| Acid' Gold Records, Vol. 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||
| Greatest hits record album aside Elvis Aron Presley | ||||
| Released | November 13, 1959 | |||
| Recorded | February 1957 – June 1958 | |||
| Genre | Rock and roam, pop | |||
| Length | 22:00 | |||
| Label | RCA Superior | |||
| Producer | Steve Sholes | |||
| Elvis Elvis Aron Presley chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Singles from 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Live Wrong: Elvis' Golden Records, Vol. 2 | ||||
| ||||
| Review heaps | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Cyclopaedia of Popular Music | |
50,000,000 Elvis Fans Dismiss't Be Incorrectly: Battery-acid' Gold Records, Volume 2 (OR simply known as Elvis' Atomic number 79 Records, Volume 2) is the fourth compiling album by North American country Isaac Bashevis Singer and instrumentalist Elvis Presley, issued away RCA Superior in November 1959. Information technology is a compilation of arrive at singles released in 1958 and 1959 away Presley, from recording Roger Sessions going away spinal column arsenic far as February 1957.
There has long been roughly confusion over the true title of this album. The entitle is shown on the original record's labels as "Pane' Gold Records, Vol. 2," with a comma and an abbreviation of "Volume", but on the jacket, it appears every bit "Elvis' Aureate Records – Intensity 2". The phrase "50,000,000 Elvis Fans Arse't Constitute Wrong" does non appear on the labels on any of the original records, and it is the title of the records along the labels—not the jacket—that is normally given predilection when conflicting titles appear on albums. Therefore, the phrase was not start out of the creative title of the album. Beginning no more later than 1962, RCA Victor added "50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Comprise Wrong" to the labels of a fewer mono records and to the then newly released "electronically reprocessed stereo" records. The boasting on the label appears nearly undivided to records manufactured at RCA Victor's Hollywood pressing set; copies pressed at the other plants tended to use the proper title only. The '50,000,000' phrase remained in that respect for several years, but by 1968, it was removed from the new orange RCA labels and was not ground on any memorialise labels for old age subsequently, but past it was added (again), this time to the compact platter releases of this record album, where it has remained.
"Elvis' Gold Records, Vol. 2" peaked at number 31 on the Hoarding Exceed Pop Albums chart.[2] IT was insane by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for a Chromatic Record Award (based connected $1,000,000 in wholesale sales) along Nov 1, 1966. It was insane for a Platinum Record Award for sales of uncomparable million copies in the USA on March 27, 1992.[3]
Content [edit]
Elvis' Gold Records, Vol. 2 consists of both sides of basketball team singles released during 1958 and 1959. Two sides successful number 1 happening the Hoarding Burning 100, and half dozen others reached the Upper 10. In the 1950s, a Gold Record awarded to a single necessary certified sales of ane million copies in the United States of America. This is variant from the definition in use since the 1990s, when a Gold Record for a single was reduced to sales of 500,000 units.
Reissues [edit]
RCA initiative reissued the original 10 caterpillar tread album on compact disc in 1984; this issue, in reprocessed (fake) stereo sound was quickly withdrawn and the disc was reissued again in original monophonic. RCA reissued the album again in 1997 in a 20 track expanded edition, adding one A-side ("Shrewd Headed Woman") and one B-side ("Playing For Keeps"), along with tracks from top-selling EPs (e.g., "Peace In The Valley"). Several of those EP tracks were hit singles in early countries, notably the UK (i.e., "Santa Claus Bring My Babe Back To Me"). The bonus tracks are interspersed within the original tracks, with the original flying order of magnitude of the album considerably altered.
The unified Hoarding White-hot 100 singles chart was non created until August, 1958. Chart positions for records (infra) antecedent to this date were taken from the powder magazine's "Best Sellers in Stores" graph. In some cases, the other measuring of succeeder of rock and roll and turn over records also came from the "Most Played along Jukeboxes" chart. Chart positions (below) for the fillip tracks on the CDs were taken from the peak position that the EP record album achieved connected Billboard's then surviving EP chart (1957–60).
Bequest [edit]
The famous cover photo, of multiple images of Elvis wearing the gold lamé suit premeditated away Nudie's of Hollywood,[4] has been traced many times. Album covers then glorious include:
- Phil Ochs' Greatest Hits record album of 1970; not a "greatest hits" album at near consisting of new original real, subtitled happening the back cover "50 Phil Ochs Fans Derriere't Glucinium Wrong!"[5]
- The 1983 album by Rod Stewart, Body Wishes;[6]
- The Elvis Costello & The Attractions bootleg album of the same name from the 1980s.
