That's All Right - Elvis Presley, Crudup, Arthur "Big
Blue Moon of Kentucky - Elvis Presley, Monroe, Bill [1]
Good Rockin' Tonight - Elvis Presley, Brown, Roy [1]
I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine - Elvis Presley, David, Mack
Milk Cow Blues Boogie - Elvis Presley, Arnold, Kokomo
You're a Heartbreaker - Elvis Presley, Sallee, Jack
Baby Let's Play House - Elvis Presley, Gunter, Arthur
I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone - Elvis Presley, Kesler, Stan
I Forgot to Remember to Forget - Elvis Presley, Feathers, Charlie
Mystery Train - Elvis Presley, Parker, Junior [1]
I Love You Because - Elvis Presley, Payne, Leon
Harbor Lights - Elvis Presley, Kennedy, Gordon
Blue Moon - Elvis Presley, Hart, Lorenz
Tomorrow Night - Elvis Presley, Coslow, Sam
I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin') - Elvis Presley, Wakely, Jimmy
Just Because - Elvis Presley, Brown, Alex [1]
I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone [Slow Version] - Elvis Presley, Kesler, Stan
Trying to Get to You - Elvis Presley, McCoy, Charlie [Har
When It Rains, It Really Pours - Elvis Presley, Emerson, Bill
Track Listings (19) - Disc #2
My Happiness [Acetate] - Elvis Presley, Bergantine, Borney
That's When Your Heartaches Begin [Acetate] - Elvis Presley, Brown, George
I'll Never Stand in Your Way [Acetate] - Elvis Presley, Heath, Hy
It Wouldn't Be the Same Without You [Acetate][#] - Elvis Presley, Rose, Fred
I Love You Because [Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, Payne, Leon
That's All Right [Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, Crudup, Arthur "Big
Blue Moon of Kentucky [Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, Monroe, Bill [1]
Blue Moon [Alternate Take][#] - Elvis Presley, Hart, Lorenz
I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin') [Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, Wakely, Jimmy
I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine [Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, David, Mack
I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone [Slow Version][Alternate Take] - Elvis Presley, Kesler, Stan
Fool, Fool, Fool [Acetate] - Elvis Presley, Ertegun, Ahmet
Shake, Rattle & Roll [Acetate] - Elvis Presley, Calhoun, Charles E.
I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, Kesler, Stan
That's All Right [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, Crudup, Arthur "Big
Money Honey [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, Stone, Jesse
Tweedle Dee [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, Scott, Winfield
I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, David, Mack
Hearts of Stone [Acetate][Live][#] - Elvis Presley, Jackson, Rudy
In 1954 a young Elvis Presley made musical and cultural history when he, lead guitarist Scotty Moore, and bassist Bill Black got together via Sam Phillips in Phillips's Memphis-based Sun Studios...and basically invented ro... more »ck & roll. What you hear in these raw, wonderful '50s-era recordings is a perfect blend of American musical idioms, including country, blues, R&B, and Tin Pan Alley pop, all rolled into one delicious new sound. These tracks are now all legendary--and Sunrise is yet another repackaging of these tunes (making previous Sun compilations obsolete), this one supposedly featuring every outtake and "alternate" take from Presley's Sun years. A must for every serious student of rock music and popular culture. --Bill Holdship« less
In 1954 a young Elvis Presley made musical and cultural history when he, lead guitarist Scotty Moore, and bassist Bill Black got together via Sam Phillips in Phillips's Memphis-based Sun Studios...and basically invented rock & roll. What you hear in these raw, wonderful '50s-era recordings is a perfect blend of American musical idioms, including country, blues, R&B, and Tin Pan Alley pop, all rolled into one delicious new sound. These tracks are now all legendary--and Sunrise is yet another repackaging of these tunes (making previous Sun compilations obsolete), this one supposedly featuring every outtake and "alternate" take from Presley's Sun years. A must for every serious student of rock music and popular culture. --Bill Holdship
"RCA continues to release and rerelease Elvis albums like the plague. Selling you with new bonus, never before heard alternate takes, etc. It's not different at all really, from the single cd "The Complete Sun Sessions" recording done 13 years ago. The sound quality is touched up a bit, and the extras are interesting But.. not worth the investment if you have the previous recordings. Although.. These sessions capture rock & roll at its most basic [12-bar blues] and romantic. Much has been said about Elvis' greatness, but this is the ONE album that proves it. Never before has an artist been so exagerated as Elvis was in the 60's and 70's for mediocore at best material, but the songs on this album will have you falling head over heals in love with Elvis, and wondering just how great things might have been if he would have stayed at Sun and never met up with the, err, the colonel. This is the greatest rock & roll ever recorded.. Period.. I've heard them all. This is the mecca that so many artists go back to.. The Beatles, Van Morrison, The Clash, Otis Redding, etc. It's got soul."
