- Elvis' Christmas Album
Infobox Album |
Name = Elvis' Christmas Album
Type = studio
Artist =Elvis Presley
Released =October 15 ,1957
Recorded = January-September 1957
Genre =Christmas music
Length = 30:09
Label = RCA LPM 1951
Reviews =
*Allmusic rating|4.5|5 [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:bycibk096ak0 link]
Last album = "Loving You" (1957)
This album = "Elvis' Christmas Album" (1957)
Next album = "Elvis' Golden Records " (1958)|"Elvis' Christmas Album" is the fourth album by
Elvis Presley onRCA Victor Records , LPM 1951, released in October 1957, and recorded atRadio Recorders inHollywood . It has been reissued in numerous different formats since its first release, issued initially in a deluxe limited edition, catalogue LOC 1035. It spent four weeks at #1 on the Billboard Top Pop Albums chart, and was the first of two Christmas-themed albums Presley would record, the other being "Elvis Sings The Wonderful World of Christmas ", released in the early 1970s. As of 2007, "Elvis' Christmas Album" is the top-selling holiday release of all time with 9 million in sales, according to the RIAA. [ [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071222/ap_en_mu/music_christmas_albums_3;_ylt=AoT_mTWZiB6uxrf7gC4Qp_IE1vAI Associated Press: Holiday albums can become classics fast retrieved December 22, 2007] ]Content
The original 1957 LP consisted of eight
Christmas songs , and four gospel songs which had been previously released on theEP "Peace in the Valley", catalogue EPA 4054, issued March 1957, peaking at #3 on the Pop albums chart and at #39 on the singles chart. [Guralnick, Peter. "", 1992, insert booklet discography. US chart positions courtesy "Billboard ", compiled by Record Research, Inc.] The two album sides divided into a program of secular Christmas songs on side one, with two traditionalChristmas carols and the gospel numbers on side two. Those included two spirituals by innovatorThomas A. Dorsey , "Peace in the Valley" and "Take My Hand, Precious Lord ." Coincidentally, "A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra " released the previous month by that other 1950s singing icon, also divided into a secular and a traditional side.While most of the songs selected were traditional
Christmas fare, such as "White Christmas " and "Silent Night," two new songs by regular suppliers of material for Presley were commissioned. One selected by Elvis to open the album, ablues -basedrock and roll number "Santa Claus Is Back In Town ," was written byJerry Leiber andMike Stoller . This writer/producer team was responsible for some of 1950srhythm and blues and rock and roll's most finely-honed satire in their work withThe Coasters , as well as penning "Hound Dog " forWillie Mae Thornton and providing Elvis with some of his biggest hits, including "Jailhouse Rock" and "Don't."Elvis had asked the pair to come up with another Christmas song during sessions for the album; within a few minutes, they had the song written and ready for recording. Originally titled "Christmas Blues", this slyly risqué number is given a full-throated treatment by Elvis who, aided by the gritty ensemble playing from his band, was determined to ensure that "this" Christmas album would not be easily ignored. [Guralnick, Peter. "The King of Rock 'n' Roll: The Complete 50s Masters", 1992, box set insert booklet, p.15.] Much of the remaining program was performed in a more traditional manner appropriate to the solemnity of Christmas, although Elvis' innate sense of occasion shone through on his left-of-centre reading of Ernest Tubb's 1949 hit, "
Blue Christmas ."Controversy
The
Bing Crosby holiday perennial "White Christmas," which appeared every year on the "Billboard" charts from 1942 to 1962, became the center of controversy upon the album's release, with calls by the song's composerIrving Berlin to have the song, and the entire album, banned from radio airplay. [Wolfe, Charles. "Elvis Presley: If Every Day Was Like Christmas", liner notes, p.4. As the liner notes are not numbered, page 1 is deemed to be the first page of the text, with page numbers following in ascending page order.] After hearing Presley's version of his song, which Berlin saw as a "profane parody of his cherishedyuletide standard", he ordered his staff in New York to telephone radio stations across theUS , demanding the song be discontinued from radio play. While most US radio stations ignored Berlin's request, at least one disc jockey was fired for playing a song from the album, and most Canadian stations refused to play the album. [Wolfe, Charles. "Elvis Presley: If Every Day Was Like Christmas", liner notes p.7.]The controversy was, ironically, fuelled by Elvis' performance of the song in a style mirroring the version by