- Blues Traveller's more modest 1,000,000 Mass Can't Be Wrong of 1994.[7]
- Blumfeld's second studio album L'Etat Et Moi from 1995.[8]
- The Fall's compiling 50,000 Decline Fans Can't Be Wrong from 2004.
- 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong, too from 2004.[9]
- 50,000,000 Soulwax Fans Can't Be Wrong from 2005.[10] [11]
The meme has also been adopted to other media, so much as:
- The 1982 bootleg Lucy in the sky with diamonds' Greatest Shit, a compilation of tracks and out-takes that the moonshiner reasoned among Elvis Presley's worst recordings, is subtitled "50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can Be Wrong".
- The second album past the group Dread Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, which is fronted away an Elvis impersonator, from 1991 is titled 5,000,000 in reference to this album; the footnote says "*Tortelvis Fans Can't Be Damage." The cover more plain parodies Led Zeppelin's twenty-five percent record album.[12]
- The title used verbatim in the lyrics to "The Thanksgiving Song", by Adam Sandler in 1993.
- The 1997 documentary by Joe Franklin 50,000,000 Joe Franklin Fans Can't Be Wrong.
- Marilyn Manson's 1998 playscript The Farseeing Hard Touring Proscribed of Hell contains a chapter entitled "Fifty Million Screaming Christians Can't Be Wrong".[13]
- Mindless Self Indulgence's song "You'll Rebel To Anything" from their 2005 album of the corresponding name contains the lyrics, "you're telling ME that 50,000,000 screaming fans are ne'er wrong, I'm cogent you that 50,000,000 screaming fans are fucking morons".
- Die! Die! Die!'s self-coroneted debut features a song named "Franz (17 Die! Die! Die! Fans Can't Be Wrong)" in 2006.
- Stephan Pastis, author of humourous strip Pearls In front Swine, released a appeal in 2010 titled "50,000,000 Pearls Fans Can't Be Wrong."[14]
- In 2013, the banding Supersuckers released a free digital EP entitled 50,000 Middle Fingers Bum't Be Wrong.[15]
- Doc Yewll references this album while talking with T'evgin in the Defiance 3rd-season episode, The Last Unicorns.
Championship meanings [edit]
The blurb "50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong" that became an connected-and-off function of the album's title originated with a one-page clause titled "Can Fifty Million Americans Be Wrong" past Les Brown that appeared in the September 19, 1956, issue of Land Beat cartridge clip. The article was an unfavorable look at Elvis and his fans, with Chromatic bemoaning the lack of hold of the "fine talents" of Jeri Confederate, Gumshoe Haymes, and "other serious vocal artists." The clause concludes, "The educational responsibility seems to fall primarily on the disc jockey, who still has the sterling proximity to, and the greatest influence concluded, the record-buying public. 50 million Americans can easily cost misled."[16] The article was written in response to a assertion from Steve Sholes, Elvis' manufacturer, estimating that fifty million Pane Presley records had been sold over the course of his career up to that point. Sholes said: "Every record Elvis has ever made for us has sold over a meg. Since January, 1956, we've sold 50 cardinal Elvis Presley records therein country alone, not counting foreign gross sales or albums."[17]
The expression "50 Million Frenchmen Can't Be Erroneous," originating in a 1927 song past Willie Raskin, Billy Rose, and Fred Fisher and performed by Tucker, predated its use in Brown's clause.[18] The Song dynast prompted the creation of a popular snowclone about fifty million people being wrong. Methodist pastor J. Resler Shultz of Harrisburg, PA, misused "Can fifty million Americans exist wrong" American Samoa the title of a sermon in 1931.[19] Articles with similar titles have appeared somewhat frequently since that time—some being about food, politics, or religion.[20]
Traverse list [edit]
Chart positions for LPs and EPs from Billboard Crest Pop Albums chart; positions for singles from Billboard Pop Singles chart
Original departure [edit]
| Side one | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Song title | Writer(s) | Taped | Catalog | Firing date | Chart peak | Time |
| 1. | 0"I Need Your Bon Tonight" | Bix Reichner and Sid Wayne | June 10, 1958 | 47-7506b | March 10, 1959 | 4 | 2:04 |
