earth in ever increasing numbers.
A half century later, the live album and concert film from that performance are
perhaps the most revelatory documents of the live shows that Elvis poured so
much of his heart and soul into during the 1970s.
"The 50th anniversary edition of Elvis Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite presents, for the first time
in one authorized package, the entirety of the original January 14, 1973
performance, the previous night's dress rehearsal with a live audience
(recorded in case of technical mishaps during the satellite transmission),
several bonus tracks inserted into the US broadcast of the event and a Blu-ray
transfer of the concert film.
"Archival producer Ernst Mikael Jørgensen and Memphis-based
recording engineer Matt Ross-Spang have fully remixed the album from the
original 16-track live recordings—first captured on tape by esteemed mobile
engineer Wally Heider and newly digitized for this release with audiophile
24-bit, 192 KHz transfers--to bring fans a fresh listen to what, for many, is
the most treasured performance of Elvis' latter-day years on the road. "To
me," Jørgensen said, "that is the biggest thing: [this album] never
sounded this good and Elvis never sounded this good.'"
The musicians
backing Presley in his Hawaiian performances are: Guitar: James Burton; Guitar:
John Wilkinson; Guitar & Vocals: Charlie Hodge; Bass: Jerry Scheff; Drums:
Ronnie Tutt; Piano and Glen Hardin. Vocal support came from J.D. Sumner &
The Stamps, The Sweet Inspirations, and Kathy Westmoreland, all collectively
augmented by The Joe Guercio Orchestra.
In the four and a half years between the '68 special and Aloha from Hawaii, Elvis woodshedded his act with a
rigorous series of live performances—over 500--in which he re-asserted the role
he'd established in the '50s as one of the most electrifying performers of his
generation.
Both in Las Vegas and on tour to various parts of the United States,
Presley refined and expanded his mastery of musical interpretation of songs
long associated with him, while also putting his distinctive stamp on classic
and more recent material first popularized by artists as beloved as The
Beatles, Frank Sinatra, James Taylor, Hank Williams, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee
Lewis, Ray Charles, Jim Reeves and Hawaii's own Kuiokalani "Kui" Lee.
The Aloha from Hawaii via
Satellite program was produced and directed by television veteran Marty
Pasetta, who'd done specials for Bing Crosby, Perry Como, Glen Campbell and had
experience in Hawaii with Don Ho. Pasetta employed split screen techniques and
quick cuts to mirror the energy Elvis & Co. put out on stage. The telecast
also regularly offered extreme close-ups bringing viewers into contact with
Elvis with an intimacy that even those in the audience didn't have.
Over the decades I’ve interviewed musicians
who recorded with Elvis Presley: Scotty Moore, Glen D. Hardin and James
Burton. Former RCA publicist Grelun
Landon, who headed Public Affairs for the label in Hollywood arranged for me to
attend a slew of Elvis 1971-1976 concerts and meet Presley’s manager, Colonel
Tom Parker.
Landon also invited me to tour the RCA
recording facilities with Presley entourage members and RCA executives. Elvis
had recently been in one RCA studio room cutting vocals. In early January
`1973, I watched the initial live feed broadcast of his landmark satellite
concert from Hawaii, released to retail outlets as Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite, which celebrated a 50th
anniversary in mid-January 2023.
Imagine hearing Elvis Presley’s magnificent
voice isolated on those big Altec 604E Super Duplex speakers while actually
being inside the environs of RCA, where Andrew Loog Oldham produced the
1964-1967 recording sessions of the Rolling Stones.
I
glimpsed Elvis once in Dr. Morris Feldman’s Picwood Dental Office in West Los
Angeles nearby the M-G-M studio in Culver City on a Saturday afternoon during
the summer of 1967. Presley arrived
in a Rolls Royce, flanked by two guys, walked into the waiting room and gave a
smile. When it was my turn for the chair, Dr. Feldman told me Elvis broke a
tooth during the filming of a movie called Speedway.
I had penned the 5,000 word liner note booklet
for their 40th edition the label issued in 2008. In 2007 I was
interviewed for M-G-M Home Entertainment DVD deluxe version of Presley’s
feature film Viva Las Vegas.
I asked poet/actor
Harry E. Northup, who attended the March 1961 Elvis Presley benefit concert in
Hawaii, about that memorable event, and Presley scholar, writer/musician Gary
Pig Gold, about Presley’s legendary return to Hawaii in 1973.
