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Showing posts with label Jerry Lee Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jerry Lee Lewis. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Jerry Lee Lewis – Sun Essentials - 4 disc set

 


Disc 1 - Rockin' Rollin' Country Boy

Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On 2:52

Great Balls Of Fire 1:52

High School Confidential 2:28

Be Bop A Lula 2:25

Good Golly, Miss Molly (Alt Take) 2:10

Down The Line 2:12

Lovin' Up A Storm 1:51

Wild One 1:50

Ooby Dooby 1:56

End Of The Road 1:47

Pumping Piano Rock 2:03

All Night Long 2:02

Let The Good Times Roll 2:12

Put Me Down 2:08

Don't Be Cruel 1:58

I'm Feeling Sorry 2:39

Home 1:57

The Wild Side Of Love 2:46

When My Blue Moon Turns To Gold Again 2:32

I Love You Because 3:01

Born To Lose 2:38

I'm Throwing Rice (At The Girl I Love) 2:13

Jambalaya (On The Bayou) 1:58

Lovesick Blues 2:08

Crazy Heart 2:46

You Win Again 2:54

Cold, Cold Heart 3:05

I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You) 2:51

Your Cheatin' Heart 1:44

Settin' The Woods On Fire (Undubbed Version) 2:25

Long Gone Lonesome Blues 2:01

(Walk That) Lonesome Valley 2:17

Disc 2 - The Country Boy Rocks On

Big Blon' Baby 1:40

Rock 'N' Roll Ruby 1:56

Pink Pedal Pushers 2:06

Breathless 2:42

I'm Sorry, I'm Not Sorry 2:35

Ubangi Stomp 1:45

Friday Night 1:41

I'll Be Me 2:43

Milk Shake Mademoiselle 2:11

Baby, Baby, Bye Bye 1:56

Break Up 2:18

Just Who Is To Blame 2:33

Charming Billy (Billy Boy) 2:17

It Won't Happen With Me 2:57

Bonnie B 2:19

Livin' Lovin' Wreck 2:03

Your Lovin' Ways 2:37

Crazy Arms 2:43

I'll Make It All Up To You (Alt Take) 2:44

Let's Talk About Us 2:06

It Hurt Me So 2:38

As Long As I Live 2:24

How's My Ex Treating You? 2:34

I Can't Seem To Say Goodbye 2:32

Shame On You 2:08

I'll Sail My Ship Alone 2:07

Someday (You'll Want Me To Want You) 2:43

Set My Mind At Ease 2:01

Seasons Of My Heart 3:00

It All Depends (On Who Will Buy The Wine) 2:58

Slippn' Around 2:51

Night Train To Memphis 2:08

Disc 3 - Hillbilly Blues

Big Legged Woman 2:28

Rockin' With Red 1:58

Sixty Minute Man 1:50

So Long, I'm Gone 2:09

I've Been Twistin' 3:17

Teenage Letter 2:18

Mean Woman Blues 2:27

Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee 2:37

Keep You Hands Off It (Birthday Cake) 2:14

Money 2:38

Sick And Tired 2:43

Hound Dog 2:06

Cool Cool Ways (Sexy Ways) 2:30

Hello, Hello, Baby 3:25

I Know What It Means 2:41

It'll Be Me (LP Version) 2:15

Hillbilly Music 2:09

Turn Around 2:51

Love's Made Me A Fool Of Me 2:45

I Forgot To Remember To Forget 2:28

Fools Like Me 2:53

I Can't Trust Me 2:14

I'm The Guilty One 2:10

Memory Of You 2:11

Don't Drop It 1:49

Hand Me Down My Walking Cane 2:21

Crawdad Song 1:51

Crazy Arms (Remake) 2:35

Ramblin' Rose 3:20

Rockin' The Boat Of Love 2:41

Whole Lotta Twistin' Goin' On 3:18

Disc 4 - Something Old, Something Blue

What'd I Say 2:25

Honey Hush 2:07

Tomorrow Night 2:59

Carryin' On (Sexy Ways) 2:02

Good Rockin' Tonight 2:44

Come What May 2:05

Hello Josephine 1:45

Little Queenie 2:26

Johnny B. Goode 1:56

Hang Up My Rock 'N' Roll Shoes 2:37

Sweet Little Sixteen 2:57

Matchbox (Alt Take) 1:51

C.C. Rider 2:28

Lewis Boogie 2:02

The Ballad Of Billy Joe 2:57

My Pretty Quadroon 2:56

Hong Kong Blues (Down In Old Hong Kong) 2:28

That Lucky Old Sun 3:12

Goodnight Irene (Undubbed Master) 2:57

Will The Circle Be Unbroken 2:25

The Great Speckled Bird 1:44