Clyde McPhatter 's group,The Drifters , which had been a Top 10 hit on the R&B singles chart in 1954 and 1955. Unlike Elvis' recording, however, their version attracted virtually no adverse reaction, and certainly no reported opposition from Irving Berlin. Part of the reason that The Drifters' version of White Christmas was less controversial was because that version was played only on black radio stations. Most mainstream stations did not take interest in The Drifters' version back then, and would not until the 1980s.Fact|date=June 200745 RPM releasesThe other new composition on the album, "
Santa Bring My Baby Back (to Me) " was paired with "Santa Claus Is Back In Town", and issued as aUK single concurrently with the album's release. The single reached number seven on theUK Singles Chart in November 1957. ["The King of Rock 'n' Roll: The Complete 50s Masters", 1992, discography.]No
US singles were issued from the album until 1964, when "Blue Christmas " was paired with "Wooden Heart ," and failed to chart; however, a pairing of "Blue Christmas" b/w "White Christmas" became a Top 20 UK hit in late 1964. "Santa Claus Is Back In Town"/"Blue Christmas" was a 1965 single release for the US market, but also failed to reach theBillboard Hot 100 . ["", 1993, discography.]Two different EPs, "
Elvis Sings Christmas Songs ", EPA 4108 in December 1957, and "Christmas With Elvis ", EPA 4340 in December 1958, divided the eight Christmas numbers between them. The former topped the newly established Billboard EP Chart, while the latter failed to chart.Reissues
"Elvis' Christmas Album" was reissued a year after its first release, replacing the iconic cover of the original with a close-up of Elvis' face as he posed against an outdoor, snowy backdrop. The album continued to reach the album charts each year until 1962, eventually selling more than three million units worldwide. [Wolfe, Charles. "Elvis Presley: If Every Day Was Like Christmas", liner notes, p.7.]
The original "Elvis' Christmas Album" was out of print by the late 1960s. Interest in the album prompted RCA to re-release it in an altered version on its budget label
RCA Camden in 1970. This version eliminated the four gospel tracks from "Peace in the Valley", and added the 1966 holiday single "If Every Day Was Like Christmas ," along with the 1970 non-seasonalb-side "Mama Liked The Roses ," issued as the flip to Elvis' top ten single "The Wonder of You ." With ten tracks and a shorter running time, it fit the standard for the budget label issues. The religious and secular Christmas songs were also mixed together. The initial cover of this revised version echoed that of the 1958 reissue, except a more recent mid-60s vintage photograph of Presley was used.In the mid-1970s, RCA leased the rights to some of its Camden catalog to the budget label
Pickwick Records , which reissued the record in 1975 with yet another cover design, Elvis' face from the RCA Camden version surrounded by ribbons. During the Holiday season after Presley's death in 1977 The Pickwick LP was advertised and sold on television via mail order to enormous sales. RCA soon reclaimed the reissue rights to its Camden line. The revised album, with its Pickwick cover art continued to be in print until the late 1980s, re-released again in 1985 as "It's Christmas Time," after which time RCA reissued the original 1957 version with its original cover art on LP andcompact disc . The original 1957 version on CD has recently gone out of print, but all of the tracks are available on other compilations of Presley's Christmas recordings, "Christmas Peace" from 2003, and "Elvis Christmas " from 2006. All the album's songs are also included in the 1992 boxed set "". In late 2007,Speaker's Corner Records fromGermany reissued the album on a high quality heavy vinyl pressing; this reissue also featured the original album cover from 1957.Personnel
*
Elvis Presley –vocals ,guitar
*Scotty Moore – guitar
*Gordon Stoker - piano, backing vocals
*Dudley Brooks - piano
*Hoyt Hawkins - organ
*Marvin Hughes - piano
*Bill Black – bass
*D.J. Fontana - drums
*Millie Kirkham - backing vocals
*The Jordanaires - backing vocalsTrack listing
"Chart positions for LPs and EPs from Billboard Top Pop Albums chart; positions for singles from Billboard Pop Singles chart."
ide One
ide Two
"If Every Day Was Like Christmas" recorded at
RCA Studio B in Nashville, and "Mama Liked The Roses" atAmerican Studios in Memphis,Tennessee .Notes
References
* Guralnick, Peter. "", insert booklet. RCA 66050-2, 1992.
* Guralnick, Peter. "", insert booklet. RCA 66160-2, 1993.
* Guralnick, Peter. "Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley". New York: Little, Brown & Co., 1994; ISBN 0-316-91020-1
* Hopkins, Jerry. "Elvis". New York: Simon & Schuster, 1971; ISBN 0-671-20973-6
* Jorgenson, Ernst. "Elvis Presley: A Life In Music — The Complete Recording Sessions". New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998; ISBN 0-312-18572-3
* Wolfe, Charles. "Elvis Presley: If Every Day Was Like Christmas", liner notes. BMG Australia Limited, 7863664822, 1994.
* White Christmas by Irving Berlin
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