The King in Birmingham sizes up the '80 silver box.
drjohncarpenter wrote:Gregory Nolan Jr. wrote:Dallas '75 better than Birmingham, '76?
Gregory Nolan Jr. wrote:... his still-maturing voice was arguably richer and more powerful than ever (at his best) in '76-'77 than in '75.
That's a good one.
Indeed it is: I call it my opinion
, which you also are entitled to.
I also know you are one who one of the lone souls who champion the '71 and "Aloha" version of "My Way," and have overall shown mostly disdain for late period Elvis, particularly the strengths of the "Elvis In Concert" album that many of us have mentioned as existing in spite of his sad condition.
I'm under no illusions about some of the slide in quality and inspiration, but I maintain that his powerful, rich voice on the Birmingham, Dallas and Pittsburgh shows of '76-77 were a career highlight for those willing to listen. And I do like some of that (rather occasional) scat-style singing, Cryo, no matter what is fueling.
I'm a fan of the "
Elvis Aron Presley" set and enjoyed very much when it was given as a gift in 1980, despite a negative review in Rolling Stone I recall at the time. I just find that Dallas-based '75 concert to be too close to say, the already well-documented by RCA '72 or '74 Elvis, and rather jokey at that. Witness his unserious version of "American Trilogy," which ruined the set for me, as with the so-so but interesting return to "The Wonder of You" and others. I had this set in my car on cassette some years back and eventualy came to dread hearing it.
As for the late period I refert to, it's a different sound he had at the end (a far cry from "Elvis Is Back!" or "From Elvis In Memphis" or "On Stage" to be sure) and it is an acquired tasted for some.
I think of those late '76 shows as showing what a "full-on" / fully-engaged "Elvis in Concert" CBS Special might have captured. It only did in spots, as we know: "Trying to Get to You," "You Gave Me A Mountain," "Hurt," "My Way" and other mostly non-rock tracks.
Cryo, the voice I'm describing is an extention of that "thicker" voice which we heard on '75's "Today," to be sure. We just hear it applied to more songs on this one.
I think the Birmingham and Dallas shows, along with Pittsburgh, really need little defending here. I have enjoyed many imports from '75, plus the FTD's that cover '75, from "Southern Nights," (mainly for the "alternate" selection it offers) to the excellent "Big Boss Man" and less so "Dixieland Rocks" which has elements of the disconnected Elvis I noted on the Dallas tracks of "Elvis Aron Presley" boxset.