One Of Three Original Elvis Presley Master Recordings From 1954 To Be Sold On Sept. 29
Also Included Will Be An Early Acetate Recording Of “Blue Suede Shoes”
September 16, 2022
Rock n roll history will hit the auction block on Thursday, Sept. 29, when three early items pertaining to Elvis Presley, including one of three original master recordings from his first-ever recording session in 1954 for Sun Records, will be offered by Weiss Auctions. Music will be a key part of the 500-lot, online-only Iconic and Eclectic Auction. The acetate recording, with Thats All Right on one side and Blue Moon of Kentucky on the other side, is considered one of rocks true Holy Grail items, as it was the record that launched Elviss career and changed American popular music forever. John Lennon once said, Before Elvis there was nothing. Three acetates were cut in that first session; one of the three will come up for bid. Also sold will be an acetate recording of Blue Suede Shoes, also with Elvis on vocals. The song would become a huge hit in 1955 for Carl Perkins, before Presley recorded his own version the following year. Both records were chart-toppers. Elvis ordered an actual pair of blue suede shoes and wore them when he performed the song. The shoes were sold at auction in 2013 for $80,000. The third item is a large version of the famous photo showing the four members of the Million Dollar Quartet consisting of Presley, Perkins, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis, signed and inscribed by all four to Marion Keisker MacInnes, who worked at Sun Records and was a key contributor to Elviss early development. The photograph was taken at the Sun Records studio in Memphis, Tenn. Additional items from Ms. Kesiker MacInness collection of Sun Records memorabilia will also be in the sale, as will other music industry items, including a Beatles autographed picture, signed by all four band members; a ticket from the Beatles performance at RFK Stadium in August 1966; and an archive of material relating to Barbra Streisand, including letters, postcards and records. Thats All Right and Blue Moon of Kentucky werent the very first songs recorded by Presley at Sun Records. On July 18, 1953, the then 18-year-old strolled into the studio on his lunch hour and plunked down four dollars to create an acetate record as a belated birthday present for his mother, Gladys. Marion Keisker MacInnes met him at the door. As for the acetate recording Elvis made for his mother as a birthday present, the disc was put up for auction in 2015, at Graceland. Rock musician and Nashville recording studio owner Jack White paid $300,000 for it. Internet bidding will be provided by LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com. Phone and absentee bids will also be accepted. To learn more, call Philip Weiss at 516-594-0731 or visit www.WeissAuctions.com.
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