Tag Archives: Elvis Presley concerts

“Elvis On The Road”
1955-56

Elvis Presley performing in 1956.
Elvis Presley performing in 1956.
      Elvis Presley in the mid-1950s, before he became a fully-known national rock ’n roll star, was constantly on the road. During 1955 and 1956, Elvis and his band performed widely, especially in the south, making numerous personal appearances, from high schools to county fairs.

His 1955 itinerary, reprinted below, reveals an unyielding schedule of nearly daily performances.  Elvis and his band were a hard-working, ever-on-the-move group of performers. Still, at the time, Presley was essentially a regional phenomenon, known primarily in the south. Elvis would not appear on national television until January 1956 — first on The Dorsey Brothers Stage Show, and later in September 1956, on the Ed Sullivan Show.

Although he would have great success with RCA Records in 1956, it was his August 1955 release of “I Forgot To Remember To Forget”  with Sun Studios of Memphis, Tennessee that first made Elvis a nationally-known country  music star. That single, which also had “Mystery Train” on its B side, rose to No. 1 on the Country & Western charts in February 1956. 

A young Elvis Presley performing, early 1950s.
A young Elvis Presley performing, early 1950s.
     Elvis Presley’s first  No. 1 pop hit on the Billboard charts, “Heartbreak Hotel,” came on May 3rd, 1956.  A month earlier he had performed the song on The Milton Berle Show on national TV with an estimated 25 percent of the U.S. population watching. By then he had moved to RCA Records.

     Yet in 1955, before the first crush of national fame, Elvis and his band were mostly on the road, also doing radio shows and some regional television, such as Louisiana Hayride. His 1955 schedule was truly grueling, and 1956 was similar, plus more recording sessions. The torrid pace did take a toll. On February 23rd, 1956, after a performance in Jacksonville, Florida, Presley collapsed from exhaustion and was rushed to a hospital. He was 21 years old.

     What follows below is the 1955 day-by-day performance itinerary of Elvis Presley and his band as they traveled across the U.S.A., with location and venue listed in most cases. The series of “record sleeves” shown in the right-hand column are mostly bootleg editions — i.e., composites made by fans in later years using the RCA and Sun logos with Elvis photos from the 1950s.  They are used here only as photographic illustrations to accompany the issue date of the 1955 Elvis songs indicated. However, for those interested, links to Amazon digital versions of the “A” songs are offered with some of these images.

See also at this website, “Elvis Riles Florida, 1955-56″ and “Drew Pearson on Elvis, 1956” (video). Another Elvis-related story – “They Go To Graceland: Elvis Home a Big Draw” – explores the history of, and recent V.I.P. visitors to, Presley’s Graceland estate in Tennessee. For additional stories on music and artist biography see the “Annals of Music” page. Thanks for visiting – and if you like what you find here, please make a donation to help support this website. Thank you. – Jack Doyle


