Product Details
The Complete Million Dollar Quartet

The Complete Million Dollar Quartet
Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash

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Track Listing

  1. Instrumental
  2. Love Me Tender [Instrumental]
  3. Jingle Bells [Instrumental]
  4. White Christmas [Instrumental]
  5. Reconsider Baby
  6. Don't Be Cruel
  7. Don't Be Cruel
  8. Paralyzed
  9. Don't Be Cruel
  10. There's No Place Like Home
  11. When the Saints Go Marchin' In
  12. Softly and Tenderly
  13. When God Dips His Love in My Heart
  14. Just a Little Talk with Jesus
  15. Jesus Walked That Lonesome Valley
  16. I Shall Not Be Moved
  17. Peace in the Valley
  18. Down by the Riverside
  19. I'm with a Crowd But So Alone
  20. Farther Along
  21. Blessed Jesus (Hold My Hand)
  22. On the Jericho Road
  23. I Just Can't Make It by Myself
  24. Little Cabin Home on the Hill
  25. Summertime Is Past and Gone
  26. I Hear a Sweet Voice Calling
  27. Sweetheart You Done Me Wrong
  28. Keeper of the Key (Carl Lead)
  29. Crazy Arms
  30. Don't Forbid Me
  31. Too Much Monkey Business
  32. Brown Eyed Handsome Man
  33. Out of Sight, Out of Mind
  34. Brown Eyed Handsome Man
  35. Don't Forbid Me
  36. You Belong to My Heart
  37. Is It So Strange
  38. That's When Your Heartaches Begin
  39. Brown Eyed Handsome Man
  40. Rip It Up
  41. I'm Gonna Bid My Blues Goodbye
  42. Crazy Arms
  43. That's My Desire
  44. End of the Road
  45. Black Bottom Stomp
  46. You're the Only Star in My Blue Heaven
  47. Elvis Says Goodybe

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7702 in Music
  • Brand: Bmg
  • Released on: 2006-09-19
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Import, Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Fifty years after a 21-year-old Elvis Presley first shook the world comes a reissue of the famed Million Dollar Quartet recording, the off-the-cuff Sun Records jam session where Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash joined Presley for a loose-jointed romp through 46 songs. Except that's not quite right--Cash either put down his part off-mic or rolled out his big baritone-bass when the tape wasn't rolling (the more likely explanation). So that, as Colin Escott writes in his liner notes, technically makes this a $750,000 Trio. And while this new edition is billed as the "complete" quartet--since 12 more minutes surfaced on a tape of superior sound quality found in Elvis's private collection, and the session is now in its right sequence--it obviously isn't the whole thing. (The 12 extra minutes are essentially four short instrumentals and "Reconsider Baby" at the start, as well as bits and pieces at different points throughout the CD.) But what survives is nevertheless fascinating, of course, not only for the historical record but for the fervor the three bring to a handful of spirituals (their finest moment) and how young Presley--who is already recording for RCA, and has just been dropped by Sun--presents himself. His new notoriety brings out a cocky charm, as he devotes much of these renditions of "Don't Be Cruel" and "Paralyzed" to an imitation of Jackie Wilson imitating him (Elvis knows Wilson only as one of Billy Ward's Dominoes), and boasting that Pat Boone recorded a song that Elvis wouldn't even audition. This fly-on-the-wall voyeurism should appeal to any student of rock 'n' roll history. But serious Elvisphiles will especially enjoy hearing Presley talk about the seeds of recording "That's When Your Heartaches Begin," mimic Hank Snow on "I'm Gonna Bid My Blues Goodbye," and express bemused ire over Faron Young, who had sent him a song ("Is It So Strange") he hoped Elvis would record. "He didn't want to give me none of it--he wanted it all, you know," Elvis says with a chuckle, supposedly referring to the publishing/writing credit, something Elvis's manager, the iron-fisted Colonel Tom Parker, demanded. As the trio moves through a plethora of material--Christmas songs, gospel, blues, R&B, country, pop, Dixieland, cowboy, and bluegrass--they become the hammer, anvil, and steel, forging a new form of music. What you have here, then, is no less than the sound of it, taking shape. --Alanna Nash


Customer Reviews

The best ever representation of this historic jam!5
Stunning sound quality makes this disc a must for all Elvis fans. This material simply never sounded better (due to new tapes they found) and in addition is complete and in the correct sequence.

Excellent5
Just want to agree with the previous reviewer. Although this session has been released many times before, this version is complete and in very good quality. it's worth the price just to hear Elvis talking on the Don't Be Cruel track about a fellow singers approach to that song - magic!

Raw Nostalgia, like finding the Dead Sea Scrolls of Music!5
I'm a Keyboard Player and a 33 year Musician, and an Elvis fan! A devoted follower of Jerry Lew Lewis and ALL the Sun Family. Sam Philips was smart enough to put an open mic in the room when this Jam Session happened. Elvis sings like he's in church on Sunday morning, wit so much feeling. Jerry Lee can't be lost no matter how many times Elvis switches songs. He grew up the same way.Carl Perkins thumbstyles that Guitar like the Lead Man he was! They stop and start, like it was all for fun (which it was). No formed up songs, no perfect clean things, Just raw gospel and country with a Rockabilly flair. I swear I didn't know these tapes existed, and I'm a music history idiot. Thank you for selling them amazon!! Any Elvis fan needs this one!! BUY IT!!