John Henry 2:34

Frankie And Johnny 2:35

You're The Only Star InMy Blue Heaven 1:52

Waiting Foe A Train (All Around The Watertank) 1:43

Old Pal Of Yesterday 2:34

Mexicali Rose (Slow Version) 1:55

Deep Elem Blues 2:45

You Are My Sunshine 2:13

The Marines' Hymn (From The Halls Of Montezuma) 2:22

That's My Desire 1:14

Just A Little Talk With Jesus 3:11

Carry Me Back To Old Virginia 2:30


Jerry Lee Lewis – Sun Essentials


Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Book review - Sam Phillips, The Man Who Invented Rock'n'Roll...paperback edition now available




Peter Guralnick, the author of the critically acclaimed Elvis Presley biography Last Train to Memphis, brings us the life of Sam Phillips, the visionary genius who single-handedly steered the revolutionary path of Sun Records.

The music that he shaped in his tiny Memphis studio with artists as diverse as Elvis Presley, Ike Turner, Howlin' Wolf, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Johnny Cash, introduced a sound that had never been heard before. He brought forth a singular mix of black and white voices passionately proclaiming the vitality of the American vernacular tradition while at the same time declaring, once and for all, a new, integrated musical day. With extensive interviews and firsthand personal observations extending over a 25-year period with Phillips, along with wide-ranging interviews with nearly all the legendary Sun Records artists, Guralnick gives us an ardent, unrestrained portrait of an American original as compelling in his own right as Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, or Thomas Edison.




Marty's review: Probably the most fascinating and informative book on the history of Sam Phillips and Sun Records I have ever read. It is also a music encyclopedia on the birth of rock and roll and all that it spawned after it. The just released paperback edition is a generous 763 pages worth, including dozens of photographs, that will have the most ardent music aficionado drooling over its pages and devouring every tasty morsel of juicy facts, historical events and biographical detail. If you thought you knew all about Sam Phillips, Sun Records and the beginnings of Elvis Presley's rise to fame, then this book will surprise and delight and have you digging out your music collections and wanting to hear more of the artists mentioned hear and appreciate their roots and the music they made.




About the Author

Peter Guralnick has written extensively on American music and musicians. His books include the prize-winning Elvis Presley two-part biography Last Train to Memphis and Careless Love; an acclaimed trilogy on American roots music, Sweet Soul Music, Lost Highway and Feel Like Going Home; the biographical inquiry Searching for Robert Johnson; the novel Nighthawk Blues; and Dream Boogie, a biography of Sam Cooke. He splits his time between Nashville and Massachusetts.

Published by Little Brown and Company


                                                                     

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Sun Records 706 Union Instrumentals including Jerry Lee Lewis, Sonny Burgess and Bill Justis



For Sun Records and instrumentals fans, this 31 track collection will rock your socks off. Featuring the cream of artists from Sun Records, Memphis, including Jerry Lee Lewis, Sonny Burgess, Bill Justis, Roland Janes, Frank Frost, Wade Cagle, Johnny Bernero, Ace Cannon and Earl Hooker.




