Most of the tapes, including the private single, the Million Dollar Quartet and alternate takes have been released.
Sun Singles Ten songs, making five singles, were originally released on the Sun label. These records (in both 45 RPM and 78 RPM formats) are among the most valuable of Presley's output, fetching four figures in excellent condition: • Sun 209—July 19, 1954: "That's All Right" / "Blue Moon of Kentucky" • Sun 210—September 25, 1954: "Good Rockin' Tonight" / "I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine" • Sun 215—December 28, 1954: "Milkcow Blues Boogie" / "You're a Heartbreaker" • Sun 217—April 10, 1955: "Baby Let's Play House" / "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" • Sun 223—August 6, 1955: "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" / "Mystery Train"
RCA Releases After signing with RCA, the same songs, in the same b/w combination, were re-released by RCA (December 1955). The songs were available on 78 RPM and 45 RPM, which explains the two ordering-numbers 20/47, respectively: • RCA 20/47-6357: Sun 223 • RCA 20/47-6380: Sun 209 • RCA 20/47-6381: Sun 210 • RCA 20/47-6382: Sun 215 • RCA 20/47-6383: Sun 217 The same pairings were later reissued as part of RCA's Gold Standard series in five different label formats: Black label with dog at top (September 1958), black label with dog on left side (September 1965), orange label (November 1968), red label (September 1970), and black label with dog in upper right hand corner (September 1976) • 447-0600: Sun 223 • 447-0601: Sun 209 • B-side of red label version misspells Presley as "PRESELY" • 447-0602: Sun 210 • The original "dog on top" copies of the above two were released with special picture sleeves • 447-0603: Sun 215 • 447-0604: Sun 217
Albums featuring the Sun recordings ===
Elvis Presley (1956)=== On January 27, 1956, the first RCA single, "
Heartbreak Hotel" b/w "
I Was the One" was released, giving Presley a nationwide breakthrough. His reputation as a performer on stage was already growing in the same dimensions. On March 23, 1956, the first album,
Elvis Presley, was released (RCA 1254). "Heartbreak Hotel" was at that moment climbing the lists, but as rock and roll was largely bought by teenagers at the time and teenagers usually bought singles, albums were seen as less important for the genre. So "Heartbreak Hotel" is not on this album. RCA, however, put five unreleased Sun recordings on this album: • "I Love You Because" • "Just Because" • "Tryin' to Get to You" • "I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin')" • "Blue Moon" ===
For LP Fans Only (1958) and
A Date with Elvis (1959)=== These two albums were released during Presley's hitch in the Army, consisting of tracks previously released only as singles or on EPs, including all but one of the ten commercially released Sun tracks. Four were included on
For LP Fans Only... • "That's All Right" • "Mystery Train" • "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" • "You're a Heartbreaker" ...with five featured on
A Date with Elvis: • "Blue Moon of Kentucky" • "Milkcow Blues Boogie" • "Baby, Let's Play House" • "Good Rockin' Tonight" • "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" The remaining commercial release, "I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine", would not appear on LP until the 1976 compilation "The Sun Sessions". ===
Elvis for Everyone! (1965)=== • "Tomorrow Night" (Previously unreleased; original Sun master overdubbed with new instrumental and vocal backing by producer
Chet Atkins for this release only) • "When It Rains, It Really Pours" (1957 re-recording of an unreleased Sun track from 1955) ===
The Sun Sessions (1976)=== On March 22, 1976, the album
The Sun Sessions was released, with 16 out of the 24 known Sun titles: • "That's All Right" • "Blue Moon of Kentucky" • "I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine" • "Good Rockin' Tonight" • "Milkcow Blues Boogie" • "You're a Heartbreaker" • "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" • "Baby Let's Play House" • "Mystery Train" • "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" • "I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin')" • "I Love You Because" • "Tryin' to Get to You" • "Blue Moon" • "Just Because" • "I Love You Because" (second version)
Missing: • The private recordings • "Harbor Lights" • "Tomorrow Night" • "When It Rains, It Really Pours" • "Satisfied" • "I Got a Woman"
The Complete Sun Sessions [33-track 2LP-set] / The Sun Sessions [28-track CD] (1987) Although the title suggests more, only 18 out of the 24 known Sun songs are here. The album does contain several takes from "I Love You Because", and "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone".