Elvis Presley-1955
Appearances & Performances
 

January-1955
Jan 1: Eagles Hall, Houston, TX
Jan 4: Odessa High School, Odessa, TX
Jan 5: City Auditorium, San Angelo, TX
Jan 6: Fair Park Coliseum, Lubbock, TX
Jan 7: Midland High School, Midland, TX
Jan 8: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Jan 11: High School, New Boston, TX
Jan 12: Civic Auditorium, Clarksdale, MS
Jan 13: Catholic Club, Helena, AR
Jan 14: Futrell High School, Marianna, AR
Jan 17: NE Miss CC, Booneville, MS
Jan 18: Alcorn/Courthse Hall, Corinth, MS
Jan 19: Community Center, Sheffield, AL
Jan 20: Leachville H.S., Leachville, AL
Jan 21: Nat’l Guard Armory, Sikeston, MO
Jan 22: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Jan 24: Humble Oil Rec. Hall, Hawkins, TX
Jan 25: Mayfair Bldg/Fairgrounds, Tyler, TX
Jan 26: REA Bldg, Gilmer, TX
Jan 27: Reo Palm Isle Club, Longview, TX
Jan 28: Gaston High School, Joinerville, TX
February-1955
Feb 4: Cadillac Club, New Orleans, LA
Feb 5: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Feb 6: Ellis Auditorium, Memphis, TN
Feb 7: Ripley High School, Ripley, MS
Feb 10: Alpine High School, Alpine, TX
Feb 11: Carlsbad Sports Arena, Carlsbad, NM
Feb 12: American Legion Hall, Carlsbad, NM
Feb 13: Fair Park Coliseum, Lubbock, TX
Feb 13: Cotton Club, Lubbock, TX
Feb 14: No. Junior H. S., Roswell, NM
Feb 15: Fair Park Auditorium, Abilene, TX
Feb 16: Odessa Senior H.S., Odessa, TX
Feb 17: City Auditorium, San Angelo, TX
Feb 18: W. Monroe H.S., West Monroe, LA
Feb 19: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Feb 20: Robinson Aud., Little Rock, AR
Feb 21: City Hall, Camden, AR
Feb 22: City Hall, Hope, AR
Feb 23: Pine Bluff H.S., Pine Bluff, AR
Feb 24: So. Side Elem. School, Bastrop, LA
Feb 25: Municipal Aud., Texarkana, AR
Feb 26: Circle Theatre, Cleveland, OH
March-1955
March 2: Newport Armory, Newport, AR
Mar 2: Porky’s Rooftop Club, Newport, AR
Mar 4: DeKalb High School, DeKalb, TX
Mar 5: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Mar 7: City Auditorium, Paris, TN
Mar 8: Catholic Club, Helena, AR
Mar 9: P. Bluff Armory, Poplar Bluff, MO
Mar 10: Civic Auditorium, Clarksdale, MS
Mar 11: J. Thompson Arena, Alexandria, LA
Mar 12: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Mar 19: White Coliseum, College Sta., TX
Mar 19: Eagles Hall, Houston, TX
Mar 20: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
Mar 20: Cook’s Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
Mar 21: Parkin High School, Parkin, AR
Mar 25: Dermott High School, Dermott, AR
Mar 26: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Mar 28: Big Creek H.S., Big Creek, MS
Mar 29: Tocopola H.S., Tocopola, MS
Mar 30: High School, El Dorado, AR
Mar 31: Reo Palm Isle Club, Longview, TX
April-1955
April 1: Ector County Aud., Odessa, TX
Apr 2: Municipal Auditorium, Houston, TX
Apr 7: Corinth Co. Courthouse, Corinth, MS
Apr 8: B&B Club, Glober, MO
Apr 9: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Apr 10: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
Apr 10: Cook’s Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
Apr 13: Breckenridge H.S., Breckenridge, TX
Apr 14: Owl Park, Gainesville, TX
Apr 15: Stamford High School, Stamford, TX
Apr 15: Roundup Hall, Stamford, TX
Apr 16: Sportatorium, Dallas, TX
Apr 16: Roundup Club, Dallas, TX
Apr 19: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Apr 20: American Legion Hut, Grenada, MS
Apr 22: Municipal Stadium, Texarkana, AR
Apr 23: Heart O’ Texas Coliseum, Waco, TX
Apr 24: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
Apr 24: Cook’s Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
Apr 25: M-B Corral Club, Wichita Falls, TX
Apr 25: Texas High School, Seymour, TX
Apr 26: City Auditorium, Big Spring, TX
Apr 27: American Legion Hall, Hobbs, NM
Apr 29: Cotton Club, Lubbock, TX
Apr 30: High School, Gladewater, TX
May-1955
May 1: Municipal Aud., New Orleans, LA
May 2: Baton Rouge H.S., Baton Rouge, LA
May 4: Ladd Stadium, Mobile, AL
May 5: Ladd Stadium, Mobile, AL
May 7: Peabody Aud., Daytona Beach, FL
May 8: Ft. Homer Hesterly Armory, Tampa, FL
May 9: City Auditorium, Fort Myers, FL
May 10: Southeastern Pavilion, Ocala, FL
May 11: Municipal Auditorium, Orlando, FL
May 12: GatorBowl Ball Pk., Jacksonville, FL
May 13: GatorBowl Ball Pk., Jacksonville, FL
May 14: Shrine Auditorium, New Bern, NC
May 15: City Auditorium, Norfolk, VA
May 16: Mosque Theater, Richmond, VA
May 17: City Auditorium, Asheville, NC
May 18: Am. Legion Aud., Roanoke, VA
May 19: Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh, NC
May 20: KOCA Radio, Kilgore, TX
May 21: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
May 22: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
May 22: Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
May 25: Am. Legion Hall, Meridian, MS
May 26: Meridian Jr. College, Meridian, MS
May 28: Sportatorium, Dallas, TX
May 29: North Side Colsm., Ft. Worth, TX
May 29: Sportatorium, Dallas, TX
May 31: High School, Midland, TX
June-1955
June 1: Guymon High School, Guymon, OK
June 3: J. Connelley Pontiac, Lubbock, TX
June 3: Fair Park Coliseum, Lubbock, TX
June 4: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
June 5: Hope Fair Park, Hope, AR
June 8: Municipal Aud., Sweetwater, TX
June 10: Am. Legion Hall, Breckenridge, TX
June 11: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
June 14: Bruce High School, Bruce, MS
June 15: Belden High School, Belden, MS
