Posts Tagged ‘Classic’

Elvis Presley-Kentucky Rain

July 6, 2010 - 9:08 pm 25 Comments

A photo complentation set to one of the King’s greatest songs.
Lyrics:Seven lonely days
And a dozen towns ago
I reached out one night
And you were gone
Dont know why youd run,
What youre running to or from
All I know is I want to bring you home

So Im walking in the rain,
Thumbing for a ride
On this lonely kentucky backroad
Ive loved you much too long
And my loves too strong
To let you go, never knowing
What went wrong

Kentucky rain keeps pouring down
And up aheads another town
That Ill go walking thru
With the rain in my shoes,
Searchin for you
In the cold kentucky rain,
In the cold kentucky rain

Showed your photograph
To some old gray bearded man
Sitting on a bench
Outside a genral store
They said yes, shes been here
But their memory wasnt clear
Was it yesterday,
No, wait the day before

So I finly got a ride
With a preacher man who asked
Where you bound on such a dark afternoon?
As we drove on thru the rain
As he listened I explained
And he left me with a prayer
That Id find you

Duration : 0:3:20

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Trouble – Elvis Presley – Song

May 29, 2010 - 1:55 am 25 Comments

Trouble – Elvis Presley

Duration : 0:2:27

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Heartbreak Hotel

April 6, 2010 - 4:21 am 4 Comments

Step into our wayback machine to Sept. 5 1987. We opened and backed Johnny Harra at a concert in Granbury, Texas. He is a very personable and professional person on and off stage. Johnny was chosen to play a 42 year old Elvis in the docudrama movie “This Is Elvis”. For more information, videos and music his website is http://www.johnnyharrathelegend.com
Johnny has also worked with Conway Twitty, Glen Campbell, Jack Green, The Kentucky Headhunters, Brenda Lee, Jewel Akins and many more.
The musicians that night were from left to right, Truman Hudson, Bob Hudson (lead guitar), Joey Phillips (drums), Greg Ladesic (bass), Oliver Mowet (keyboard). The backup vocals were Joe Fleming and Kelly.
This was recorded on VHS by a relative up in the loft next to the spotlight, and the sound you hear was picked up through the camera mike across the auditorium. The tape was about gone due to age, and the video doesn’t look very good at full screen.
For the people who were there that night, and the ones seeing this for the first time……….enjoy.
We may also be found at: (first you need to pause this video or you’ll get sound over sound)
http://www.myspace.com/trumanhudsonandriggin
When you have finished visiting our site click on one of our friends picture/icon , about halfway down right, such as George Strait, The Eagles, Lisa Layne (All I want for Christmas Is You) and others. This will take you to their myspace site, with songs, videos and performance shedules. These are the official myspace sites of the artist and the real deal.
To come back to you tube, X out at the top right in myspace.

Duration : 0:1:54

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Paul Simon – Graceland (Classic Album)

March 27, 2010 - 10:22 pm 10 Comments

This film tells the story of Paul Simon’s landmark 1986 album, Graceland. Recorded in New York and South Africa, Graceland not only sold 14 million copies, but it was also named Album of the Year at the 1986 Grammy Awards. It brought the sound of South African music to audiences around the world. This acclaimed film shows how a career setback for Paul Simon precipitated the inspiration for Graceland, how he learned so much from the South African musicians he met, and how, in collaboration, a triumphant album was created.

Links to purchase from Amazon below.

UK Customers: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00004RJAX/?tag=wwweaglerockc-21

US Customers: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00000JMPW/?tag=eaglrockente-20

Duration : 0:2:30

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Heartbreak Hotel

March 24, 2010 - 9:10 pm 25 Comments

Buck Norris sings “Heartbreak Hotel” by Mae Axton and sung by Elvis Presley.
Mae Boren was the only daughter of Mark L. and Nannie Boren. Lyle Boren, one of her eight brothers, was one of the youngest members elected to the US Congress in 1936.[2] The family moved from Texas to Oklahoma when Mae was two. She attended East Central State College and the University of Oklahoma, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism. She obtained a public teaching certificate and taught English and journalism at schools in Broken Bow, Moore, Walters, Frederick and Ada.[3]

Mae married John T. Axton, an officer in the US Navy, and they had two sons, country star Hoyt Axton, born March 25, 1938 in Duncan, Oklahoma, and a younger son, John, who became an attorney. The family lived in Comanche, Oklahoma during the children’s pre-teen years.