Missing: • The private recordings • "Satisfied" • "I Got a Woman" ===
The Million Dollar Quartet (1989)=== The recordings have been released in 1989 as a
CD, titled,
Elvis Presley - The Million Dollar Quartet (RCA CD # 2023-2-R) ===''
The King of Rock 'n' Roll: The Complete 50s Masters'' (1992)=== Nearly every song Presley recorded at Sun is present here (although "That's When Your Heartaches Begin" is hidden on CD number 5; the rest is on CD 1).
Missing: • "Satisfied" (apparently lost forever), all but one track from the Million Dollar Quartet session, as well as "It Wouldn't be the Same Without You" and "I'll Never Stand in Your Way". The latter two songs appear on yet another (and as complete as possible) Sun sessions CD titled
Sunrise. ===
Sunrise (1999)=== Another delving in the Sun Records vaults is the most complete collection of Presley's recordings from that time. All the masters, some demos and alternate recordings, and a few early live-recorded tracks.
Missing: • "Satisfied" • "Woman (I Gotta) ===
Elvis at Sun (2004)=== The current (as of mid-2006) version of the Sun recordings. Contains the five singles ("That's All Right" / "Blue Moon of Kentucky"; "Good Rockin' Tonight" / "I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine"; "Milkcow Blues Boogie" / "You're a Heartbreaker"; "Baby Let's Play House" / "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone"; "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" / "Mystery Train") plus "Harbor Lights", "I Love You Because" (alternate take 2), "Tomorrow Night", "I'll Never Let You Go (Little Darlin')", "Just Because", "I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone" (slow version), "Tryin' to Get to You", and "When It Rains, It Really Pours".
Missing: • Private recordings and demos: • "My Happiness", • "That's When Your Heartaches Begin" • "I'll Never Stand in Your Way" • "It Wouldn't Be the Same Without You" • "I Love You Because" (first version) (available on
Elvis Presley) • The lost "Satisfied" • "I Got a Woman" (Re-recording available on
Elvis Presley)
A Boy from Tupelo: The Complete 1953–55 Recordings (2012) A
limited-edition 3-CD box set released in June 2012 by RCA/Sony collectors' label Follow That Dream (FTD) Records, as a companion piece to a book by Ernst Mikael Jørgensen, also entitled
A Boy from Tupelo. The book chronicles Presley's day-to-day life from July 4, 1954 (the day when he first rehearsed with guitarist
Scotty Moore) to December 31, 1955, including many previously unpublished testimonies, accounts and details on every single show performed by Presley during the period (the book is, indeed, mainly intended as a complete concertography and tourography of Elvis Presley's early career). The first two of the three discs released in conjunction with the book feature, as the title specifies, all the material recorded by Presley from 1953 to 1955, including all of the alternate takes and all of the recordings which were missing from previous releases, with the exception of "Satisfied" and "I Got a Woman"; the latter two recordings are stated by Jørgensen himself, in the book, to be actually lost. However, a live rendition from March 19, 1955, of "I Got a Woman" is featured on the third disc of the package, along with 31 more live recordings from the era, 27 of which are previously unreleased. The
A Boy from Tupelo book + CDs package, which was printed as a strictly limited run of 3,000 copies (each including a gift pack consisting in five 45-RPM reproductions of Presley's original Sun singles) sold out in 2012. In 2017 the set finally received wide release and added one track to Disc 3 which was previously unavailable: "I Forgot To Remember To Forget - Recorded at the Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, Louisiana, October 29, 1955". ==See also==