Elvis: Burning in Birmingham DVD (Elvis Presley)

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$12.52
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New

Elvis: Burning in Birmingham DVD release using audience 8mm film (avg. quality) and excellent t quality soundboard recorded audio.

Region 0 (Free)

Region Free (0) NTSC

Elvis Presley Video Unchained Melody (02:50)

Burning in Birmingham DVD features the third to last gig from an up and down year for Elvis, twelve months which saw him visit more American cities than anyone could have imagined, given his recurring health problems. And what a complete surprise this Birmingham, Alabama performance is! Given the spate of saddening recent 'private' releases of soundboards from 1976, here we find an enormously spirited Elvis offering perhaps his single best effort of the year (if one excludes the audience-recorded New Year's Eve concert in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania two days later), singing over twenty songs with vigor and joy!

Region 0 (Free)

Region Free (0) NTSC

This isn't Elvis at his live best (try anything from 1954-57, or the sit-down shows at NBC studios in June 1968), but it is the best of Elvis in 1976. It is a better performance than the immensely overrated 'Aloha' broadcast from 1973 and superior to any of the 1974 shows one can now hear on 'private' releases where he's audibly unwell, yet still on stage performing (to learn more, try 'Desert Storm' for starters, or investigate the box set 'A Profile - The King On Stage Vol. 2'). In Birmingham (as in Pittsburgh on the 31st) he goes for the high notes and sings with power to spare (in private interviews Elvis gave at the time he discussed taking some time off in 1977 ... wish he had).

Besides solid renditions of 'C.C. Rider' (listen to the energy in his voice from the first word) and several other more familiar tour songs, he sings a rare, off the cuff rendition of 'For The Good Times' (it's quite likely this hadn't even been rehearsed in the four years since he'd recorded it) and a version of 'Trying To Get To You' where he hiccups, Buddy Holly-style ('you really loved me true-ohh-ohh-ohh-ohh')! 'Early Morning Rain', hardly ever played to its entire length on-stage, gets the full treatment by Elvis on a whim, mid-song ('one more verse'), while 'Hurt' is delivered with the reprised ending he only did when he was feeling good. He even throws a crazy joke at the Sweet Inspirations, asking 'you got a new wig, Estelle?', during 'I Got A Woman'! He's in a wonderful and gracious mood -- and it doesn't sound 'medicinally-influenced', either.

Two of the peaks of the show come back to back. First of these is his amazingly sweet, tender and unexpected performance of 'The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face'. This isn't the most memorable number Elvis did in the 1970's, and not even Roberta Flack's original 1971 performance redeems it. But here, the unique Presley magic weaves a spell over the listener, making it seem incandescent by comparison. And this song is the key to the entire concert, for it is here that one realizes that the entire show must've been inspired by his affection for new girlfriend Ginger Alden! He begins 'First Time' by saying 'we'll do this for you, sweetheart' and during certain parts of the song he says 'listen'. That wasn't for the 18,000 paying customers. For the final 'ever I lay with you' verse (which he never recorded in a studio) he orders an on-the-spot arrangement of voice and electric piano ('everybody lay out here except David Briggs') which results in a spine-tingling moment that is the essence of Elvis Presley, vocalist supreme and great American artist.

Elvis, the artist, continues to slay the audience (and try to win Ginger's love) when he announces 'if you don't mind, I want to play piano and sing 'Un-chained Melody' for you' -- which he does to perfection, save a few bum piano notes and Sherrill Neilson 'helping' at the very end. The passion and commitment, as usual, is full-on, making it every bit as wonderful as the definitive version he created two days later in Pittsburgh. The gig is capped off with a very decent 'Mystery Train/Tiger Man' medley and a more engaging version of 'Can't Help Falling In Love' than was the norm by late 1976. Even here Elvis speaks to Ginger, as he tells her in mid-verse (!!) to 'stay here ... on the very end' -- he wanted her to see his grand exit, often just as frenzied (and filled with exploding flashbulbs) as his entrances.

There's something quite precious and empowering when a person feels uplifted by love, and in Birmingham on December 29, 1976, that's the person the audience sees -- as a bonus, it's one of the finest shows the late seventies Elvis ever gave. Now, thanks to 2001, anyone can hear it and in superb soundboard quality to boot! If one's choice of 'import' soundboards is limited, this comes with the highest recommendation.

Reviewed by Johnny Savage, USA
Sound rate **** +
Show ***** +++++++

Track listing.

  1. See See Rider
  2. I Got A Woman / Amen
  3. Love Me
  4. Fairytale
  5. You Gave Me A Mountain
  6. Jailhouse Rock
  7. O Solo Mio / It's Now Or Never
  8. Trying To Get To You
  9. My Way
  10. Polk Salad Annie
  11. Band Introductions
  12. Love Letters
  13. Band Introductions
  14. Funny How Time Slips Away
  15. Hurt (With Reprise)
  16. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
  17. Unchained Melody
  18. Mystery Train/ Tiger Man
  19. Can't Help Falling In Love
  20. Closing Vamp

(Live, December 29, 1976, Birmingham)