Harry E. Northup: I
saw Elvis in Hawaii in 1961.
“When I was a teenager living in a
small town in Western Nebraska, I fell in love with Elvis Presley’s songs and
listened to them over and over. ‘Don’t Be Cruel’ was and is my favorite. When I
was 17, I joined the US Navy. After Radio School, I was sent to Oahu where I
was stationed at Pearl Harbor. On March 25th, 1961, I saw Elvis in a concert at
the Bloch Arena, in Pearl Harbor. It was a benefit on behalf of the Memorial Fund of the battleship USS
Arizona.
The audience was mostly service men. I
sat in the balcony, stage right. He sang ‘Love Me Tender,’ ‘Hound Dog,’ ‘Don’t
Be Cruel,’ among many others. He was electric; each time he made a move, even
if it was with his little finger, the audience went wild. He was the King. Men
and women loved Elvis.
“I remember seeing a man dressed in a suit.
He was carrying an attache case. A sailor buddy told me it was Colonel Parker.
That was Elvis’ last public appearance for many years because he started making
movies.
“GI
Blues is one of my favorite films of his because of the Army setting, the
love theme and the lyrical songs that he sang. I feel grateful to have seen
Elvis in such a perfect setting when he was young, clean cut and handsome.”
Gary Pig Gold: Elvis
and the 50th State long enjoyed a close relationship – 1961's USS Arizona benefit concert then
box-office-busting Blue
Hawaii, not to mention Paradise,
Hawaiian Style five years later (actually, perhaps we shouldn't mention that one) –
and the islands had frequently been a favored vacation spot for The
King and his courtiers," reminds reluctant haole Gary Pig Gold.
"It seems only fitting then that what
turned out to be Elvis' final, and perhaps biggest of all bangs beamed
clear 'cross the universe out of the Honolulu International
Convention Center Arena minutes after midnight on January 14,
1973. Twenty-three songs in just under 80 minutes with 6,000-plus in
attendance, $75,000 raised for the Kui Lee Cancer Fund, $2.5 million in production
costs, over a quarter-million double QuadraDisc™ soundtrack albums moved
within ten days ...and, most Earth-shattering – literally! – of all
at the time? A satellite viewing audience 'in excess of one billion people.' At
least according to the Colonel.
"Whatever these numbers may truly
be, the performance itself was truly extraordinary; the TCB Band by this point
having spent countless Instamatic flashcube-illuminated hours on stage honing
their sets to a flawless peak-and-valley-then-peak-again running order. And to
demonstrate just how seriously Elvis himself took this event can be judged via
his even more punishing than usual pre-Aloha fitness regimen: Drastically
increased daily karate workouts under the supervision of Master Kang Rhee helped
along with, according to those nearby, megavitamin vials, large quantities of
protein drink, weighted racquetball workouts, diet pills by the handful,
mineral water by the gallon and a daily injection understood to include the
urine of a pregnant woman.
“Nevertheless, come show time Elvis had
'dropped down to 165 pounds; thin as a rake and more handsome than ten movie
stars' in the wise guy words of Memphis Mafioso Sonny West. All the better then
to fill Bill Belew's custom 'white American Eagle' jumpsuit ...the $10,000 cape
from which Elvis sailed clear into the audience at the conclusion of
'Can't Help Falling In Love.'"
Aloha From Hawaii
via Satellite was the first time that a full-length concert was aired
around the world and it was the most expensive up until then. Over 6,000 fans were in attendance for both
shows at the H.I.C. (now known as the Blaisdell Arena). Presley’s fondness for Hawaii had first been
demonstrated in March 1961, when he raised $62,000 with a concert at the Bloch
Arena, toward the funding of the USS Arizona Memorial.
The Aloha
From Hawaii via Satellite concert that was actually heard was a second
show, that started at 12:30 a.m. in Hawaii on Sunday morning, January 14,
1973. Elvis delivered 24 songs that
pulled tunes from every phase of his career.
In the U.S., the broadcast was in fact
postponed so as not to conflict with M-G-M's Elvis On Tour. When Aloha From Hawaii via Satellite was
finally broadcast in the U.S. on April 4th, the Nielsen ratings had the show in
33.8% of homes and reaching 51% of those watching television.
The double-LP immediately sped up the
charts, taking the #1 spot in Billboard's May 5th issue, knocking Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon out of the top
spot. It remained on the chart for 52
weeks, and was certified 5-times platinum by the RIAA. The album was Elvis' first #1 since the Roustabout movie soundtrack from January
1965.
