| In November 1955, RCA Records bought Presley's contract, 
      singles and unreleased master tapes from Sun Records for $35,000. His first 
      full-length album came out six months later, with tracks drawn from both 
      the Sun sessions and from further recording at RCA's studios in New York 
      and Nashville. "There wasn't any pressure," guitarist Scotty Moore 
      said of the first RCA sessions. "They were just bigger studios with 
      different equipment. We basically just went in and did the same thing we 
      always did." On tracks such as "Blue Suede Shoes," that meant 
      revved-up country music with the most irresistibly sexy voice anyone had 
      ever heard. (Rolling Stone) | 
  
    | Today it all seems so easy -- RCA signs up the kid from Memphis, television 
        gets interested at around the same time, and the rest is history. The 
        circumstances surrounding this album were neither simple nor promising, 
        however, nor was there anything in the history of popular music up to 
        that time to hint that Elvis Presley was going to be anything other than 
        "Steve Sholes' folly," which was what rival executives were 
        already whispering. So a lot was unsettled and untried at the first of 
        two groups of sessions that produced the Elvis Presley album -- it wasn't 
        even certain that there was any reason for a rock & roll artist to 
        cut an album, because teenagers bought 45s, not LPs. The first of Elvis' 
        RCA sides yielded one song, "Heartbreak Hotel," that seemed 
        a potential single, but which no one thought would sell, and a few tracks 
        that would be good enough for an album, if there were one. But no one 
        involved knew anything for sure about this music. Seventeen days later, 
        "Heartbreak Hotel" was released, and for about a month it did 
        nothing -- then it began to move, and then Elvis appeared on television, 
        and had a number one pop single. The album Sholes wanted out of Elvis 
        came from two groups of sessions in January and February, augmented by 
        five previously unissued songs from the Sun library. This was as startling 
        a debut record as any ever made, representing every side of Elvis' musical 
        influences except gospel -- rockabilly, blues, R&B, country, and pop 
        were all here in an explosive and seductive combination. Elvis Presley 
        became the first rock & roll album to reach the number one spot on 
        the national charts, and RCA's first million dollar-earning pop album. 
       (by Bruce Eder , All 
        Music Guide) |