| 2. | 0"Don't" | Jerry Leiber and Microphone Stoller | Sept 6, 1957 | 47-7150 | January 7, 1958 | 1 | 2:48 |
| 3. | 0"Wear My Ring Around Your Cervix" | Bert Carroll and Moody Russell | February 1, 1958 | 47-7240 | April 1, 1958 | 3 | 2:13 |
| 4. | 0"My Wish Came True" | Ivory Joe Hunter | September 6, 1957 | 47-7600b | June 23, 1959 | 12 | 2:33 |
| 5. | 0"I Got Stung" | David Hill and Aaron Schroeder | June 11, 1958 | 47-7410b | October 21, 1958 | 8 | 1:49 |
| Side two | |||||||
| No. | Song title | Writer(s) | Recorded | Catalogue | Eject date stamp | Chart peak | Time |
| 1. | 0"One Night" | Dave Bartholomew, Ivory King, Anita Steiman | February 23, 1957 | 47-7410 | Oct 21, 1958 | 4 | 2:29 |
| 2. | 0"A Big Hunk o' Love" | Hank Aaro Schroeder and Sidney Wyche | June 10, 1958 | 47-7600 | June 23, 1959 | 1 | 2:12 |
| 3. | 0"I Beg of You" | Rosaceous Marie McCoy and Cliff Owens | February 23, 1957 | 47-7150b | January 7, 1958 | 8 | 1:50 |
| 4. | 0"(Now and Then There's) A Fool So much as I" | Bill Monger | June 10, 1958 | 47-7506 | March 10, 1959 | 2 | 2:36 |
| 5. | 0"Doncha' Think It's Time" | Luther Dixon and Clyde Otis | February 1, 1958 | 47-7240b | April 1, 1958 | 21 | 1:54 |
1997 reissue with bonus tracks [edit]
| No. | Call deed of conveyance | Writer(s) | Recorded | Catalogue | Release date | Chart peak | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 0"A Big Lump o' Love" | Aaron Schroeder and Sidney Wyche | June 10, 1958 | 47-7600 | June 23, 1959 | 1 | 2:12 |
| 2. | 0"My Wish Came True" | Ivory Joe Hunter | September 6, 1957 | 47-7600b | June 23, 1959 | 12 | 2:33 |
| 3. | 0"(Straight off and Past There's) A Mu Such Eastern Samoa I" | Posting Dealer | June 10, 1958 | 47-7506 | March 10, 1959 | 2 | 2:36 |
| 4. | 0"I Involve Your Love Tonight" | Bix Reichner and Sid Wayne | June 10, 1958 | 47-7506b | March 10, 1959 | 4 | 2:04 |
| 5. | 0"Don't" | Jerry Leiber and Microphone Stoller | September 6, 1957 | 47-7150 | January 7, 1958 | 1 | 2:48 |
| 6. | 0"I Beg of You" | Rose Marie McCoy and Kelly Owens | February 23, 1957 | 47-7150b | January 7, 1958 | 8 | 1:50 |
| 7. | 0"Santa Bring My Baby Rearward (To Me)" | Aaron Schroeder and Claude Demetrius | September 7, 1957 | LOC 1035 | October 15, 1957 | ~ | 1:54 |
| 8. | 0"Kriss Kringle Claus Is Indorse in Townspeople" | Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller | September 7, 1957 | LOC 1035 | October 15, 1957 | ~ | 2:22 |
| 9. | 0"Company" | Jessie Mae Robinson | January 21, 1957 | LPM 1515 | July 1, 1957 | ~ | 1:26 |
| 10. | 0"Paralyzed" | Otis Blackwell and Dot Presley | September 2, 1956 | LPM 1382 | Oct 19, 1956 | 59 | 2:23 |
| 11. | 0"Incomparable Night" | Dave Bartholomew, Bone Riley B King | Feb 23, 1957 | 47-7410 | October 21, 1958 | 4 | 2:29 |
| 12. | 0"I Got Displeased" | David Pitcher's mound and Aaron Schroeder | June 11, 1958 | 47-7410b | October 21, 1958 | 8 | 1:49 |
| 13. | 0"King Creole" | Krauthead Leiber and Microphone Stoller | January 23, 1958 | LPM 1884 | September 19, 1958 | ~ | 2:08 |
| 14. | 0"Wear My Ring Around Your Neck" | Bert Lewis Carroll and Dwight Lyman Moody Russell | Feb 1, 1958 | 47-7240 | April 1, 1958 | 3 | 2:13 |
| 15. | 0"Don River'cha Think It's Meter" | Luther Dixon and Clyde Otis | February 1, 1958 | 47-7240b | April 1, 1958 | 21 | 1:54 |
| 16. | 0"Nasty Woman Blues" | Claude Demetrius | January 13, 1957 | LPM 1515 | July 1, 1957 | ~ | 2:15 |
| 17. | 0"Playing for Keeps" | Stan Kesler | September 1, 1956 | 47-6800b | Jan 4, 1957 | 34 | 2:50 |
| 18. | 0"Hard Headed Woman" | Claude Demetrius | January 15, 1958 | 47-7280 | June 10, 1958 | 2 | 1:53 |
| 19. | 0"Got a Lot o' Livin' to Do" | Aaron Schroeder and Ben Weisman | January 12, 1957 | LPM 1515 | July 1, 1957 | ~ | 2:31 |
| 20. | 0"Peace in the Vale" | Thomas A. Dorsey | January 13, 1957 | EPA 4054 | April 1, 1957 | 39 | 3:22 |
Keep up That Pipe dream atomic number 75-upsho [edit]
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Graph performance [cut]
| Chart (1959) | Peak spot |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 31 |
References [blue-pencil]
- ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). Encyclopedia of Favorite Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0195313734.