Great material, but redundant and incomplete
B. Stanley | Shorewood, IL USA | 05/27/2005
(2 out of 5 stars)
"The recordings Elvis Presley made for Sun Records in Memphis are considered among the finest rock n' roll records ever made. There's an undeniable freshness about the studio tracks on these two discs that still conveys energy and fun. They're all very simply songs, quickly recorded, but they'd be absolutely impossible to duplicate.
That's probably why they've been repackaged and re-released again. With a $30 price tag, everyone from Presley fanatics to casual listeners interested in music history would be better off picking up the 5-Disc Box Set: THE COMPLETE 50s MASTERS, which gives you all the master takes here as well as many of the alternates and demos (plus all his RCA recordings from 1956-1958, including movie soundtracks, Christmas and gospel tunes and great singles like "Heartbreak Hotel", "Love Me Tender", "Jailhouse Rock", "Don't Be Cruel", "All Shook Up" and "Hound Dog") for only $25 more. That collection is well worth it.
I don't feel the unreleased studio material justifies re-releasing these songs again. With a few exceptions, it's easy to see why these alternate takes were originally rejected.
The rough tapes also don't contain the priceless moment of Elvis cracking up on a take as Carl Perkins makes faces at him through the window of the Sun Records office that looked into the recording studio. That's the kind of informal spontaneity that made the Sun Recordings so vibrant (for Presley, Perkins and plenty of other great artists). That's why I bought this collection.
What is here is some incredibly racist studio dialogue between takes that is far more shocking to a modern listener than any pelvis-wiggling might've been at the time. It's incredibly embarrassing to the spirit of fun-for-all that this repackaging of the Sun material might be trying to market to.
There's also some live tracks to fill out the end of Disc 2. They sound like Elvis was giving a concert from a distant sewer while someone was sweeping gravel off the floor in the recording studio.
I love Elvis and the Sun material is arguably the greatest accomplishment in his recording legacy, but there are better packages to get all of the material anyone would want from this collection."
Truly remarkable
keonikrazey | 07/12/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I don't care if you love Elvis, you hate Elvis, youi dig rock, you loathe rock, you are 8 or you are 80, this music will go right to your heart. You are hearing a truly original artist create an art form on the spot with irresistable caring and appeal. There's little here that has much do with the Elvis RCA fashioned the minute they got his contract; he isn't sinigng "Wear My Ring Around Your Neck" here. What is here is pure, undiluted genius--a mixture of blues, soul, pop, country, folk and a lot else, all distilled into the most tender, gutsy, fascinating, honest music imaginable. And Elvis' taste in material is just fascinating--he has taken music from all sorts of sources here, nothing predictable, nothing linear, and fashioned it, bent it, molded it and delivered it with genius. And there is one noteworthy moment which has largely gone unnoticed. When he sings "I'll Never Stand In Your Way" he is all but imitating the original performer, Joni James, in the most affecting and complimentary way imaginable. He could even do THAT magnifiicently."
The "good" elvis material
sfsorrow | West Lafayette Indiana | 07/20/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Forget the fat Elvis of the 70's, the hip shaking Elvis of the late 50's and the movie making Elvis of the 60's. Once you've done that then look at a young truck driver from Mississippi who wanted to hear his voice on record and this is what you get with Sunrise. the original Sun sessions do lay down the groundwork for what Elvis was to become but they also show rock and roll's close relationship with the blues. the rawness of their power is incredible. This is the stuff that the Elvis should be remembered for, not the other crap."
A journey to the place where the soul of man never dies
sfsorrow | 06/03/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Outside of jazz and along with Robert Johnson's complete recordings, Presley's Sun sessions are possibly the most important recordings in the history of American music. What Presley (who was only a teenager) achieves on these songs is just staggering. A perfect and purely instinctive fusion of blues, rhythm and blues, country and pop into a new style of music soon to be baptized "rock'n roll". These recordings put to rest the charges that Presley "stole" the blues from the black artists he admired. Instead, it is clear that Presley "feels" the blues like no other white singer ever has. More importantly, he makes the songs his own...This collection is not, in fact, complete. It ignores the much better sounding live versions of "Maybellene" and "Tweedle Dee" included in the box set "The 50s Masters". It is, however, by far the best ever Sun sessions compilation. The songs sound as fresh as the day they were recorded and will probably sound the same 1000 years from now. This is one of the rare examples of a moment when an artist achieves something which is more than the sum of his influences to create a new art form. A monument of American music, a must for any serious music lover."