Thursday, May 30, 2013

The Legendary Story of Sun Records...various artists


Sun Records is a record label founded in Memphis, Tennessee, starting operations on March 27, 1952.
Founded by Sam Phillips, Sun Records was notable for discovering and first recording such influential musicians as Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny Cash. (Presley's recording contract was sold to RCA Victor Records for $35,000 in 1955 to relieve financial difficulties which Sun was going through.) Prior to those records, Sun Records had concentrated on recording African-American musicians, because Phillips loved Rhythm and Blues and wanted to bring black music to a white audience. It was Sun record producer and engineer, Jack Clement, who discovered and recorded Jerry Lee Lewis, while owner Sam Phillips was away on a trip to Florida. The original Sun Records logo was designed by John Gale Parker, Jr., a resident of Memphis and high school classmate of Phillips.

The music of many Sun Records musicians helped lay part of the foundation of late 20th century rock and roll, plus it influenced many younger musicians, particularly The Beatles. In 2001, Paul McCartney appeared on a tribute compilation album titled Good Rockin' Tonight: The Legacy Of Sun Records. The 2010 tribute Million Dollar Quartet is based on the famous photograph of Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis grouped round Elvis Presley at the piano, the night when the four joined in an impromptu jam at Sun Record's one-room sound studio, the "Million Dollar Quartet" of 4 December 1956.

In 1969, Mercury Records label producer Shelby Singleton purchased the Sun label from Phillips. Singleton merged his operations into Sun International Corporation, which re-released and re-packaged compilations of Sun's early artists in the early 1970s. It would later introduce rockabilly tribute singer Jimmy "Orion" Ellis in 1980 as Orion taking on the persona of Elvis Presley. The company remains in business today as Sun Entertainment Corporation, which currently licenses its brand and classic hit recordings (many of which have appeared in CD boxed sets and other compilations) to independent reissue labels. Sun Entertainment also includes SSS International Records, Plantation Records, Amazon Records, Red Bird Records, Blue Cat Records among other labels the company acquired over the years. Its website sells collectible items as well as compact discs bearing the original 1950s Sun logo.

Some of the notable recording artists at Sun were Roscoe Gordon, Rufus Thomas, who recorded solo and with his daughter Carla Thomas, Little Milton, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich and Conway Twitty (who at that time recorded under his real name of Harold Jenkins).

This excellent 60 track compilation represents all the styles of music heralded by Sun Records, from earthy Blues and Country to Rockabilly and Rock'n'Roll. For anyone interested in the roots of rock and roll, this an important and historical collection. Many of these tracks were later covered by other artists early in their own careers.

