| The release of this album, seen in its proper historical context, is 
        an indicator of just how bright Elvis Presley's star shone in the late 
        '50s. His first hits collection was issued in March 1958, on the eve of 
        his going into the Army; his second was the first "volume two" 
        greatest-hits album ever issued on a rock & roll star, appearing weeks 
        ahead of his leaving the Army in March 1960. Anyone who buys the notion 
        that Elvis was "tamed" during his first years at RCA will find 
        revelation in "A Big Hunk of Love," "I Need Your Love Tonight," 
        and "I Got Stung," some of the greatest pieces of hard rock 
        & roll that the King ever cut -- and all were recorded in the midst 
        of Elvis' stay in the Army, in a hastily arranged session in Nashville 
        during June 1958. By this time, his voice was becoming one of the finest 
        instruments in rock & roll, his idolization of Dean Martin and other 
        popular singers paying off with a degree of control and articulation that 
        his rivals could only envy, and it's all laid out here on what are still 
        some pretty hard-rocking sides. The remastered edition not only improves 
        the sound significantly, but adds eight songs to the original ten. The 
        notes are thorough, although they reveal the stretching that the producers 
        were engaged in by citing British releases as the justification for inclusion. 
        But the quality of the music is undeniable. (Bruce Eder, All Music 
        Guide) |