June 17: Roundup Hall, Stamford, TX
June 18: Sportatorium, Dallas, TX
June 19: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
June 19: Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
June 20: City Auditorium, Beaumont, TX
June 21: City Auditorium, Beaumont, TX
June 23: McMahon Mem. Aud., Lawton, OK
June 23: Southern Club, Lawton, OK
June 24: Altus, OK
June 25: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
June 26: Slavonian Lodge Aud., Biloxi, MS
June 27: Keesler AFB, Biloxi, MS
June 28: Keesler AFB, Biloxi, MS
June 29: Radio Ranch, Mobile, AL
June 30: Radio Ranch, Mobile, AL
July-1955
July 1: Casino Club, Plaquemines, LA
July 2: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
July 3: Hoedown Club, Corpus Christi, TX
July 4: City Rec. Hall, Stephenville, TX
July 4: Hodges Park, DeLeon, TX
July 4: Soldiers & Sailors, Brownwood, TX
July 20: Cape Arena, Cape Girardeau, MO
July 21: Silver Moon Club, Newport, AR
July 25: City Auditorium, Fort Myers, FL
July 26: Municipal Auditorium, Orlando, FL
July 27: Municipal Auditorium, Orlando, FL
July 28: Gator Stadium Park, Jacksonville, FL
July 29: Gator Stadium Park, Jacksonville, FL
July 30: Peabody Aud., Daytona Beach, FL
July 31: Ft. Homer Hesterly, Tampa, FL
August-1955
Aug 1: Tupelo Fairgrounds, Tupelo, MS
Aug 2: Sheffield Center, Muscle Shoals, AL
Aug 3: Robinson Aud., Little Rock, AR
Aug 4: Municipal Auditorium, Camden, AR
Aug 5: Overton Park Shell, Memphis, TN
Aug 6: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Aug 7: Magnolia Gardens, Houston, TX
Aug 7: Cook’s Hoedown Club, Houston, TX
Aug 8: Mayfair Building, Tyler, TX
Aug 9: Rodeo Arena, Henderson, TX
Aug 10: Bear Stadium, Gladewater, TX
Aug 11: Reo Palm Isle Club, Longview, TX
Aug 12: Driller Park, Kilgore, TX
Aug 13: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Aug 20: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Aug 22: Spudder Park, Wichita Falls, TX
Aug 23: Saddle Club, Bryan, TX
Aug 24: Davy Crockett H.S., Conroe, TX
Aug 25: Sportcenter, Austin, TX
Aug 26: Gonzales B-ball Pk., Gonzales, TX
Aug 27: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
September-1955
Sept 1: Pontchartrain Bch, New Orleans
Sept 2: Municipal Stad., Texarkana, AR
Sept 3: Sportatorium, Dallas, TX
Sept 3: Roundup Club, Dallas, TX
Sept 5: St. Francis Fair, Forrest City, AR
Sept 6: Bono High School, Bono, AR
Sept 7: Nat’l Guard Armory, Sikeston, AR
Sept 8: Municipal Aud., Clarksdale, MS
Sept 9: McComb H.S., McComb, MS
Sept 10: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Sept 11: Municipal Aud., Norfolk, VA
Sept 12: Municipal Aud., Norfolk, VA
Sept 13: Shrine Auditorium, New Bern, NC
Sept 14: Fleming Stadium, Wilson, NC
Sept 15: Am. Legion Aud., Roanoke, VA
Sept 16: City Auditorium, Asheville, NC
Sept 17: Th-ville H.S., Thomasville, NC
Sept 18: WRVA Theater, Richmond, VA
Sept 19: WRVA Theater, Richmond, VA
Sept 20: Fairgrounds, Danville, VA
Sept 21: Memorial Aud., Raleigh, NC
Sept 22: Civic Auditorium, Kingsport, TN
Sept 24: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Sept 26: Gilmer Junior H.S., Gilmer, TX
Sept 28: B&B Club, Gobler, MO
October-1955
Oct 1: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Oct 3: White Coliseum., College Sta., TX
Oct 4: Boys Club, Paris, TX
Oct 5: City Auditorium, Greenville, TX
Oct 6: SW TX St Univ., San Marcos, TX
Oct 6: Skyline Club, Austin, TX
Oct 8: City Auditorium, Houston, TX
Oct 10: Soldiers-Sailors, Brownwood, TX
Oct 11: Fair Park Aud., Abilene, TX
Oct 12: Midland H. S., Midland, TX
Oct 13: Municipal Aud., Amarillo, TX
Oct 14: Odessa H. S., Odessa, TX
Oct 11: Fair Park Aud., Lubbock, TX
Oct 15: Cotton Club, Lubbock, TX
Oct 16: Mun. Aud., Oklahoma City, OK
Oct 17: Memorial Aud., El Dorado, AR
Oct 19: Circle Theatre, Cleveland, OH
Oct 20: Brooklyn H.S., Cleveland, OH
Oct 20: St. Michaels’ Hall, Cleveland, OH
Oct 21: Missouri Theatre, St. Louis, MO
Oct 22: Missouri Theatre, St. Louis, MO
Oct 23: Missouri Theatre, St. Louis, MO
Oct 24: Silver Moon Club, Newport, AR
Oct 25: Houston Armory, Houston, MS
Oct 26: Gulf States Fair, Prichard, AL
Oct 28: Radio Ranch, Mobile, AL
Oct 29: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
November-1955
Nov 5: Louisiana Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Nov 6: Community House, Biloxi, MS
Nov 7: Keesler AFB, Biloxi, MS
Nov 8: Keesler AFB, Biloxi, MS
Nov 12: Carthage Milling, Carthage, TX
Nov 12: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Nov 13: Ellis Aud., Memphis, TN
Nov 14: High School, Forrest City, AR
Nov 15: Community Center, Sheffield, AL
Nov 16: City Auditorium, Camden, AR
Nov 17: Municipal Aud., Texarkana, AR
Nov 18: Palm Isle Club, Longview, TX
Nov 19: Gladewater H.S., Gladewater, TX
Nov 25: Wilson Jr. H.S., P. Arthur, TX
Nov 26: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Nov 29: Mosque Theater, Richmond, VA
December-1955
Dec 2: Sports Arena, Atlanta, GA
Dec 3: State Coliseum, Montgomery, AL
Dec 4: Lyric Theater, Indianapolis, IN
Dec 5: Lyric Theater, Indianapolis, IN
Dec 6: Lyric Theater, Indianapolis, IN
Dec 7: Lyric Theater, Indianapolis, IN
Dec 8: Rialto Theater, Louisville, KY
Dec 9: Swifton H. S., Swifton, AR
Dec 9: B&I Club, Swifton, AR
Dec 10: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Dec 12: Nat’l Guard Armory, Amory, MS
Dec 17: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA
Dec 19: Ellis Aud., Memphis, TN
Dec 31: LA Hayride, Shreveport, LA

