Product Details
The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis

The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis
Jerry Lee Lewis

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Great Balls Of Fire
  2. Lewis Boogie
  3. High School Confidential
  4. Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On
  5. Cold Cold Heart
  6. Don't Be Cruel
  7. Ramblin' Rose
  8. Waitin' For A Train
  9. I've Been Twistin'
  10. I'm Feelin' Sorry
  11. Hello Josephine
  12. Crazy Arms
  13. Little Queenie
  14. Mean Woman Blues
  15. It Hurt Me So
  16. Gettin' In The Mood
  17. Carry Me Back To Old Virginia
  18. You Win Again
  19. Matchbox
  20. Save The Last Dance For Me

Disc 2:

  1. What I'd Say
  2. Down The Line
  3. Good Golly Miss Molly
  4. Big Blon' Baby
  5. Sweet Little Sixteen
  6. Sixty Minute Man
  7. Breathless
  8. Fools Like Me
  9. Wild One (Real Wild Child)
  10. It'll Be Me
  11. Milkshake Mademoiselle
  12. Good Rockin' Tonight
  13. Jambalaya
  14. You Can't Help It (I Can't Help It)
  15. Break Up
  16. Lovin' Up A Storm
  17. Wild Side Of Life
  18. Deep Elem Blues
  19. I'm The Guilty One
  20. Return Of Jerry Lee

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #11617 in Music
  • Released on: 2005-02-07
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: .27 pounds

Customer Reviews

Throwing down the gauntlet4
"Killer" Jerry Lee Lewis is the man a lot of first generation rockers claim "coulda been bigger than Elvis". In 1958, just over a year into his recording career, a bigamous marriage to his 13 year old cousin (twice removed) hit the tabloids. Many radio stations and concert venues blacklisted Lewis, and it nearly finished him for good. With characteristic defiance, he carried on playing regardless, and after 10 long years of struggle, 1968's 'Another Place, Another Time' started a second run of hits, this time on the country charts, that lasted all the way to 1980. By then, Lewis had become a living legend, and in 2007, he is still touring the globe, having just released a star-studded duets album, 'Last Man Standing'. Of course, the memory of the scandal never completely faded, and five additional wives, a bullet in his bass player's chest, a cadillac crashed through the gates of Graceland, and a phenomenal amount of pills and booze have all added fresh fuel to the fire over the years. And yet, despite the self-destructive streak that has cost him Elvis's huge commercial success, on record, the music of Jerry Lee Lewis is preserved to be judged on its own merit. So, who is the REAL "King of Rock 'n' Roll"?

'The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis' offers 40 tracks from Lewis's early career at Sun Records, from 1956-1963. Although this pre-dates his country comeback in 1968, Jerry Lee's influences were always eclectic - this compilation contains country, blues and boogie-woogie as well as vintage rock 'n' roll, often blended together to create what the artist simply described as "Jerry Lee Lewis music". As a musician, Lewis was a master piano player. While Elvis's guitar was never more than a glorified prop on stage, "The Killer" was capable of improvising intricate piano solos, and playing them with awesome speed and precision. Like Elvis, Jerry Lee almost never composed his own material, but his ability to reinvent and personalise the music of others was second to none. His trademarks included name-checking himself in the lyrics, throwing in adlibs ("easy now!"), and peppering his songs with lascivious laughter, purring and panting (!). Best of all, his irrepressible sexuality, sly humour and supreme arrogance were not part of an act. They came from the very core of his wild nature, untamed and untempered, and this gave his music a raw authenticity quite unlike Elvis's safer, more commercial style.

All the early hits are here, including 'Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On', 'Great Balls Of Fire' and 'Breathless'. However, as Lewis's songs are often under 3 minutes, there is room for at least another 10 tracks, which is all the more frustrating when noticing that superb cuts like 'It Won't Happen With Me', 'I Can't Seem To Say Goodbye', 'Hang Up My Rock 'n' Roll Shoes' and 'Teenage Letter' have all been left out. These tracks can be found on 'The Essential Sun Collection', which despite one or two omissions of its own - 'Wild One (Real Wild Child)' is disgracefully ignored - is a slightly better buy. As an introduction to the artist, then, this album is not ideal (thus only 4 stars). As a challenge to Elvis Presley's title, though, it throws down the gauntlet with fearsome conviction.

