Mark James - Suspicious Minds (The Original Version) скачать видео бесплатно


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Длительность: 03:05
Загружено: 2011/04/13

This is one of those soul-influenced, hyper-produced, and horn-driven pop ballads that were prevalent on the radio in the early '70s, the sort that were hits for B.J. Thomas, the Hollies, Neil Diamond, etc. In fact, it was Mark James, a childhood friend of Thomas from Houston, who wrote "Suspicious Minds" as well as Thomas' "Hooked on a Feeling." Thomas also released a version of "Suspicious Minds" in 1972, but it is Elvis Presley's 1969 recording that will remain forever embedded in the public's consciousness. The recording was produced by legendary Memphis soul producer Chips Moman at the down-home American studio, which had -- according to Peter Guralnick's Careless Love: The Unmaking of Elvis Presley (1999) -- produced "an unprecedented string" of 64 chart records over 18 months (1968-1969) for a variety of out-of-town labels. The track marked a return to form as well as a literal return to the singer's hometown. After years of wasting his talents on B-movie soundtrack filler, a bellowing, mature-voiced Presley unleashes his full power on this watershed ballad. It alternately rages and simmers, from a driving four-on-the-floor chorus to a slow-burning, halting-tempo bridge that feels like a completely different song. It is on this Stax-like soul section -- after the anguished frustration expressed in the verses -- that Presley testifies like Otis Redding, beseeching his lover not to "let a good thing die," as if down on one knee. The theme is summed up in the song's title: two adult lovers letting paranoia and mistrust drive a wedge between them.

James had released his own recording of the song on the Scepter label in 1968, and it provided the blueprint for the Presley version. Moman had also produced the original recording, which is almost identical in arrangement to the Presley take. But the King's intensity turns the song into something completely his own, spurring on the studio band to turn up the heat more than a few notches. The James version, which was not a hit, simply cannot even compare. With the Presley master recorded in merely four takes, "everyone in the studio knew that this was the song," according to Guralnick. Presley's enthusiasm to be back home, recording topnotch material in a funky studio with great musicians, is evident on the recording. This enthusiasm kept the recording sessions moving in the face of disputes over business matters; Moman, who owned the copyright to the song, resolutely refused to give any publishing to the Presley camp -- the practice of taking a chunk of the publishing royalties was common for material covered by Presley. The singer kept himself sheltered from such matters. In the end, it seems, his love for the song overruled his business advisors. The recording begins with a hammering guitar lick and a hi-hat drum introduction. Over this, the vocal lines are sung in a two-part harmony. The musicians on the sessions included Reggie Young on guitar, Tommy Cogbill on guitar and bass, Bobby Wood on piano, Ronnie Milsap on piano and vocal, Mike Leech on bass, and Gene Chrisman on drums. The arrangement soon builds to include horns, strings, layered backing vocals, and the pounding rhythm section.

After the Memphis sessions, Presley took his act out to Las Vegas, where he tried out "Suspicious Minds" in front of a live audience. A week into the engagement, he went into a studio in Vegas to do some overdubs on the original recording, including the International Casino horns, and rearranging it to include a false ending coda, wherein the song begins to fade out, only to return for a vamp on the lines "We're caught in a trap/I can't walk out/Because I love you too much baby." Guralnick notes that the reaction of Moman and his crew upon hearing the released version was that it amounted to a gimmicky "audio joke," perhaps influenced by the then-current Beatles hit "Hey Jude." But there is no arguing with the success of the recording: It was Presley's first number one in seven years. In addition to the well-known single version, Presley recorded a passionate live take heard on Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite (1973). Thomas also released a version of his friend James' song on the Moman-produced disc B.J. Thomas County (1972) that is, unsurprisingly, very similar to the other two Moman-produced versions of the song. The Fine Young Cannibals resurrected the song on Fine Young Cannibals (1985), scoring a post-new wave hit.

Source: AllMusic | Bill Janovitz

Комментарии

9 years назад

Marc De Beer

Van 1968, en is goed uitgebracht <3

9 years назад

suzieQ195

Great job on this... never heard it before!!

10 years назад

soulboy1965

Why have I never heard this before!!!! Awesome! Can't stop playing it.

10 years назад

Mária Krausz

1970-május 26-Annamári születet rengeteg virágot kaptam a férjem barátaitól.nevezetes nap volt.és szülés elött concerten voltunk.

10 years назад

ConlangFan

I like this version more 

10 years назад

jimincairns

Mark also co-wrote 'Always on my mind'.

10 years назад

jarjon76

This is very solid song. Elvis gave it that "kick" it needed in his version. Mark James is a very good songwriter, that's for sure.

10 years назад

CBSEye

The Mark James version sounds more like a demo than a hit. Elvis sold the song 100 per cent and Chips Moman merely recreated his original production only more polished. The key was to use Elvis' double tracked voice as they did on the James original. The backing voices also added real flavor this time around and of course nobody sings like ELVIS! The only false note was the cheesy fade intro/outro devised by Elvis' personal producer Felton Jarvis. He was trying to recreate what Elvis was doing on stage with the song in Vegas during his summer of '69 return. Let perfection be. Half the deejays stopped the song after the first fade for sake of time anyway. One of Presley's greatest! But nice to hear where it all started from such a talented songwriter. 

10 years назад

Bob Nelson

I was at the Rock and Soul museum in Memphis and they had the organ that Mark used to compose and/or perform it

10 years назад

John Fuentes

This wasn't a bad version but I agree with others that Elvis put more emotion in his version. Plus I think the background vocals were stronger in the Elvis version. I think the original was at least worthy of a top 100 listing.

10 years назад

Bruce Dorminey

Elvis' version from 1969 is listed as 91 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. But here is the little known original version of Suspicious Minds as recorded by Mark James, the guy who actually wrote it. I'm shocked that James' version did so poorly because it's all there for the taking. But it's amazing how Elvis gave it that extra punch and made it his own. I had always assumed that the song was written for Elvis since it so mirrored Presley's real life experience with Priscilla at the time . Roland Gift's 1985 cover gets honorable mention. Gift has said that Elvis actually appeared to him in a dream and encouraged him to cover the song. 

10 years назад

Emily Smith

Miss mine big teddy bear Emily Brooks

10 years назад

adrianmusic777

Allways thought Wille Nelson wrote this.

10 years назад

garyw1971

VERY NICE!!!!

10 years назад

eva mlcak

The '45 pictured here shows F Zambon as the writer - that's Mark James's REAL name. 

10 years назад

Gary Cristani

If you could double splice like Nat King Cole and Natalie Cole and Hank Williams and Hank Williams Jr' just a thought.

10 years назад

Guido Hertlein

Great Songwritring, but no good singer

11 years назад

Benny Hammond

With this arrangement, Elvis's lead and Mark James as the harmony voice, this song would be even better. 

11 years назад

Donna M. Bouie

Love watching Elvis' Las Vegas performance of this song but very refreshing to hear the original songwriter's version. Nice.

11 years назад

Joao Aurelio

One greatest rock songs, thank you couldnt find the Mark james recording

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