Music Review: Elvis Presley - Viva Las Vegas
Published July 11, 2008
1964 was a very busy year for Elvis Presley. Three movies, two soundtracks, one EP, assorted singles, his pursuit of Priscilla, and a public affair left very little time for anything else. The movie and soundtrack releases of Kissin’ Cousins at the beginning of the year and Roustabout at the end were poor to average at best. Sandwiched in the middle, however, was one of Elvis’ best movies that did not have a complete soundtrack release at the time. That oversight has been corrected in recent years.
Viva Las Vegas was Elvis’ most successful film, commercially. It also featured Ann-Margret, with whom Elvis would have a year long affair. The chemistry between the two is very apparent. They would remain friends until the end of his life. The film benefited from the direction of veteran George Sidney. He re-shot scenes over and over and from different angles. He angered Col. Tom Parker by exceeding the film’s budget, but did produce a slick, commercial movie that ranks as one of Elvis’ best and remains very entertaining.
The movie may have had the strongest set of songs of any Elvis film and it is inconceivable that a complete soundtrack album was not issued by the RCA label at the time. Ann-Margret, who sang a number of songs was also under contract to RCA, so that was not an issue. One single and a four song EP were all that were released in 1964. Today the full soundtrack has been issued on CD a number of times and is well worth seeking out.
“Viva Las Vegas” remains a classic Presley song. Elvis’ vocal performance can be called joyous. His voice had matured over the previous several years and had a quality and timbre that has rarely been matched. History says that Elvis recorded this song in one take. Why it failed as a single is beyond me as it stands on its own outside the context of the film.
Elvis was always able to take classic songs by other artists and transform them into his own creations. Here Elvis takes the rhythm & blue standard, “What’d I Say” and gives it a driving rock performance. Elvis acquits himself well when comparing this version to the well known Ray Charles performance.
- Music Review: Elvis Presley - Viva Las Vegas
- Published: July 11, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Soundtracks, Music: Pop
- Part of a feature: The Discographer
- Writer: David Bowling
- David Bowling's BC Writer page
- David Bowling's personal site
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The song "Viva Las Vegas" was recorded on Wednesday, July 6, 1963, after 7 takes, five of them being false starts.
What history records is that the "Viva Las Vegas" sequence, when Elvis sings the song at mid-point during the movie, was shot in one take, and with the use of a single camera.
Amazingly, Presley sings the song whilst simultaneously moving around the stage with at least four different women, pausing to sing to each one of them, never losing the focus, the positioning and the sequencing, inspite of delivering what are definitively four different set of moves and using both his arms and hands to reflect the lyrics.
Rumour had it that Parker, Presley's manager, was pretty upset that a classic, professional delivery such as the one Presley puts up, for this song, would have taken MGM less than 3 minutes to assemble, as well as its having been so economical, because of the aforementioned single camera used.