Elvis Presley 1969
January/February 1969
Elvis Presley has been doing all of his recording work in
Nashville or Hollywood since signing with RCA. But, now he
records in Memphis again for the first time since 1955. He has
all-night marathon sessions at American Sound Studio. His work
here will become regarded as some of the finest music of his
career, his best work since the innovative days at Sun and the
exciting early days at RCA before he went into the army.
Elvis has excellent material to choose
from and pours his heart and soul into the sessions. He works
with a lot of top-notch Memphis musicians. The sound is fresh
and gutsy. On every track one can sense his creative excitement
and energy. This is joyful work after years of movie boredom.
Two albums will result from these sessions. The sessions will
also yield four hit singles to be released starting later this
year and going into 1970: "In the Ghetto", "Suspicious Minds",
"Don’t Cry, Daddy" and "Kentucky Rain".
March/April 1969

Elvis returns to Hollywood to film and
record the soundtrack music for his thirty-first, and what will
turn out to be his last, acting role in a motion picture. It is
Change of Habit, co-starring
Mary Tyler Moore. Elvis plays a hip ghetto doctor in a
Northern city, having come from Tennessee. Mary Tyler Moore and
two others play nuns who go “undercover” into the ghetto to
assist with health and societal troubles in the community. The
theme, though serious and timely, is not particularly well
carried out by the script in the opinion of many, and the title
is frivolous. But, Elvis looks magnificent, and gives a natural,
easy, understated performance that is a refreshing pleasure to
see after the silliness he endured in his films through most of
the sixties. The few songs in the movie are good and they’re
performed in natural, rather than the usual badly contrived,
situations.
March, 1969
Charro! opens in theaters and doesn’t do much at the box
July 31 - August 28, 1969

Elvis is
booked for a four-week, fifty-seven show engagement at the
International Hotel in Las Vegas, which has just been built and
has the largest showroom in the city. Elvis puts together
top-notch rock and roll musicians, an orchestra, a male gospel
back-up group, and a black female soul/gospel back-up group for
his show.* They rehearse for several weeks and open on July 31,
1969. The show is a delightful mix of fresh arrangements of
classic Elvis hits, exciting new material he has recorded, a few
covers of current and past hits of other artists, and charming
on-stage antics and sharing of personal recollections of his
career. A press conference follows the first of his two opening
night shows. This engagement breaks all existing Las Vegas
attendance records and attracts rave reviews from the public and
the critics. It is a triumph. Elvis' first live album, Elvis
in Person at the International Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, is
recorded during this engagement and is soon released.
For these shows a lean Elvis in top physical form, wears simple, unique,
karate-inspired two-piece outfits in black or white.
These are designed by Bill Belew,
who did the wardrobe for the ‘68 special. These are the
predecessors to the famous one-piece jumpsuits which will be
simple at first, then become flashier and more elaborate over
the years.

Here are a couple of reviews from music writers:
"There are several unbelievable things about Elvis, but the most
incredible is his staying power in a world where meteoric
careers fade like shooting stars." - Newsweek , 8-11-69
issue.
"...a style and panache that come close to pure magic. Lithe,
raunchy, the sweat pouring down his face, he now moves with the
precision of an athlete, the grace of a dancer...flamboyant and
flashy, sexy and self-mocking, he works with the instincts of a
genius to give poetry to the basic rock performance." -
W.A. Harbinson - From his 1975 book, The Illustrated Elvis.
A passage reflecting on Elvis' 1969 Vegas engagement.
NOTE: The orchestra was conducted by Bobby Morris.
The band
consisted of James Burton (lead guitar), John Wilkinson (rhythm
guitar), Jerry Scheff (bass guitar), Larry Muhoberac (piano) and
Ronnie Tutt (drums). The female singers were The Sweet
Inspirations. The male singers were The Imperials. Charlie Hodge
provided additional guitar and vocals and general on-stage
assistance. Over the concert years there were changes in the
show cast. Joe Guercio became Elvis' conductor. Millie Kirkham,
who had worked on Elvis' studio recordings, joined the show as
soprano, a position later taken over by Kathy Westmoreland. Glen
D. Hardin became the piano player. J.D. Sumner & the Stamps
Quartet became the male back-up group. Various other personnel
changes occurred over the years.
September 1969
The Trouble with Girls, Elvis Presley's thirtieth
movie, opens in theaters and doesn’t do much at the box office.
From the American Sound Studio sessions RCA releases "
Suspicious
Minds", which will soon become Elvis' first number one
single since "Good Luck Charm" in 1962, and will be his last
number one pop single, though he’ll have many big hits.
November 1969
Change of Habit, Elvis Presley's thirty-first
movie, opens in theaters and doesn’t do much at the box office.
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