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A very emotional version of "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" was performed and filmed in 1972 at Hampton Roads. This show was filmed for the documentary Elvis On Tour; however, the song was not included in that film but was released with other outtakes in 1992 on the home video release Elvis – The Lost Performances.
50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong – Elvis' Gold Records Volume 2: I Need Your Lovin' Don Gardner, Bobby Robinson: 1971: From Hollywood To Vegas: I Really Don't Want to Know: Howard Barnes, Don Robertson: 1970: Elvis Country (I'm 10,000 Years Old) I Shall Be Released: Bob Dylan: 1971: Walk a Mile in My Shoes: The Essential 70's Masters [1 ...
The follow-up single, "It's Now or Never", was another worldwide hit, peaking no lower than No. 2 in 13 countries. 1960 and 1961 saw the release of two more U.S. No. 1 hits, "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" and "Surrender". Beginning in late 1961 the majority of Presley's singles were released to promote his films and their associated soundtrack albums.
The crooning ballad, "Are You Lonesome Tonight," earned three Grammy nominations in 1960, including one for Record of the Year. Elvis lost in all three categories, but the song still soared on the ...
"Lonely Man" is a song first recorded by Elvis Presley as part of the soundtrack for his 1961 motion picture Wild in the Country, but eventually dropped from the movie. The movie was originally titled "Lonely Man", and an excerpt of Elvis singing the song could be seen in its original trailer, [ 1 ] but the song was cut before release and the ...
In 1960, "It's Now or Never" was a number-one record in the U.S. for Elvis Presley, spending five weeks at number one and the UK, where it spent eight weeks at the top in 1960 and an additional week at number one in 2005 as a re-issue, and numerous other countries, selling in excess of 20 million physical copies worldwide, Elvis Presley's ...
A few of Presley's own songs became huge hits in certain regions of the world, in versions whose translation into the required language bore little or no resemblance to the original lyrics. For instance, "Good Rocking tonight", which Presley made famous throughout the world, became "La voix d'Elvis", a story about how his voice and music ...
He appears to lose his train of thought during "Are You Lonesome Tonight?", although some [11] have made the case that Elvis regularly played around with the words during the spoken portion of the song when performing it on stage, rather than it being a case of poor memory. Indeed, concert recordings of Presley experimenting with the lyrics ...