Details

Track Listing DISC 1: SPECIAL EDITION: 1. I Just Can't Help Believin' 2. Twenty Days and Twenty Nights 3. How the Web Was Woven 4. Patch It Up 5. Mary in the Morning 6. You Don't Have to Say You Love Me 7. You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling 8. I've Lost You 9. Just Pretend 10. Stranger in the Crowd 11. Next Step Is Love, The 12. Bridge Over Troubled Water 13. Love Letters 14. When I'm Over You 15. Something 16. I'll Never Know 17. Sylvia 18. Cindy, Cindy 19. Rags to Riches
DISC 2: THE CONCERT: 1. That's All Right 2. Mystery Train / Tiger Man 3. Hound Dog 4. Love Me Tender 5. Just Pretend 6. Walk a Mile in My Shoes 7. There Goes My Everything 8. Words 9. Sweet Caroline 10. You've Lost That Loving Feeling 11. Polk Salad Annie 12. Heartbreak Hotel 13. One Night 14. Blue Suede Shoes 15. All Shook Up 16. Little Sister / Get Back 17. I Was the One 18. Love Me 19. Are You Lonesome Tonight? 20. Bridge Over Troubled Water 21. Suspicious Minds 22. Can't Help Falling in Love
DISC 3: THE REHEARSAL: 1. I Got a Woman 2. I Can't Stop Loving You 3. Twenty Days and Twenty Nights 4. Next Step Is Love, The 5. You Don't Have to Say You Love Me 6. Stranger in the Crowd 7. Make the World Go Away 8. Don't Cry Daddy 9. In the Ghetto 10. Peter Gunn Theme - (TRUE instrumental) 11. That's All Right 12. Cottonfields 13. Yesterday 14. I Can't Stop Loving You 15. Such a Night 16. It's Now or Never 17. Fool Such as I, (Now and Then There's) A 18. Little Sister / Get Back 19. I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water 20. Johnny B. Goode 21. Mary in the Morning 22. Wonder of You, The 23. Santa Claus Is Back in Town 24. Farther Along 25. Oh Happy Day
Album Notes Personnel: Elvis Presley (vocals); James Burton, John Wilkinson, Charlie Hodge, Chip Young (guitar); Charlie McCoy (harmonica, organ); David Briggs (piano); Glen D. Hardin (keyboards); Jerry Scheff, Norbert Putnam (bass); Ronnie Tutt, Jerry Carrigan (drums); Millie Kirkham, The Sweet Inspirations, The Imperials Quartet, The Nashville Edition, Mary Holladay, Ginger Holladay, Jeannie Greene (background vocals). Recorded at RCA's "Nashville Sound" Studio B, Nashville, Tennessee on June 6-7, 1970 and live at the International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada on August 13-15, 1970. The new liner notes are taken from a 1980 interview with original producer Felton Jarvis. This 3-disc set includes the original album THAT'S THE WAY IT IS and two discs of unreleased tracks. Personnel: Elvis Presley (vocals, guitar); James Burton, Chip Young, Eddie Hinton, John Wilkinson (guitar); Charlie McCoy (harmonica, organ); David Briggs, Glen D. Hardin (piano); Norbert Putnam, Jerry Scheff (bass); Jerry Carrigan, Ron Tutt (drums); Charlie Hodge Orchestra; The Imperials, The Jordanaires, The Sweet Inspirations, Millie Kirkham, Mary Green, Mary Holladay, Ginger Holladay, Temple Riser, June Page, Sonja Montgomery, Dolores Edgin (background vocals). Compilation producers: Ernst Mikael Jorgensen, Roger Semon. Principally recorded at The International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada on August 12, 1970. This 3-disc set includes the original album THAT'S THE WAY IT IS and two discs of unreleased tracks. Personnel: Elvis Presley (vocals, guitar); James Burton, Chip Young, Eddie Hinton, John Wilkinson (guitar); Charlie McCoy (harmonica, organ); David Briggs, Glen D. Hardin (piano); Norbert Putnam, Jerry Scheff (bass); Jerry Carrigan, Ron Tutt (drums); The Imperials, The Jordanaires, The Sweet Inspirations, Millie Kirkham, Mary Green, Mary Holladay, Ginger Holladay, Temple Riser, June Page, Sonja Montgomery, Dolores Edgin (background vocals); Charlie Hodge Orchestra. Compilation producers: Ernst Mikael Jorgensen, Roger Semon. Principally recorded at The International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada on August 12, 1970. Although it shares its title with a documentary about Elvis' 1970 late summer engagement at Las Vegas' International Hotel, the album THAT'S THE WAY IT IS features only two songs ("You Don't Have To Say You Love Me" and "The Next Step Is Love") that appear in the film. Of the other ten songs here, four were recorded live at the International but not included in the film; the other six are studio recordings from Presley's June 1970 Nashville sessions. THAT'S THE WAY IT IS captures Presley at the tail-end of his transition from rock star to Vegas showman. Gone from Presley's repertoire are the spare rockers and tender love songs that highlight his earlier career. Replacing them are huge production numbers and dramatic ballads like "You Don't Have To Say You Love Me" and "I've Lost You." In fact, the majority of the songs here are down tempo heartbreak songs, nearly all sung with a near-operatic level of intensity. In lesser hands the results would be mawkish, but Presley manages to pull it off. Especially effective are the opening and closing numbers, "I Just Can't Help Believin'" and "Bridge Over Troubled Water." This is a highly expanded (three CD) version of the soundtrack to Dennis Saunder's 1970 documentary of Presley's first big post-comeback tour, designed to complement the restored reissue of the film itself. Disc one features the original album--which mixes live and studio cuts from Nashville and Las Vegas--fleshed out with seven more songs from the same sessions, including an impassioned version of the Beatles' "Something," and a honky-tonk take on Tony Bennett's '50s weeper "Rags to Riches." Disc two features an entire (mostly previously unreleased) live show from the same period, brilliantly remixed, so that genius guitarist James Burton can really be heard for a change. Disc three features rehearsals for the tour, some recorded at home. ...
Industry Reviews ...Elvis rocks out, clearly enjoying himself, playing to the crowd at the International, including the smoochfest with the ladies during 'Love Me Tender'....[It's] Elvis poised at the top of the arc of his decline... Mojo (09/01/2000)
...It's Elvis in full effect: magnificent pop arais in the studio, swampy grit on stage, and covers that sound schmaltzy until the towering emotion in his voice makes you realize he means every word. - Rating: A Entertainment Weekly (07/28/2000)
4 stars out of 5 - ...This was the blueprint for an Elvis we could have grown old with... Rolling Stone (06/26/2003)
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