First time listening to Elvis Presley Love Letter



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Original Video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEkSpSHC-A0

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18 thoughts on “First time listening to Elvis Presley Love Letter”

  1. Hiya you allays do great reactions . Now this version of love letters by elvis in 66 is ok . But his 1971 version from the album love letters from elvis is So much superior . His voice is mature with depth . Give it a listen even on your own and tell me if you agree

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  2. This was back when it was taboo (and difficult) to get divorced, and it was taboo for an older woman to be dating a younger man. I think the age difference would've been the bigger controversy because it's also a major plot point in his movie King Creole.

    In King Creole, he was dating a lady who used to be a 1920s flapper and basically still is a flapper, so they talk with different slang and know different songs and so on. She thinks there's an inherent incompatibility because of the generational differences and because she's disillusioned due to the bad decisions that she's made in life. (She chose the life of a gangster.) But he saw a kindred spirit. Someone who felt all alone in the world with no one on her side, which was the same way he felt.

    In Wild in the Country, the incompatibility is mainly that Elvis's character was young and hadn't had a chance to learn things in college or learn street smarts. He was about to go to college and start life out on his own. The woman had already made her choices and regretted them. (She chose the path of the academic who rarely leaves town and never goes on adventures.) She didn't want her disillusionment to be passed on to this optimistic guy. But he saw her sadness and understood it because he'd had a hard life.

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  3. I love this song 💖
    Thank you so much to whomever requested it!
    And a big thank you to you, BrandyBerry, for reacting to this one!
    I really enjoy your Elvis reactions 🌹👏
    Okay so, to answer your question: "Love Letters" is a Pop song written for a 1945 movie by the same name.
    Edward Hey man wrote the lyrics and Victor Young wrote the music.
    It was nominated for the Academy Award For Best Original Song but "Love Letters" lost to another song called "It Might As Well Be Spring".
    However, the sparse piano arrangement you hear in Elvis's version is borrowed from the piano arrangement heard in Kitty Lester's version.
    That piano arrangement is the work of Lincoln Mayorga who is 85 and is still active in the music industry as a pianist and arranger and recording artist. He also still tours.
    Earl Cyril Palmer who was the drummer on Kitty Lester's version was also something of an early rock 'n' roll and R&B drummer legend.
    He was the drummer on almost every Little Richard song track and worked a lot with Fats Domino as well as The Righteous Brothers, Sam Cooke, and other big name artists from back in the day.
    And there you have it!

    Once again, thank you so much for another lovely Elvis reaction 💐
    And peace & blessings to you & yours 💕

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  4. Glad you got to see it. My favorite scene is when he's drunk and spraying her house with the hose.😂 Check out the movie Kid Galahad by Elvis. It's another great movie. He plays an unknown upstate NY boxer who becomes the champion. Mohammed Ali called it his favorite movie by Elvis. They were close friends.

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  5. This was one of the few songs Elvis kept on liking himself, in 1976 on tour he sang it frequently and introduced David Briggs as also being present when he first recorded it in 1966. There was supposed to be another piano player, according to Briggs, but he was there and practiced it with Elvis with the other player late, Elvis sorta gotten used to Briggs’ sound and wanted him on the recording. You gotta check out Ernst Jorgensen’s and Peter Guralnick’s book on his studio sessions and his music in general. They are a must.

    There is one concert, I believe late August 1976, when Elvis wasn’t doing great, a mediocre show in a series of those during that year and especially July/August when he felt very low following the conflict and firing of 3 of his bodyguards (who would write a tell-ale book about Elvis that would hurt him badly inside, when it was published near the end of his life), but he did a magnificent version of this song. If the spirit possessed him, he could always rise to the occasion and deliver.

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  6. I had completely forgotten about this wonderful song and I've never seen that movie I don't think. That was great. I also really like the fact that it was a waltz! ONE 2 3, TWO 2 3, ONE 2 3, TWO 2 3 …

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