*(1962) RCA ''Suspicion'' (Take 3 LFS) Elvis Presley

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  • Опубліковано 11 тра 2024
  • ''Suspicion'' (N2WW-0694) (take 3 LFS) (7:30 PM - 10:30 PM) (11:00 PM - 2:00 AM)
    Recorded Monday March 19, 1962 at RCA Studio B, 1611 Hawkins Street, Nashville, Tennessee
    Name (or. No. of Instruments) (General)
    Elvis Presley - Vocals
    Scotty Moore - Guitar
    Harold Bradley - Guitar
    Grady Martin - Guitar
    Bob Moore - Bass
    D.J. Fontana - Drums
    Buddy Harman - Drums
    Floyd Cramer - Piano & Organ
    Boots Randolph - Saxophone & Vibes
    The Jordanaires consisting of Gordon Stoker, Neal Matthews, Hoyt Hawkins, and Ray Walker (Backup Vocals)
    Millie Kirkham - Backup Vocals)
    "Suspicion" is a 1962 song originally recorded by Elvis Presley written by Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman. It became a major hit in 1964 in a recording by Elvis Presley sound-alike Terry Stafford.
    One of 25 songs written by Pomus and Shuman for Elvis Presley, "Suspicion" was recorded by Presley on March 19, 1962, in Studio B of RCA's Nashville studio and issued on Presley's album ''Pot Luck'' released on June 15, 1962. In April 1964, when the Terry Stafford version of "Suspicion" (recorded in May 1962 as a demo) was in the Top Ten of the Billboard Hot 100, the Presley original was given a U.S. single release with "Kiss Me Quick" as the flip, and it was "Kiss Me Quick" which was the favored side, reaching number  34 nationally. "Suspicion" peaked at number 103. The song was published by Elvis Presley Music, Inc.
    In Australia, "Kiss Me Quick" and "Suspicion" appeared on the chart as a double A-side hit with a number 56 peak: the actual format for this Australian release was a four-track EP entitled ''Elvis Sings Kiss Me Quick'' which featured "Kiss Me Quick" and "Suspicion" as A-side tracks with a B-side composed of "Sentimental Me" and "I Want You With Me". "Suspicion" was also issued as a single in several European territories to vie with the Terry Stafford version with the Presley version charting in the Netherlands and the Dutch chart for Belgium with respective peaks of number 9 and number 6 and also in Norway where its chart peak was number 9 and in Denmark where it peaked at number 3: in its European single release "Suspicion" featured "It Hurts Me" as B-side. "Suspicion" would belatedly afford Presley a Top Ten hit in the U.K. where its December 1976 single release rose to a peak of number  9 on the chart dated February 5, 1977.
    After an unsuccessful affiliation with A&M Records, Terry Stafford cut a demo of "Suspicion" at the Los Angeles studio of Bob Summers. Summers, best known as the producer of the 1959 Larry Hall hit "Sandy", played all the instruments on the demo which Stafford and Stafford's manager pitched to record companies in the Los Angeles area and also to local radio stations including KFWB where disc jockey Gene Weed was impressed enough with the demo to take it next door to the headquarters of the newly formed Crusader Records. John Fisher, the president of Crusader, spent several hours remastering the demo with the resultant track becoming the second single released on Crusader. The arrangement included rhythmic backing accompaniment with an Ondioline, an idiosyncratic French-built electronic keyboard.
    After breaking out in San Bernardino in January 1964 "Suspicion" had its top-tier market breakout in Los Angeles in February 1964 peaking in March 1964 at respectively number 2 and number 4 on the hit parades of KRLA and KFWB and then quickly spread east, hitting number 1 on WLS (Chicago) for most of April. Nationally "Suspicion" rose from number 7 to number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 4 April 1964, when the chart's top five hits were all by the Beatles. "Suspicion" broke the Beatles' monopoly on the top five spots on the chart by rising to number 3, its peak position, the next week. Stafford's "Suspicion" reached number 31 in the U.K. Singles Chart, and also number 3 in Canada.
    "Suspicion" first became a Country &Western chart hit in 1971 via a remake by Bobby G. Rice which reached number 33 Country & Western, with the track being included on Rice's debut album Hit After Hit. In 1988 "Suspicion" charted for Ronnie McDowell whose version, taken from McDowell's ''I'm Still Missing You'' album, reached number 27 Country & Western. In 1964, Hong Kong singer Rebecca Pan covered '"Suspicion" on her LP album ''I Love You'', released by Diamond Records. In 2005, Bahamian singer-composer Diana Hamilton covered '"Suspicion" on her LP album ''A Bahamian In Paris'', in collaboration with Eric Henri-Gréard, songwriter Florian Lacour, and produced by Patrick Rouchon. A maniacal version of the song was recorded by Vivian Stanshall, and produced by Keith Moon.
    "Suspicion" has also been covered by Jimmy London, Millicent Martin, Larry Marshall and Delroy Wilson.
    Source and more information see: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    * - Digitally Remastered
    © - Condor Records - ©

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