Nor did Elvis want to duplicate very much
of his then-current M-G-M theatrical release, Elvis On Tour, filmed in March-April 1972, the Golden Globe
award-winning film which turned out to be the final motion picture of his
lifetime.
Following the 12:30 show, at about 3:00
a.m., the ensemble regrouped (without an audience) to cut five additional songs
exclusively for the U.S. broadcast, four of which originated on Elvis' old Blue Hawaii movie soundtrack of 1961:
"Blue Hawaii," "Ku-U-I-Po," "No More," and
"Hawaiian Wedding Song." The
fifth was Gordon Lightfoot's "Early Morning Rain," emblematic of the
contemporary folk-rock singer-songwriter boom to which Elvis was surprisingly
well attuned in the '70s.
It was not generally known at the time
that the Friday evening (January 12th) dress rehearsal had also been recorded,
as a safety backup. Fifteen years later
in June 1988 (more than a decade after Elvis' death), the show was finally
issued on CD as The Alternate Aloha.
In 1972 Presley
gave a sold-out concert at Madison Square Garden in New York. Next was a
further renaissance in his career with the Dennis Linde-written hit single
“Burning Love.” This was followed by Elvis On Tour, a road documentary. Then
Colonel Parker touted his plans regarding a global satellite broadcast event
that would “allow the whole world the chance to see a Presley concert.”
In early 1973, Elvis Presley was
performing at one of the highest peaks of his career, and this new expanded
soundtrack proves it.
Aloha
co-producer Ernst Mikael Jørgensen suggests in his essential research guide, Elvis Presley: A Life In Music (St.
Martin's Press, 1998): "The immense pressure of being beamed live to one
billion people didn't seem to faze Elvis a great deal; showing little evidence
of nerves, he was highly focused, and he executed a flawless set that sparkled
with all the flash of his image. The
unparalleled media attention and size of the audience, not to mention the
worldwide number one album that followed, were perhaps the most effective
statement ever engineered of one artist's worldwide power."
Danish record
executive, producer, author and Elvis Presley catalog guru Ernst Jorgensen has
been a seminal force in the revival and inspection of Presley’s body of audio
work for a decade. He has overseen and co-produced Presley box sets, including The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll From Nashville to Memphis, Walk a Mile in My
Shoes, and Platinum: A Life in Music,
all nominated for the Grammy Award while exceeding sales of over a million
copies.
2013
Interview Harvey Kubernik and Ernst Jorgensen
HK: In
preparing this expanded re-release of the original landmark event, what sort of
reactions and initial observations came to you in assembling the project?
EJ: The main
issue here was completeness - to gather in one package both shows and also
include the 5 extra songs Elvis recorded exclusively for the US broadcast.
HK: Can you
tell me anything about the original engineers? Were they RCA staff engineers or
chosen by Elvis?
EJ: This was
recorded by RCA staff engineers and because of Elvis' producer Felton Jarvis'
illness, RCA's A&R person Joan Deary oversaw the recording project.
HK: In
reviewing concert tapes of Elvis post ’68
Comeback Special, what strikes you most about his live shows and band that
we hear on this 1973 endeavor?
EJ: Normally
Elvis would chat a lot on his shows, especially in Las Vegas, but this is a
very tight show, with as many songs as you could squeeze into the time frame of
the show. Elvis at his most determined
and professional might be the best way to describe this.
HK: Can you add
anything about the sort of concert repertoire captured on this new re-release?
How did Elvis usually select his set list?
EJ: Since Elvis
had just recently released a live album (from Madison Square Garden) it was
important to include new repertoire - especially for the record release. Some
of these had already been incorporated in the repertoire back in August (but
not recorded) and some were added during rehearsals. The list of songs for the
rehearsals is quite extensive, and with an eye to unreleased songs, it was also
a question of flow in the program that Elvis was very aware of.
HK: Is there
anything you can offer in terms of the restoration process as far as assembling
tapes and the full concept you have edited and compiled?
EJ: We wanted
to have the original album in the mix it was originally released in. AS for the
rehearsal show, we were less enthusiastic about the earlier release, and
decided to re-mix the show
HK: Elvis has
always had a special relationship with Hawaii. Did you feel that as well?
EJ: We
certainly know he did - he went there often for both filming of his movies and
later for his holidays. Whether it has any consequence for the actual is less
likely.
