By the mid 1970's The King had matured into a stellar MOR performer and recorded some of his greatest songs, though consistency was still a problem and this album is no different from a few others he made at the time, having some overall excellent vocal work (by 1973 in my opinion he was ... Read review
Advantages: Two bona fide Elvis classics Disadvantages: A patchy album overall
By the mid 1970's The King had matured into a stellar MOR performer and recorded some of his greatest songs, though consistency was still a problem and this album is no different from a few others he made at the time, having some overall excellent vocal work (by 1973 in my opinion he was sounding as good as he was in 1956) let down more than once by some weaker filler material on his LP's, a situation not helped by the two-album-a-year deal he was ... ...they are, would struggle to produce two geniunely listenable albums in a 12 month span.
So it was to Stax Studios in Memphis that the Elvis entourage headed in December 1973; the original plan was to record with some of the house musicians there but sadly things didn't work out and the Presley live band were drafted in to back him up. Therefore this release can best be described as patchy, and anyone who hates Elvis would probably ... more
By the mid 1970's The King had matured into a stellar MOR performer and recorded some of his greatest songs, though consistency was still a problem and this album is no different from a few others he made at the time, having some overall excellent vocal work (by 1973 in my opinion he was sounding as good as he was in 1956) let down more than once by some weaker filler material on his LP's, a situation not helped by the two-album-a-year deal he was in at the time. Any artist, whoever they are, would struggle to produce two geniunely listenable albums in a 12 month span.
So it was to Stax Studios in Memphis that the Elvis entourage headed in December 1973; the original plan was to record with some of the house musicians there but sadly things didn't work out and the Presley live band were drafted in to back him up. Therefore this release can best be described as patchy, and anyone who hates Elvis would probably have this kind of LP in mind when they describe why. Not that it isn't immaculately produced; not that the songs are beautifully crafted and played, not that The King couldn't still stand up as one of the finest singers around at the time, because it's all that and more; it's just that too many of the 10 cuts veer dangerously towards safe crowd-pleasing C&W when with a little imagination Elvis could have had a real balls-out rougher sound on this record. Keeping it in the can, label RCA didn't release it until January 1975.
The good songs; the title track, a top 10 hit in Britain, is a cover of Chuck Berry's travelogue vis a vis from Virginia to Hollywood, a fast bouncing rocker with breakneck singing. It was featured in Men In Black, in the scene where Tommy Lee Jones drives his car upside down along a road tunnel. The King's plaintive plea that he doesn't want to write another Love Song Of The Year, a gorgeous meandering tune of the kind he was making his speciality by now.
Co-aide Red West helped to pen If You Talk In Your Sleep, a down and dirty funky jam, all big brash and unforgiving, contrasts sharply with the ultra-maudlin It's Midnight, as Elvis bemoans the woman he left behind deliberately, but it's midnight "and I miss you", one of the starkest songs he ever recorded. Larry Gatlin's gospel plea "Help Me" features well, as Presley begs him upstairs for guidance. Legend has it that The King dropped down on his knees in the studio whilst singing it, lending more effect to the song.
Those are the goodies; here comes the bad side; the safe predictable and (gasp) downright dull country covers There's A Honky Tonk Angel, Mr Songman, Thinking About You and even worse the pointlessly long Your Love's Been A Long Time Coming, which I refer to as This Song's Been A Long Time Ending oh the irony. These as mentioned above are all nicely played and sang but it's all a bit, well, unexciting. You Asked Me To closes out in quiet reflection.
So in all honesty it's a steady-as-she-goes album, with some good songs and some mediocre ones, it's not as good as Elvis Today or From Elvis Presley Boulevard (which I consider as one of the greatest albums ever made in the history of music) but it will keep fans happy, whilst leaving some others scratching their head wondering what all the fuss was about. Some reissues appear as a double with Raised On Rock, which is pretty much the same old same old.
pinkmatchstick 16.07.2007 (07.07.2007)
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Review of Promised Land [Remastered] - Elvis Presley
Product Information for "Promised Land [Remastered] - Elvis Presley" »
Product details
Title
Promised Land [Remastered]
Performer
Elvis Presley
Genre
Rock & Pop
Release Date
15/05/2000
Recomended Retail Price
8.99 GBP
Original Release Year
1975
Label / Distributor
RCA / Sony Music/Arvato Services
Engineer
Joe Lopes
Pieces in Set
1
Studio / Live
Studio
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
78636793023
Catalogue Number
7863679302
Additional notes
Album Notes
Personnel includes: Elvis Presley, Voice, J.D. Sumner & The Stamps (vocals). Engineers include: Dick Baxter, Mike Moran, Mickey Crofford. Producer: John Snyder. Reissue producers: Ernst Mikael Jorgensen, Roger Semon. Recorded in Memphis, Tennessee in December 1973. Digitally remastered by Joe Lopes (February 1989, RCA Recording Studios, New York). In 1973, Elvis Presley booked sessions at Memphis' famous Stax Studios, where Booker T. & the MGs, Otis Redding, and numerous other soul stars had recorded hits. Unfortunately, initial efforts to have Presley work with the Stax stable of musicians yielded few usable tracks, and Elvis soon called in his stage band to finish the sessions. The results can be heard on the albums GOOD TIMES, RAISED ON ROCK, and PROMISED LAND. Like most of Elvis' 70s recordings, PROMISED LAND is an eclectic mix reflecting Presley's many musical enthusiasms. The ten songs that make up this album run the gamut from country heartbreak songs ("There's a Honky Tonk Angel," "Mr. Songman") to carnal white funk ("If You Talk in Your Sleep") to heartfelt gospel ("Help Me") to schmaltzy pop ("Love Song of the Year," "It's Midnight"). While the performances on PROMISED LAND are uniformly excellent, the material is a mixed bag of strong material and throwaways. The production is extravagant, typical of Presley recordings from this era. Those interested in hearing these songs in sparer settings might want to check out RHYTHM AND COUNTRY, a collection of undubbed alternate takes from the Stax sessions.
Titles on disc 1
1.
Promised Land
2.
There's A Honky Tonk Angel
3.
Help Me
4.
Mr Songman
5.
Love Song Of The Year
6.
It's Midnight
7.
Your Love's Been A Long Time Coming
8.
If You Talk In Your Sleep
9.
Thinking About You
10.
You Asked Me To
11.
Loving Arms
12.
I Got A Feelin' In My Body
13.
If That Isn't Love
14.
She Wears My Ring
15.
My Boy
16.
Spanish Eyes
17.
Talk About The Good Times
18.
Good Time Charlie's Got The Blues
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