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Peace in The Valley: The Complete Gospel Recordings is a triple-CD compilation album by Elvis Presley, released in 2000. [2]In January 2001 the album debuted at number 13 on Billboard ' s Top Contemporary Christian album chart. [3]
The set, catalogued as number 66421-2, comprises recordings of gospel music made by Presley during his career. The contents of all three gospel albums Presley released in his lifetime are included, while other songs had appeared on singles, an extended play single, and other albums. The set also contains five previously unreleased selections ...
He Touched Me is the seventeenth studio album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley, released in April 1972. A contemporary gospel music album, [7] it earned him his second of three Grammy Awards. The album was his third and final studio gospel album, and the most contemporary of the three.
Memories: The '68 Comeback Special was a 1998 double album released by RCA Records that was a repackaging of material from the 1968 Elvis Presley television special, Elvis (commonly referred to as the Elvis Presley '68 Comeback Special). Twenty-two of the compilation's 35 tracks were previously unreleased recordings, including several alternate ...
Presley in a Sun Records promotional photograph, 1954. Elvis Presley recorded at least 24 songs at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, between 1953 and 1955.The recordings reflect the wide variety of music that could be heard in Memphis at the time: blues, rhythm & blues, gospel, country & western, hillbilly, rockabilly and bluegrass.
Elvis Presley: I Got Lucky: Fred Wise, Dolores Fuller, Ben Weisman: 1961: I Got Lucky: I Got Stung: Aaron Schroeder, David Hill: 1958: 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong – Elvis' Gold Records Volume 2: I Gotta Know: Paul Evans, Matt Williams: 1960: Elvis' Golden Records Volume 3: I Hear a Sweet Voice Calling: Bill Monroe: 1956: The Complete ...
The single "You'll Never Walk Alone", an adaptation of the Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers standard, was a minor hit for him in the late 1960s.Although technically a secular show tune, Elvis and RCA treated it as a religious song, as reflected in the original 1967 single and the fact it was often included on compilations of Presley's religious music, such as this album.
Meanwhile, Presley's assistant Charlie Hodge claimed Presley decided to record the song after he played a version by Sons of the Pioneers for Presley. [11] The selected songs that were in the public domain were rearranged to meet requirements to register the copyright by Presley's management. [20] The recording of How Great Thou Art took place ...