HK: Can you
offer some observations about Elvis doing this revolutionary TV broadcast as
opposed to his live shows. Did the technical preparation or collaboration take
on a bigger undertaking as it was a new technical forum for broadcast. Elvis
and the band rose to the occasion.
EJ: I think the
most important issue here was to be able to show the world - not just the U.S.
- what an Elvis Presley show was like. Ultimately to sell a lot of records. It
was always of the utmost importance for Elvis' manager, Colonel Parker, to do
something for Elvis that maintained that his artist was on another level than
any other performer. The Colonel also knew that Elvis delivered his best if he
was challenged.
HK: Can you
compare and contrast the Elvis New York City Madison Square Garden 1972 live
recording with this 1973 live recording in Hawaii? As far as quality,
performances, tape results, and the growth of Elvis still evident as a stage
performer.
EJ: There is
only seven months between the two events, so I think it's hard to talk about
growth - both represent challenges to Elvis (he didn't think New York would
like him), so Aloha is possibly only
a step up in the circumstances of the show - the magnitude of a worldwide live
broadcast - that he could deliver a flawless performance under even that kind
of pressure.
HK: One
question about CD and vinyl. How has the Elvis catalogue benefitted from the CD
formats as much of his early work was out on 45’s and album vinyl. The master
tapes from his recording career seem to be in perfect shape and easy to
transfer.
EJ: We have
worked on the ambition that we can always get the sound closer to what the
original intent was by using the right equipment, analyze flaws coming from
digital transfers - and we believe we have gotten better at - the goal is to
hear the same on the CD as you hear on the original master tapes. Sounds easy,
but it isn't. Tapes were recorded on different equipment, with various
technical issues, but in general the tapes are brilliant.
HK: Can you
provide some reflections about the Elvis early and mid-70s live and studio
catalogue. I think in general the reporting and documentation overlooked some
real gems and great band playing.
I saw five or six
Presley shows in California during 1970-1976, and with the exception of the
last one, his voice sounded great. I did write a story in ’76 for Melody Maker suggesting Elvis retire
from the world of touring owing to obvious health issues I witnessed on stage.
But this ‘73 concert collection presents an entertainer and not just the rocker
most everyone, especially reviewers, still wanted him to remain.
EJ: I think all
journalists and many fans basically wanted to still see Elvis as a rock ‘n’
roll artist, where Elvis himself strived for a bigger musical stance including
ALL the music he loved - in many ways I think in his own mind, he may have felt
that the summer of 1970 - the making of That’s
The Way It Is, was his own crowning achievement: The repertoire, band, the
freedom to perform exactly what he wanted to.
HK: Why does
Elvis and particularly his musical recordings still endear and endure?
EJ: Elvis’ life
story is fascinating - it's in some ways a tragedy, and yet it's full of
glorious moments of achievement. At the bottom of it all is however that he was
a brilliant singer.” (In 2008 Harvey Kubernik penned the liner notes to Elvis Presley the ’68 Comeback Special
box set 40th anniversary edition. He is also an interview subject on
the 40th anniversary deluxe edition Jailhouse Rock DVD where he comments on Presley’s singing, dancing
and choreography for the “Jailhouse Rock” number captured on screen.
Kubernik is the
author of 20 books, including Leonard
Cohen: Everybody Knows published in 2014 and Neil Young Heart of Gold during 2015. Kubernik also authored 2009’s Canyon Of Dreams: The Magic And The Music Of
Laurel Canyon and 2014’s Turn Up The
Radio! Rock, Pop and Roll In Los Angeles 1956-1972. Sterling/Barnes
and Noble in 2018 published Harvey and Kenneth Kubernik’s The Story Of The Band: From Big Pink To The Last Waltz. In 2021 the duo wrote Jimi Hendrix: Voodoo Child for Sterling/Barnes and Noble.
Otherworld Cottage Industries in 2020 published Harvey’s book, Docs That Rock, Music That Matters.
Kubernik’s
writings are in several book anthologies, including, The Rolling Stone Book Of The Beats and Drinking With Bukowski. Harvey wrote the liner note booklets to the
CD re-releases of Carole King’s Tapestry, The Essential Carole King, Allen
Ginsberg’s Kaddish, The Ramones’ End of the Century and Big Brother & the Holding Company
Captured Live at The Monterey International Pop Festival).
And he sends us stuff here at Forgotten Hits all the time, too!!! (Now how cool is that?!?!)
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