Elvis songs released by Sun Records, January 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by Sun Records, January 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

Promoter “Colonel” Tom Parker first takes notice of Presley’s name after Texarkana DJ “Uncle Dudley” reports on the crowd frenzy at Elvis’ January 11, 1955 show.

 

Elvis songs released by Sun Records, April 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by Sun Records, April 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

On March 23rd, 1955, Elvis and his band auditioned for Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts show in New York but were rejected.

 

Elvis songs released by Sun Records, August 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by Sun Records, August 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

At the Jacksonville, Florida show on May 13, 1955, Elvis tells the girls in the 14,000-plus crowd that he’ll “see [them] backstage,” causing a riot. The incident convinces Colonel Parker about Elvis’ popularity.

July 31, 1955. Elvis during concert at Tampa, FL’s Ft. Homer Hesterly Armory. (Photo, William ‘Red’ Robertson).
July 31, 1955. Elvis during concert at Tampa, FL’s Ft. Homer Hesterly Armory. (Photo, William ‘Red’ Robertson).

Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

By late summer 1955, Colonel Parker had taken control of Presley’s career. On Nov. 21st he negotiated a deal with RCA to acquire Elvis’ Sun Studios contract for $35,000 (roughly $365,000 in 2022).

Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

On November 10th, 1955, in his Nashville hotel room, songwriter Mae Axton plays Elvis a demo of a song she’d co-written called “Heartbreak Hotel.”
 

Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.
Elvis songs released by RCA Records, Dec 1955. Record sleeve is a bootleg edition. Click for digital single.