Disc: 1
1. Mystery Train - Little Junior's Blue Flames
2. Blue Suede Shoes - Carl Perkins
3. Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On - Jerry Lee Lewis
4. Bear Cat - Rufus Thomas
5. Folsom Prison Blues - Johnny Cash
6. Color And Kind (Look-A Here Baby) - Howlin' Wolf
7. Flying Saucer Rock And Roll - Billy Lee Riley
8. Ten Cats Down - The Miller Sisters
9. I Never Knew - Roy Orbison
10. Your Cheatin' Heart - Cliff Gleaves
11. Just Walking In The Rain - The Prisonaires
12. The Hucklebuck - Earl Hooker
13. Shake 'Em Up Baby - Frank Ballard
14. Willing And Ready - Ray Smith
15. Rock 'n' Roll Ruby - Warren Smith
16. Born To Lose - Carl McVoy
17. Lonely Weekends - Charlie Rich
18. I Need A Man - Barbara Pittman
19. Ubangi Stomp - Carl Mann
20. Sadie's Back In Town - Sonny Burgess
21. Groovy Train - Wade Cagle & The Escorts
22. Don't Be Runnin' Wild (Problem Child) - Ken Cook
23. Go! Go! Go! - Roy Orbison
24. Red Velvet - The Kirby Sisters
25. Greyhound Blues - D.A. Hunt
26. I Forgot To Remember To Forget - Charlie Feathers
27. Lewis Boogie - Jerry Lee Lewis
28. Peace In The Valley - Million Dollar Quartet
29. Down By The Riverside - Million Dollar Quartet
30. Who Will The Next Fool Be? - Charlie Rich
Disc: 2
1. Great Balls Of Fire - Jerry Lee Lewis
2. Matchbox - Carl Perkins
3. Feelin' Good - Little Junior's Blue Flames
4. Mona Lisa - Carl Mann
5. Ooby Dooby - Roy Orbison
6. Guess Things Happen That Way - Johnny Cash
7. My Babe - Narvel Felts
8. It's Me Baby - Malcolm Yelvington
9. Paralyzed - Million Dollar Quartet
10. I'll Wait Forever - Anita Wood
11. Somebody Told Me - Little Milton
12. Rockin' Bandit (Dubbed Version) - Ray Smith
13. Pearly Lee - Billy Lee Riley
14. Red Hot - Billy 'The Kid' Emerson
15. Uranium Rock (Alternate Take) - Warren Smith
16. Raunchy - Bill Justis
17. Got You On My Mind - The Miller Sisters
18. Just In Time - Harold Jenkins (Conway Twitty)
19. Ain't Got No Home - Carl Mann
20. Ain't Got A Thing - Sonny Burgess
21. Cheese And Crackers - Rosco Gordon
22. Got Love If You Want It - Warren Smith
23. Feelin' Low - Ernie Chaffin
24. There's Another Place I Can Go - Charlie Rich
25. Handsome Man - Barbara Pittman
26. How Long Can It Be? - Maggie Sue Wimberly
27. Goin Crazy - Mack Self
28. Rockin' Daddy - Eddie Bond
29. Cloudy - Brad Suggs
30. Goodnight Irene - Johnny Cash





Sunday, October 10, 2010

Jerry Lee Lewis..........Sun Essentials

Jerry Lee Lewis, the Killer, is the rock n' roll singer-songwriter and pianist, whose enduring image will be him standing at the piano, limbs flailing, quiff flying, while he belts out "Great Balls of Fire" - his signature tune.

Lewis developed his style early, mixing boogie-woogie, rock, gospel and rhythm and blues. As a youth he was expelled from university for playing 'worldly' music. He moved to Nashville in 1955 - only to be told his music was not country enough. He wound up at Sun Records, where he worked as a session man for, among others, Carl Perkins. It was during a recording session with Perkins, that they were joined in the studio for an impromptu jam by Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash. The resulting tapes - made by the engineer as a 'souvenir'- were released as the Million Dollar Quartet.

In 1957 he shook the world with "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" and "Great Balls of Fire" and looked set to have a stellar career, however his private life became public and everything changed. While touring in Europe, news circulated of Lewis' marriage to his thirteen year old cousin (once removed), the resulting backlash caused the cancellation of the tour and an almost complete halt to Lewis career in the States. He was reduced to playing small clubs for small money, while his records struggled to get airplay. Even the subterfuge of an instrumental record, released under the name The Hawk, was rumbled, and in 1963 his contract with Sun ended. New releases for another label barely troubled the charts. Forced to look further afield, Lewis returned to Europe, where he recorded Live at the Star Club, Hamburg, the album is regarded amongst the best live rock n' roll recordings made, and stands as a testimony to his performing verve.

Despite the problems surrounding his private life, complicated by drink and drugs, Lewis carved a successful career in country music, with a steady stream of top thirty country albums. However, he probably never got the opportunity to fulfill his potential and achieve the status of his peers, such as Elvis. Lewis' contribution to music was recognized in 1986, when he was inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame, he is also a member of the Rockabilly Hall of Fame, and in the top thirty of Rolling Stone Magazine's Greatest Artist of All Time list. A biopic of Lewis' life was released in 1989.

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