| | Elvis Presley Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD Elvis Presley Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
ELVIS' GOLDEN RECORDS, VOL. 3 is a compilation of singles released between 1960 and 1963.
Originally released in 1963, GOLDEN RECORDS VOLUME 3 contains nearly all of Elvis' top 10 hits released between his 1960 return from military service and early 1962. It was during this period that Elvis last topped the charts consistently; soon, the British invasion and a string of sub-par movie soundtracks would reduce both his stature and his record sales. GOLDEN RECORDS VOLUME 3 shows off the full range of Elvis' talent, with ballads ("Are You Lonesome Tonight?"), rockers ("Little Sister," "I Feel So Bad"), pop ("Stuck On You," "I Gotta Know") and even operatic songs ("It's Now Or Never," "Surrender") represented among the disc's twelve tracks. The album was issued on CD in 1989 and was subsequently remastered and re-reissued in 1997 with eight additional tracks.
Includes liner notes by Colin Escott.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
Personnel includes: Elvis Presley (vocals); The Jordanaires (background vocals).
Compilation producers: Ernst Mikael Jorgensen, Roger Semon. Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 Music Elvis Presley Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 Songs Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 Music Review Buy Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD Purchase Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Neil Young Sleeps With Angels CDs (1994)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 album
$9.45 SLEEPS WITH ANGELS was nominated for a 1995 Grammy Award for Best Rock Album.
Judging by the regard with which Neil Young is embraced by contemporary bands, it's clear that this rocker retained his youthful crankiness and experimental verve--willfully oblivious to popular fashions. Like John Mellencamp's DANCE NAKED, Young's SLEEPS WITH ANGELS has the mythic feel and smell ...
| | Elvis Presley Elvis' Golden Records CD (1958) Remastered
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD music
$9.09
| | Elvis Presley 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong: Vol. 2 CD (1959) Remastered
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 music CDs
$9.39
| | Elvis Presley Elvis' Gold Records, Vol. 4 CD (1968)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 songs
$12.79 "Ain't That Loving You Baby" was recorded in 1958. The remainder of the singles compiles on ELVIS' GOLD RECORDS VOL 4 were recorded between 1960 and 1967.
Periodically throughout Presley's lifetime, RCA Records would compile Elvis' most recent best-selling records and release them on a GOLDEN RECORDS greatest hits package. VOLUME 4 is the fourth of five such records, covering Elvis' career between 1962 and 1966. Although many rock fans disparage Presley's work during these years--primarily because this era is identified with the King's many sub-par movie soundtrack albums--the recordings on VOLUME 4 stand alongside the best of Presley's work.
High points include a cover of Ray Charles' "What'd I Say," the impassioned R&B ballad "It Hurts Me," and the top five hit "You're the Devil in Disguise." The twelve-track CD version of GOLDEN RECORDS VOLUME 4 is a digitally remastered ...
| | Elvis Presley Elvis' Gold Records Vol. 5 CD (1984) Remastered
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 album
$8.29 ELVIS' GOLD RECORDS VOL. 5 is a collection of hits recorded from 1968 to 1977.
Periodically throughout Presley's lifetime, RCA Records would compile Elvis' most recent best-selling records and release them on a GOLDEN RECORDS greatest hits package. VOLUME 5 is the final record in the ...
| | Vincent Herring Sterling Place All-Stars CD (1999)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD music
$11.59 At Sterling Place and Flatbush in Brooklyn, NY, the seeds for this quartet of jazz experts were planted, and the rich, ripe fruit grown to make up this CD. Alto and soprano saxophonist Vincent Herring, pianist Ronnie Mathews, bassist Richie Goods, and drummer Carl Allen are the all-stars, and they collectively romp through seven numbers ranging from modal and swinging mainstream to bop, and a ballad, all played precisely, tastefully, and rhythmically spirited as you'd expect. Herring continues his predilection toward bop with an edge, but he sounds like himself, not Bird. Mathews is a thoroughly educated and experienced player, able to play any style well, while Goods and Allen are fine listeners and improvisers. There are three pretty good swingers, the groove-inflected "Sweet & Lovely," the harder Wes Montgomery tune "S.O.S.," and the closer, Mathews original "John Charles" with a singingly tuneful bass-piano unison line. The heavy modal original of Mathews "Salima's ...
| | Weeping Tile Valentino CD (2001) (Import) Import; Argentina
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 music CDs
$18.39
| | Blondie Autoamerican CD (1980) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 songs
$9.45 All tracks have been digitally remastered using 24-bit technology.
Blondie's penultimate album before their breakup, 1981's AUTOAMERICAN is a fine collection of diverse, slickly-produced pop songs, featuring the all-pervasive "Rapture." It's difficult to explain just how omnipresent this song was on Top 40 radio in 1981--only Kim Carnes' "Bette Davis Eyes" and the "Stars on 45" medley had more airplay--or how enormous its cultural impact.
Before "Rapture," rap was little known outside of New York City's outer boroughs, but Debbie Harry's rap, namechecking scene legends Fab Five Freddy and Grandmaster Flash (alongside '60s film auteur Francois Truffaut, for the downtown hipsters), brought the style worldwide. The rap was so groundbreaking that it's easy to forget that the first three minutes of the song, where Harry coos luxuriantly over a slinky bass groove, is some of Blondie's best work, as is the rest of the album.
The basic Blondie sextet was augmented, or replaced, by numerous session musicians (including lots of uncredited horn and string players) for the group's fifth album, Autoamerican, on which they continued to expand their stylistic range, with greater success, at least on certain tracks, than they had on Eat to the Beat. A cover of Jamaican group the Paragons' "The Tide Is High," released in advance of the album, became a gold-selling number one single, as did the rap pastiche "Rapture," but, despite their presence, the album stalled in the lower half of the Top Ten and spent fewer weeks in the charts ...
| | Fags CD (2002)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 album
$7.09
| | Gomer Edwin Evans Spirit Of Tantra CD (2003)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD music
$12.39
| | Bob James Take It From The Top CD (2004)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 music CDs
$14.45
| | Bill Fadden & The Silvertone Fl Satellite Rock CD (2003)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 songs
$15.59
| | Paul Avgerinos Words Touch CD (2001)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 album
$9.85
| | Andrew Strong Greatest Hits CD (2006)
Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 3 CD music
$26.79
|
|
|