Actual RCA record sleeve for “Hound Dog/ Don’t Be Cruel” single of July 1956, with Alfred Wertheimer photo of Elvis singing to a hound dog on ‘The Steve Allen Show’ of July 1st.
Actual RCA record sleeve for “Hound Dog/ Don’t Be Cruel” single of July 1956, with Alfred Wertheimer photo of Elvis singing to a hound dog on ‘The Steve Allen Show’ of July 1st.
Elvis Presley's self-titled debut album hit No. 1 on Billboard, May 7, 1956 -- the first rock ’n roll album to do so. The album’s image is also credited by some as helping to make the guitar “the defining instrument of rock ’n roll”. Click for digital.
Elvis Presley's self-titled debut album hit No. 1 on Billboard, May 7, 1956 -- the first rock ’n roll album to do so. The album’s image is also credited by some as helping to make the guitar “the defining instrument of rock ’n roll”. Click for digital.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Elvis performing before capacity crowd at the Mississippi-Alabama Fairgrounds, Tupelo, MS, September 26, 1956. Click for framed, two-photo collage of Elvis - 1 performing, 1 portrait – plus listing of all No. 1 hits.
Elvis performing before capacity crowd at the Mississippi-Alabama Fairgrounds, Tupelo, MS, September 26, 1956. Click for framed, two-photo collage of Elvis - 1 performing, 1 portrait – plus listing of all No. 1 hits.

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Date Posted:  31 March 2008
Last Update:   9 July 2023
Comments to: jackdoyle47@gmail.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PopHistoryDig

Article Citation:
Jack Doyle, “Elvis on the Road, 1955-1956,”
PopHistoryDig.com, March 31, 2008.

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Elvis music at Amazon.com

“The Essential Elvis Presley” album. Click for copy.
“The Essential Elvis Presley” album. Click for copy.
Elvis Album: 30 No 1 Hits. Click for copy.
Elvis Album: 30 No 1 Hits. Click for copy.
Elvis: Gospel Songs; 3 CDs, 87songs. Click for copy.
Elvis: Gospel Songs; 3 CDs, 87songs. Click for copy.


Sources, Links & Additional Information

A 45 rpm single of Elvis Presley’s August 1955 Sun Studios recording of 'I Forgot To Remember To Forget,' the song that first made Elvis a nationally-known country music star, prior to his popular rock ’n roll fame.
A 45 rpm single of Elvis Presley’s August 1955 Sun Studios recording of 'I Forgot To Remember To Forget,' the song that first made Elvis a nationally-known country music star, prior to his popular rock ’n roll fame.
Album cover for the 3-disc RCA soundtrack for the April 2018 HBO documentary, “Elvis Presley: The Searcher”.
Album cover for the 3-disc RCA soundtrack for the April 2018 HBO documentary, “Elvis Presley: The Searcher”.

Hank Bordowitz, Turning Points in Rock and Roll, Citadel Press, 2004. Click for copy.

Peter Guralnick, “Elvis Presley,” in Anthony De Curtis and James Henke (eds), The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll, Random House, New York, 1992, pp. 21-36.

Robert Fontenot, “Your Guide to Oldies Music–The History of Elvis: 1955,” About. com.

Elvis discography and record sleevesSergent. com.au.

“Teeners’ Hero,”Time, May 14, 1956.

“Sweet Music,” Time, October 8, 1956.

Louis M. Kohlmeier, Wall Street Journal, (front-page story on Elvis), December 31, 1956.

Stephen Holden, “Pop View; a Hillbilly Who Wove a Rock-and-Roll Spell,” The New York Times, July 19, 1987.

“Elvis Presley,” in Holly George-Warren and Patricia Romanowski (eds), The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, Rolling Stone Press, New York, 3rd Edition, 2001, pp. 774-778.

“Elvis Presley,” Wikipedia.org.

Jack Doyle, “Elvis Riles Florida, 1955-56″ (Elvis & band perform at Florida Theater in Jacksonville; faces arrest if he “gyrates” too suggestively), PopHistoryDig.com, February 29, 2012.

Jack Doyle, “Drew Pearson on Elvis, 1956” (video), PopHistoryDig.com, February 1, 2013 (famous columnist “commentary” on Elvis meant to be critical but still captures his rise to fame…).

For a more detailed look at Elvis Presley performances and other activities in the 1953-55 period see, Elvis Presley Music .com.

Greg Williams, “Forever Elvis,” Tampa Tribune, originally published, August 16, 2002.

Ace Collins, Untold Gold: The Stories Behind Elvis’s #1 Hits, Chicago Review Press, 2005.


Books & film at Amazon.com

Peter Guralnick’s bestseller, “Last Train to Memphis.” Click for copy.
Peter Guralnick’s bestseller, “Last Train to Memphis.” Click for copy.
“Elvis” - The 2023 film. Click for DVD or prime video.
“Elvis” - The 2023 film. Click for DVD or prime video.
Priscilla Presley’s book, “Elvis and Me.”  Click for copy.
Priscilla Presley’s book, “Elvis and Me.” Click for copy.