Elvis In Concert - Nashville 1973

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FrankieRider2
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Elvis In Concert - Nashville 1973

#306539

Post by FrankieRider2 »

I was doing some cleaning out this evening when I ran across some plastic bags filled with old Elvis clippings. I found this period review of Elvis' 1973 concerts in Nashville, TN.... just thought I'd share with everyone here who might be interested.

Memphis Press-Scimitar --- Monday, July 2, 1973
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FANS SHOW THAT THEY STILL LOVE ELVIS IN NASHVILLE
By Jane Sanderson, Press-Scimitar Staff Writer

NASHVILLE - Young Lisa Presley sat on Memphian Linda Thompson's lap in the Nashville Auditorium yesterday laughing and waving spontaneously as she watched her father, Elvis Presley, create a scene of mass hysteria.

The blond little girl, who is 5, looking much like her famous father, was seated behind a curtain at one side of the stage with Miss Thompson, former beauty queen and Memphis State student who is said to have been Elvis' constant companion for many months. In adjoining seats were Elvis' father, Vernon Presley and his wife.

Rock king Elvis had come to home Tennessee not to perform in his hometown Memphis, which he has bypassed for years on concert tours, but to give two Sunday concerts in Nashville, his first appearances in that city.

"I've worked here, but I haven't played here before", he told the audience, adding he would sing a medley of his recordings, most of which he recorded right there in Nashville.

If Elvis had done nothing more than stand on the stage, no doubt the screams and applause would have come just the same. As it was, he spent more than an hour doing his thing, and doing it with all the drive a superstar could muster, exhausting not only himself but an audience that cheered wildly. Many rushed toward the stage only to be quickly herded back to their seats by security guards.

Rolling of kettle drums announced Elvis, following a comedy routine by Canadian Jackie Kahane and songs by The Sweet Inspirations, and with strobe lights flashing and frenzied electronic sounds, the White Knight arrived on stage flamboyantly costumed, as usual, in a stark white suit studded with nail heads, a flowing cape, and a guitar slung over one shoulder as a prop, which he soon shed.

Elvis lost no time jumping into his hit songs, each bringing forth more response than the one before. Electrifying the matinee audience of nearly 10,000 right from the start, Elvis ripped right into "I Got A Woman", "Amen", and "Steamroller Blues".

It was noticeable that his gyrations of early days were now more subdued, but the theatrics of his new Las Vegas image were all there. Elvis stalked, crouched, swung around, kneeled, threw scarve to clamoring fans and even karate chopped the air, all to the delight of the screaming crowd.

Every movement of the rock idol - shift of the knee, pat of the foot, or sudden side glance -- brought deafening response and agonized calls of "Elvis".

Good-humored all the way, Elvis wheeled around on hearing his name yelled from the balcony behind him and answered, "I'll be up there in a few minutes, honey. It takes me a few minutes to make the rounds.... I swing from a rope."

Most of the audience didn't know why Elvis pointed a finger off stage when he began "Help Me Make It Through The Night", but he was singing directly to his hidden daughter. Some might have detected the meaning later, however, when he murmured, "Hello, Lisa", and smiled in the same direction as he started "Love Me Tender".

All the old Presley favorites were there, "Hound Dog", "Blue Suede Shoes", and "Jailhouse Rock", to name a few, and it seemd that the indefatiguable Presley was working harder in one concert than most performers do on an entire tour.

Especially effective were his dramatic presentations of "How Great Thou Art" and "He Gave Me A Mountain", with emotions peaking in "Fever", which appeared to make the temperature rise. Dropping to the floor and rising, Presley tugged at his belt and said laughing, " I nearly lost it", much to the delight of the crowd.

Of the few fans who broke through security lines, one took Presley a handkerchief to mop his brow. Another took him a Hawaiian lei which he promptly donned, and others tossed notes to the stage.

Presley kept on in high key, ending with "Can't Help Falling In Love", after which he was whisked away from the auditorium, leaving an even stronger legion of fans, representing many states, carrying life-size Elvis posters, photograph albums, T-shirts and pennants inscribes "I Love Elvis".

Here's the wire press photo that ran with the concert review:

Image


Frankie Rider, II
Arkansas
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Too bad

#306631

Post by Guest »

Too bad that theres no soundboard from that concert :?



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Joe Car
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#306960

Post by Joe Car »

Thanks for posting this review. I especially like this part, "All the old Presley favorites were there, "Hound Dog", "Blue Suede Shoes", and "Jailhouse Rock", to name a few, and it seemd that the indefatiguable Presley was working harder in one concert than most performers do on an entire tour."



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#324746

Post by paulsweeney »

Thanks for posting - it was great to read 8)




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#325208

Post by Guest »

Fantastic thank you :D




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73

#325802

Post by Guest »

What a wonderful read! :D Thank so much for sharing it with us.




thekingisalive

#331349

Post by thekingisalive »

When I was in Memphis a few years ago, I talked to a couple who had seen the afternoon show, which I incidentally had on AR. They had been to thousands of concerts with basically everything that could walk and crawl in the industry, but they had never seen anyone who came even close to Elvis. He captivated the crowd like no other, and he sung better than they had believed possible, especially on the power ballads. When he sang "You Gave Me a Mountain" and "How Great Thou Art", it was like hearing the voice of God booming out of the loudspeakers. Their enthusiasm made me really appreciate that concert, despite the terrible sound quality. Because of them, it’s one of my most cherished possessions.

Per




Inigo Montoya

Re: Elvis In Concert - Nashville 1973

#637699

Post by Inigo Montoya »

I remember for years it seemed ti was not entirely clear whether Elvis did one or two shows that day, a situation I found rather odd if only because he was the biggest star in the world (in other words, it wasn't one of the 1954 or '55 shows that have been debated) and he filled a tour stadium, not a Vegas or Tahoe showroom where it'd be a little easier to miss a show and not have that fact be recorded for posterity. I used to listen to my tape of the afternoon show (I think it was that one...of course, I used to think it was the ONLY show from that date) quite a bit and I remember the very nice setlist: "Faded Love" and "Something" were great additions. Kind of telling, actually, that neither song warrants mention in the review.

I'm looking forward to this upcoming release of the July 3 show from Atlanta.




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Re: Elvis In Concert - Nashville 1973

#952527

Post by rlj4ep »

Thank you for the post and the newspaper clipping. I heard these Nashville shows were really good shows.



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Re: Elvis In Concert - Nashville 1973

#965392

Post by Good Time Charlie »

It would be nice to have a tour 1973 soundboard.


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