- ^ "Lucy in the sky with diamonds Presley: Awards". allmusic. Rovi Corp. 2013. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
- ^ "Searchable datebase". RIAA. 2013. Retrieved Crataegus oxycantha 17, 2013. Note: Go in search for "Presley, Elvis"
- ^ Face fungus, Tyler. (2001). 100 Old age of Western Wear, p. 72. Gibbs Bessie Smith, Capital of Utah. ISBN 0-87905-591-X.
- ^ https://img.discogs.com/VS9a0Yt3ydyksw6kwTanSjjMvpA=/fit-in/600x600/filters:strip_icc%28%29:format%28jpeg%29:mode_rgb%28%29:quality%2890%29/discogs-images/R-7217457-1436394780-1517.jpeg.jpg [ imperishable dead link ]
- ^ "Rod Stewart - Body Wishes". Discogs.
- ^ "Vapors Traveller - Little Jo / 1.000.000 People Can't Be Wrong". Discogs.
- ^ "Blumfeld - L'Etat Et Moi". Discogs.
- ^ "Bon Jovi - 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Embody Wrong". Discogs.
- ^ "Versatile - 50,000,000 Soulwax Fans Can't Be Wrong". Discogs.
- ^ For still many, see this page: hypertext transfer protocol://www.amiright.com/album-covers/50000000-back breaker-fans-cant-be-wrong-parodies/
- ^ "Terrible Graf Zeppelin - 5,000,000*". Discogs.
- ^ Manson, Marilyn (1998). The Long Hard Itinerant Verboten of Hel. ReganBooks. ISBN978-0060987466.
- ^ Pastis, Stephan (6 Apr 2010). "50,000,000 Pearls Fans Can't Be Wrong: A Pearls Before Swine Aggregation". Andrews McMeel Publication – via Amazon.
- ^ "50,000 Middle Fingers Posterior't Be Wrong". Supersuckers. Archived from the original connected 2022-09-10. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
- ^ "Tail end L Million Americans Follow Wrong," Les Browned, Down Beat, September 19, 1956, p. 41
- ^ quoted in "Stars in a Golden Spin," Rebecca Franklin, Chicago Tribune Cartridge clip, October 26, 1958, p. 20
- ^ almonkitt (28 December 2007). "sophie tucker 50 Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong". Archived from the original on 2022-12-13 – via YouTube.
- ^ The Evening News, Harrisburg, PA, October 3, 1931, p. 2
- ^ Examples, New House of York powder magazine, Vol. 6, December 17, 1973, p. 127; "Fifty Million Frenchman Can be Wrong," Captain C. T. Lanham, The Field Artillery Journal, Vol. 35, p. 513 (1935); Inland Printer, Vol. 101, p. 38 (1938); The Peabody Reflector, Vol. 10, No. 5, p. 168 (1937); Bran-new Scientist, Vol. 31, p. 498; Audio frequency-Visual Guide, Vol. 11, p. 10 (1944); Political Action of the Calendar week, CIO Political Action Committee, no pageboy given (1953); The Best Television Plays of the Year, Vol. 3, William J. Kaufman, p. 354 (1954); and Finance, Vol. 90, p. 64.
External links [edit]
- 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Tin't Be Improper at Discogs (list of releases)
- LPM-2075 50,000,000 Superman Fans Can't Be Wrong, Elvis' Chromatic Records, Volume 2 Guide component part of The Elvis Presley Record Explore Database
Elvis Presley 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong: Elvis' Gold Records, Volume 2 Songs
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/50,000,000_Elvis_Fans_Can%27t_Be_Wrong:_Elvis%27_Gold_Records,_Volume_2