Monday , March 18 2024
elvis presley, elvis on tour

Music and Film Reviews: ‘Elvis on Tour,’ plus a Moon Mullican Tribute and JD Clayton

Elvis Presley’s precipitous decline, which led to his death in August 1977, appears to have begun about four years earlier. He did perform a hugely popular TV special in January of 1973 (Aloha from Hawaii), but that’s the year when his divorce was finalized, the hit singles stopped coming, his drug use was rising, and his health was sinking.

In 1972, though, Presley was still in relatively good shape. That’s when he delivered his last big pop hit (“Burning Love”), as well as a concert series that resulted in the bestselling album Elvis: As Recorded at Madison Square Garden and a Golden Globe–winning film, Elvis on Tour.

A new seven-disc, 145-track box set that shares that film’s title offers a closer look at the concert series. A follow-up to 2019’s gargantuan Elvis Live 1969, it features four complete April 1972 shows, three of which are previously unreleased. (The fourth, which has been remixed for this box, also appeared in a 2003 collection.) The anthology, which includes a 32-page booklet with essays and photos, also incorporates two discs’ worth of material from Presley’s rehearsal sessions for the tour.

Finally, the set embraces a Blu-ray edition of the hour-and-a-half-long Elvis on Tour film, which includes excellent footage of Presley’s early years in the music business but focuses mostly on the spring 1972 concert series with performance clips and offstage material.

The documentary—which is well-done, aside from the overuse of split screens—shows Presley enjoying himself and mostly performing well, though at times he appears to be just going through the motions. He seems particularly engrossed with the music when he’s offstage and singing just for fun—during which times he largely sticks to gospel material. (In fact, he won a Grammy in 1972 for a gospel album called He Touched Me.)

Presley de-emphasizes his hit singles in these concerts, preferring to concentrate more on an ostensible attempt to update his image with covers of material by songwriters such as Paul Simon (“Bridge Over Troubled Water”), Mickey Newbury (“An American Trilogy”), Buffy Sainte-Marie (“Until It’s Time for You to Go”), and Kris Kristofferson (“For the Good Times”). 

He does run through some of his early hits, but any concertgoer who made a brief trip to the lobby for popcorn might have missed most of them. In the Hampton, Virginia show that fills the first disc of this box, for example, he features “Love Me,” “All Shook Up,” “(Let Me Be) Your Teddy Bear,” “Don’t Be Cruel,” “Are You Lonesome Tonight?,” “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” “Hound Dog,” “Love Me Tender,” “A Big Hunk of Love,” and “Can’t Help Falling in Love”—10 songs in a combined total of less than 18 minutes.

More recent chart successes also garner little attention. Though Presley didn’t capture top positions on the Billboard singles charts nearly as often in the late ’60s and early ’70s as he had in earlier years, he did score some big hits during this period: “Crying in the Chapel” (No. 3 in 1965), “Suspicious Minds,” “In the Ghetto,” and “Don’t Cry, Daddy” (No. 1, 3, and 6, respectively, in 1969), “The Wonder of You,” “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me,” and “Kentucky Rain” (No. 9, 11, and 16, respectively, in 1970), and the aforementioned “Burning Love” (No. 2 in 1972). The shows in this box set, though, include only two of these eight songs: “Suspicious Minds” and “Burning Love,” the latter an Arthur Alexander cover that Presley’s label released about four months after the tour.

Even casual fans will likely find the film absorbing. The backstage material gives a good sense of what life on the road was like for Presley in 1972. On many of the songs, his voice remains powerful, and his stage presence is still strong. The two discs of rehearsal material, which include candid moments and some songs that did not make it into the shows, are particularly interesting. That said, it would be difficult to argue that Presley’s glitzy, Las Vegas-styled, big-band act ever equals the electrifying nature of his 1950s and early 1960s work on Sun and RCA—or even the best parts of his famous 1969 TV “comeback special.” 

