By
Josh Tyrangiel
Published: November 13, 2006
YEAR RELEASED:
1999
LABEL:
BMG / Elvis
ARTIST:
Elvis Presley
TIME 100 ALBUMS PODCASTS
PODCAST:
Welcome to the All-TIME 100 Albums - the musical compilations of the last half-century that need no introduction. That said, listen in below as music critics Josh Tyrangiel and Alan Light introduce the list and talk about the top albums of the 1950s and '60s.
PODCAST:
We know. Twenty-nine of the 100 greatest albums of all time come in the 1970s, and Pink Floyd isn't there. Play this podcast to learn why we picked the titles we did, and if you have something to say, tell us about it using the talkback link below.
PODCAST:
Maybe it's a Sign O' The Times that you're listening to critics' audio recordings about great music, but this podcast about how we chose the best albums of the 1980s really is a Thriller. Give it a listen below.
PODCAST:
Here's music even the younger set will know by heart. Listen to selected clips from the 1990s through present day as music critic Josh Tyrangiel discusses his picks.
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On July 5, 1954, Elvis Presley walked into Sam Phillips' Sun Studios in Memphis and invented rock and roll. The moment when Presley, 19, guitarist Scotty Moore and bassist Bill Black first started messing around with Arthur (Big Boy) Crudup's "That's All Right"making it faster, more exuberantis captured here, and it still sounds audacious, as if the players themselves can't believe what they're doing. The same originality animates "Good Rockin' Tonight," "Blue Moon of Kentucky" and "Mystery Train," and makes a lot of the work Elvis did later seem, if not superfluous, at least a little dull.
Archive
Volume II of Peter Guralnick's masterly telling of Elvis' life
On the 25th anniversary of Elvis' death, his art still outwits the Grim Reaper

ALL-TIME 100 ALBUMS PHOTO ESSAY