Good Value Anthology4
This for my money is one of the better JLL R & R collections on the market, and let's face it, there are quite a few out there. The main problem Joe Public has, is that Jerry Lee made umpteen remakes on umpteen different labels. For the uncommitted casual buyer, my suggestion would definitely be to listen to his Sun output above all others, and that's what's covered here (though not comprehensively of course - there are other collections which do the job on this - it depends how hard you want to hit your bank account).

Lewis's music grew out of Rhythm & Blues, Gospel, C & W and the earthy nightlife of the Deep South. He developed into a brash performer, and eventually parlayed his way into the legendary Sun Studios in Memphis. He told them he "played the piano like Chet Atkins played the guitar". This got their attention and he hit the lower reaches of the charts with "Crazy Arms" - Country more than Rock, but soon he was into the big time with "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" and the incomparable "Great Balls Of Fire". This last number won him a spot in the classic 1957 R & R film "Jamboree". The country-flavoured blues had given way to a hard-driving,boogie-woogie style which earned Jerry Lee his place as a pioneer of Rock 'N' Roll.

For me it was no coincidence that Elvis Presley and Carl Perkins had also made their names through Sun - the common denominator was the sound created by producer/entrepreneur Sam Phillips.

There was a sociological connection as well. At the time the record charts in the U.S. (especially in the South) were segregated along racial lines, the Black audience generally being associated with R & B and Gospel, and the White side had Country and Mainstream Pop. Phillips was shrewd enough to see that Jerry Lee could neatly fill a niche as competition for piano-playing Black vocalists like Fats Domino and Little Richard, who were having great success on the crest of the R 'N' R wave.

Phillips' formula was based on three-or four-piece bands and the vocals were liberally laced with slap-back echo. To listen to Jerry Lee's "Well"s, "Oohs" and "Ahs" as he went through his routine is to hear the seminal sounds of 1950's R 'N' R. Gene Vincent was another great exponent of this, and there were many lesser imitators. Lewis's instrumental work was superb - dynamic and flamboyant with the boogie riffs pushing things neatly along. Fats and Little Richard must have been looking over their shoulders.

As the 1960's came around, Phillips expanded to a bigger studio and the slap-back echo now became a more respectable reverb - and for me, at least, that magical Sun ingredient was lost. The tight, crisp sound on "Little Queenie" gave way to a booming, cavernous sound on "Save The Last Dance For Me".

Come 1963 The Beatles changed everything and Jerry Lee left Sun. He eventually "crossed over" into Country and (IMHO) bland mediocrity.

He left a great legacy from the Sun days, however, and I still love to listen to things like the above-mentioned "Little Queenie" (which for me, eclipsed the Chuck Berry original by a mile); "Good Rockin' Tonight", (the piano solo captures him at his frantic best); "Lovin' Up A Storm", "Breathless", "Milkshake Mademoiselle", "Sixty Minute Man" - to my mind this is the authentic Jerry Lee Lewis.








You can always bet on Jerry Lee for sure!5
The original SUN stuff and no foolin' around! This double CD is the
real essence of the living legend called Jerry Lee Lewis. The man who
made Devil's music, who was literally crucified in Britain and USA
because of his marriage; the man who was banned by all radio stations
because of this although he was producing the best and most genuine
rock 'n roll ever! Anyway we know the story and he luckily came back
and would become a # 1 Country music performer during the seventies.
Here we have 40 of the purest rock 'n roll contributions with still a
lot of highlights one of them being "It hurt me so" a song that I had
never heard before in spite of all the JLL compilatons I own. At the
same time there's a lot of "early" country done the way he did it.
Jerry Lee started out, like mostly all stars in the 50's, as a country
performer and when he visited SUN records for the first time he even didn't
know what R&R was like and Jack Clement(the man who discovered and
believed in him) had to explain it to Jerry. The best buy to get if
you like true R&R and Country music at the same time. I was brought up
in both genres so I can tell!