Unless you’re an Elvis completist, moreover, you’ll likely find too much redundancy in these concert recordings, especially if you already own the Madison Square Garden release. Unlike, say, Bob Dylan, Presley rarely varied either his setlists or his approach to particular tunes. So, what we have here, at least on discs one through four, is mostly just four indistinguishable renditions of each of a couple dozen songs. In fact, some of these numbers also appear on the rehearsal recordings, so Elvis on Tour includes, for example, five performances each of “Polk Salad Annie,” six of “See See Rider,” and a whopping 14 of “For the Good Times.” It’s probably safe to say that for most listeners, the good times will be over by the third or fourth version.

Also Noteworthy

Various Artists: Moon and the Stars: A Tribute to Moon Mullican. Many people will undoubtedly be surprised to learn that this is not the first or even second tribute album devoted to Moon Mullican (1909–1967). A distinctive country singer and piano player who incorporated elements of honky-tonk, Western swing, and even polka, he was also a notable songwriter who reportedly co-authored “Jambalaya” with Hank Williams. For whatever reason, though, he is not well known today.

As journalist Ben Sandmel says in his liner notes, however, “if you haven’t heard of Moon Mullican, you’ve either heard his music or felt his influence.” And he has lots of fans among musicians, including Johnny Nicholas, the former frontman for Asleep at the Wheel, a group that once recorded Mullican’s “Cherokee Boogie.” Nicholas co-produced the terrific Moon and the Stars, which is available on two LPs or one CD. It features a versatile instrumental ensemble and an eclectic mix of veteran and young artists taking turns on lead vocals.

The album offers 20 numbers associated with Mullican, including nine that he wrote or co-wrote. Nicholas takes center stage on six songs, among them “You Don’t Have to Be a Baby to Cry,” which was first recorded by Mullican in 1950 and became a pop hit for the Caravelles 13 years later. Also here is “I’ll Sail My Ship Alone,” sung by Linda Gail Lewis, whose brother Jerry Lee recorded the number in 1973. (According to Peter Guralnick’s biography of Sun Records founder Sam Phillips, Mullican was “one of the few piano players Jerry ever acknowledged as an influence.”)

Among other standouts on this release: “Good Times Gonna Roll Again,” featuring blues pianist and singer Marcia Ball; “I’m Waiting for Ships That Never Come In” and “Downstream,” both spotlighting the great Peter Rowan”; “Pipeliner Blues,” with Sir Douglas Quintet cofounder Augie Meyers; and “Leaving You with a Worried Mind,” which profits from spirited vocals by Emily Gimble, granddaughter of famed Western swing fiddler Johnny Gimble.

JD ClaytonLong Way from Home. This is the debut full-length album from Arkansas native JD Clayton, a country rocker whose best work recalls artists like Guy Clark and John Prine.

The folksy 10-track CD—which incorporates all four selections from a 2022 EP­—includes a back-to-back pair of amiable love songs (“Beauty Queen” and “Goldmine”) as well as a sweet, banjo-spiced number called “Sleepy Night in Nashville” in which Clayton sings, “You just go ahead and shut those eyes / There’s gonna be some rain and a little thunder / Come morning time, the sun is gonna shine.” In the excellent title track, he addresses his mother and talks about chasing his musician-world dreams, while “Different Kind of Simple Life” finds him ostensibly trying to reconcile those dreams with his roots and new role as a husband and father. 

Not everything here impresses. “American Millionaire,” for example, feels like filler, as does a cover of the traditional “Midnight Special” that adds nothing to the Creedence Clearwater version it appears to emulate. But much of this album marks Clayton as an artist with considerable potential.

About Jeff Burger

Jeff Burger’s website, byjeffburger.com, contains half a century's worth of music reviews and commentary. His books include Dylan on Dylan: Interviews and Encounters, Lennon on Lennon: Conversations with John Lennon, Leonard Cohen on Leonard Cohen: Interviews and Encounters, and Springsteen on Springsteen: Interviews, Speeches, and Encounters.

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