In 1949, Mae’s husband was stationed in Jacksonville, Florida; the family moved there. She taught English at Paxon School for Advanced Studies and Alfred I. duPont High School. Mae was a schoolteacher by profession but had a strong passion for music[citation needed]. In the 1950s rock and roll was quickly becoming popular among the kids and unpopular among most others. For Mae as a school teacher to become its ally was viewed by many as incredibly hypocritical. Nonetheless, she pushed forward in her endeavors as an advocate of the music that would end up changing the industry forever.
Mae freelanced as a music journalist for Country Song Roundup and served as a regional publicist for Nashville-based concert promoter, Colonel Tom Parker.

Axton was also the link between Elvis Presley and RCA Records; she states in her 1973 artist biographies, Country Singers as I Know Em, that she introduced the Colonel to a 19-year-old Presley after Elvis promotor in Memphis, Bob Neal contacted her about helping Elvis as Neal was closing his promotion business. Additionally, she “hounded” RCAs Nashville division head, Stephen H. Sholes, to sign Presley.[5]

In 1956, Mae tells of the day when she and a disc jockey and accomplished musician from Jacksonville named Tommy Durden wrote Heartbreak Hotel. Durden actually had the idea from a newspaper story about a man who had rid himself of all identity, written a one-line sentence “I walk a lonely street”, and killed himself. She states that she reacted as strongly as Tommy to this devastating end to a life. When she finished reading, Mae stated to Tommy that everyone has someone who cares, and when those who love him learn of his death, they’ll be broken-hearted, so let’s put a Heartbreak Hotel at the end of that lonely street. Tommy responded with, “That would make a good song.” They both said let’s write it! About that time another of their song writing friends, Glenn Reeves(one time director of Wheeling, West Virginia Jamboree) walked into the room and was invited to co-write the song, but declined. Twenty minutes later the song was on tape, Reeves returned heard it and was not impressed but agreed to do an Elvis like demo for the pair. The wheels were turning for a history making song.

Mae first sent the song to Bob Neal insisting it could be Elvis first number one hit, but Elvis wouldn’t hear it for awhile. Mae also had to go to Daytona on business later that week to meet with the Colonel and while there she meet with another friend, bass player, Buddy Killen who was trying to start a publishing company in Nashville. He loved Heartbreak Hotel as did his partner, Grand Ole Opry Show Director,Jack Stapp. Heartbreak Hotel would be a founding song for a hugely successful publishing company called Tree, which would later be known as Sony Tree. Mae headed to the Disc Jockey Convention in Nashville with her extra copy of Heartbreak Hotel and a tape player. She found Bob Neal and Elvis in the lobby and ask Elvis if had heard the song yet. He said he had not and Bob stated that he had not played it for Elvis yet, so she invited him and Neal up to her room to hear Heartbreak Hotel. Elvis loved the dark brooding song. The change of management to the Colonel and a new label to RCA ushered in the success of the King of Rock n’ Roll and of an unassuming educator who wouldn’t take no for an answer – never – ever – if she believed in it! Momma Mae wrote some 200 songs, 14 of which made the charts, with “Heartbreak Hotel” being number one on the pop chart for 8 weeks, the country chart for 17 weeks and reaching number 3 on the R&B chart.

Elvis Presley also recorded “Never Been To Spain” which was written by her son Hoyt Axton, thus recording songs by both mother and son.

Duration : 0:2:58

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GI Blues ~ Elvis By E

October 4, 2009 - 6:12 am 25 Comments

Me singing this cover of Elvis Presley .From the sixty’s Movie. A request by -ParanormalMan41-

Duration : 0:3:41

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GI Blues ~ Elvis By E

October 4, 2009 - 6:12 am 25 Comments

Me singing this cover of Elvis Presley .From the sixty’s Movie. A request by -ParanormalMan41-

Duration : 0:3:41

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