The title "Elvis at Stax" is slightly misleading,
suggesting Elvis Presley decided to set up shop at the famed Memphis
recording studio so he could use their house band, or perhaps co-opt
some of the Southern soul groove. That wasn't the case. Elvis chose
the Stax studios to conduct several recording sessions in 1973 for a
simple reason: it was close to his Memphis home. He rented out the
studio twice, once in July and once in December, and brought in his
crack backing band, recording enough material to fill out three CDs.
This music was doled out over the years, accounting for five hit
singles over three years (a B-side and a posthumous single also came
from these sessions), along with three albums: 1973's Raised On
Rock, 1974's Good Times, and 1975's Promised Land. These albums were
all strong, but aren't often considered part of Presley's core canon,
possibly because this mid-'70s run of records were often packaged
like product (certainly there's not a memorable album cover among
them), possibly because, apart from "Promised Land," there were no
hit singles that could be called a true smash or part of his core
canon. And that's why Elvis at Stax is so valuable: taken as a whole,
these 1973 sessions are revealed as his last great blast of
creativity in the recording studio. Essentially, he was working the
same ground he began to plow on his 1968 comeback, but the
aftershocks of Elvis Country are apparent, along with just the
slightest hint of funky, organ-driven grooves. In this context, the
preponderance of alternate takes are not tedious, but rather show
Elvis' good humor and creativity as he tries out slightly different
approaches on each take. What impresses is Presley's virtuosity and
how he cannily constructed his performances to seem effortless:
there's sweat fueling these tight, punchy renditions, and heart
behind his ballads, and you can hear him work it all out on the
alternate takes, then reach full flight on the finished masters.
None of this was readily evident on the three LPs of Stax material,
but this triple-disc, alternate-laden box lays it out plain and it's
a joy to behold. (AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
) |