As Recorded at Madison Square Garden

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Elvis: as Recorded at Madison Square Garden
File:Elvis as Recorded at Madison Square Garden.jpg
Live album by Elvis Presley
Released June 18, 1972
Recorded June 10, 1972
Venue Madison Square Garden
New York, New York
Genre Rock
Label RCA Victor
Elvis Presley chronology
He Touched Me
(1972)He Touched Me1972
Elvis: as Recorded at Madison Square Garden
(1972)
Burning Love and Hits from His Movies, Volume 2
(1972)Burning Love and Hits from His Movies, Volume 21972
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars[1]
Robert Christgau C[2]
MusicHound 2/5 stars[3]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide 2/5 stars[4]
Rough Guides 3/5 stars[5]

Elvis: As Recorded at Madison Square Garden is a live musical album recorded by Elvis Presley and released in June 1972 by RCA Records peaking on the charts in July 1972. Recorded at the Madison Square Garden arena in New York City on Saturday June 10, 1972, the concert, and the subsequent album, were promoted as being Presley's first live concerts in the Big Apple since the 1950s. It was certified Gold on August 4, 1972, Platinum on May 20, 1988, 2x Platinum on March 27, 1992 and 3x Platinum on July 15, 1999 by the RIAA. Along with Aloha from Hawaii: Via Satellite it ranked as the top 1970's RCA live album by Elvis Presley.

Despite the lengthy track listing, the release was only a single disc, and the record was released only a week after the concert itself. Elvis' very next album would also be a live recording featuring many of the same songs: Aloha from Hawaii: Via Satellite.

The concert included on this album was the evening show. An afternoon performance was also recorded, but except for a performance of "I Can't Stop Loving You" which appeared in the 1977 compilation, Welcome to My World, it remained unreleased until the 1990s when it was issued as An Afternoon in the Garden.

Drummer Ronnie Tutt claimed in an interview in 2009 for the BBC documentary Elvis in Vegas that Colonel Tom Parker sped up the mixes so that more tracks could be on the album, increasing his publishing royalties. Tutt's account has never been proven as factual.[6]

In 2013, RCA/Legacy, through HDTracks.com, released a high-resolution remastering of the concert in 24-bit/96kHz.

Track listing

Side one
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Also Sprach Zarathustra" (introduction; theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey) Richard Strauss 1:06
2. "That's All Right"   Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup 2:14
3. "Proud Mary"   John Fogerty 2:35
4. "Never Been to Spain"   Hoyt Axton 3:36
5. "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me"   Pino Donaggio, Simon Napier-Bell, Vito Pallavicini, Vicki Wickham 2:03
6. "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'"   Barry Mann, Phil Spector, Cynthia Weil 4:11
7. "Polk Salad Annie"   Tony Joe White 2:57
8. "Love Me"   Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller 1:38
9. "All Shook Up"   Otis Blackwell, Elvis Presley 1:04
10. "Heartbreak Hotel"   Mae Boren Axton, Tommy Durden, Elvis Presley 1:44
11. "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear" / "Don't Be Cruel" (medley) Kal Mann, Bernie Lowe / Otis Blackwell 1:50
12. "Love Me Tender"   Vera Matson, Elvis Presley 1:38
Side two
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "The Impossible Dream (The Quest)"   Joe Darion, Mitch Leigh 2:35
2. "Introductions by Elvis"   1:27
3. "Hound Dog"   Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller 1:55
4. "Suspicious Minds"   Mark James 4:23
5. "For the Good Times"   Kris Kristofferson 3:03
6. "An American Trilogy"   Mickey Newbury 4:28
7. "Funny How Time Slips Away"   Willie Nelson 2:41
8. "I Can't Stop Loving You"   Don Gibson 2:37
9. "Can't Help Falling in Love"   Luigi Creatore, Hugo Peretti, George David Weiss 2:34
10. "End Theme"   0:55

Personnel

  • A&R/Producers: Harry Jenkins, Joan Deary, Felton Jarvis
  • Al Pachuki and Dick Baxter - recording engineers
  • Dick Baxter and Larry Schnapf - mastering and supervision

Notes

Over the four shows performed by Elvis many celebrities, including musicians, attended one of his shows most notably amongst them George Harrison, Art Garfunkel, David Bowie, all the members of both Ten Years After and Led Zeppelin, Paul Simon and Bob Dylan. It had been reported that John Lennon had attended one of the shows, incognito, but in an interview in 1975 he denied ever seeing Elvis live in concert. Bruce Springsteen also attended one of the four shows, having signed his first record contract with Columbia Records earlier that week. Eddie Murphy also found the show very influential. After purchasing a copy he would lip-synch to the record in front of a mirror. Murphy states that it was Elvis that helped him decide to be a professional entertainer. Croatian/Yugoslavian pop star Mišo Kovač, highly influenced by the music of Elvis Presley, attended one of the shows, claiming afterwards that the show changed his self-perception. A musician who also felt the power of Presley's Garden shows was Paul Stanley, the rhythm guitarist and primary lead vocalist of the rock band Kiss who, as a struggling musician and part-time cab driver at night took numerous customers to, and from the Garden during the three days of Presley's NYC engagement. Hearing about and feeling the excitement directly from those who shared his numerous rides made him think very seriously about his future career, promising himself to one day fill the Garden, something which he accomplished with his band in early February 1977, some 5 months before Presley's death.

References

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External links