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Home Alt Forums Your Video Heartbreak Hotel Tenor sax cover by Leo Salu

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  • #117796
    Pete
    Participant

      Another nice one Leo.

      #117799
      Mel
      Participant

        Slow and Bluesy 👌😀

        #117822
        Leo Salu
        Participant

          Thanks guys appreciate the feed back………

          #117826
          Pete
          Participant

            Another great track/music from John.

            #117845
            Leo Salu
            Participant

              Hello Pete great tone like the echo sound, one note however, you might be a little ahead of the track! Keep them coming. Leo

              #117849
              Pete
              Participant

                Hi Leo, yea do tend to get ahead of the music sometimes thanks for comment, will have to watch that.

                #117882
                Leo Salu
                Participant

                  Pete I think we are all on this site to improve our playing, Johnny offers a lot of advice to achieve that end. He always says to video our playing, best way to know the weak area’s, a while back he suggested changing my MP to Metal so I got a Otto Link with a fiberreed made quite a difference. and like he always says Rock On.

                  #117888
                  Pete
                  Participant

                    Yes Leo agree with you, we all will learn something on sites like this and need truthful comments. Which Otto link did you get, i have a old link STM 7* which is my “go to” m/p but i do use a Hard rubber a lot depending on the sound i am trying to get.I am using the Legere 2.50 Signature reed they play straight out of box no problem.A lot of the pro’s are using them i think now?

                    #117906
                    Leo Salu
                    Participant

                      I have the #5 Ottolink super tone master NY, i use a medium hemp fiberreed, BTW those fiberreeds last a long time the one i am using is over 7 months old and still going strong.
                      My hard rubber MPs are the selmer S80 c* I have two of them but now prefer the Otto.

                      #117928
                      saxomonica
                      Participant

                        Hi Leo, another great song as usual from you! Sweet edge to your tone.

                        There is a good write up on Wikipedia about this air here ~

                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartbreak_Hotel

                        ~~~~~~ / ~~~~~~

                        other choice bits that go deep down in the belly, strange and almost morbid even ..

                        1) https://performingsongwriter.com/heartbreak-hotel/

                        2) https://groovyhistory.com/heartbreak-hotel-elvis-presley-song-history-meaning-lyrics/3

                        3) https://elvisdaily.com/2023/08/19/elvis-presley-heartbreak-hotel-song-meaning/

                        And from ROLLING STONE ~

                        The story has been repeated thousands of times, with minor variations, in magazines, books, blogs and documentaries. In some versions, the heartbroken man shoots himself; in others, he leaps to his death from a hotel window. There are occasional references to a failed romance and to the destruction of all traces of identification before the fatal act. There’s always a one-line suicide note: “I walk a lonely street.”

                        But there’s never a name. For 60 years, the true identity of the man whose death inspired “Heartbreak Hotel” has remained a mystery. Florida songwriters Tommy Durden and Mae Boren Axton always claimed the creative spark for Elvis Presley‘s first-ever Number One hit was a 1955 newspaper story about an anonymous man’s suicide and his cryptic note about that “lonely street.” (The paper cited is usually The Miami Herald.) And yet, no one has ever turned up the article, or even provided much clarifying detail.

                        This is surprising, considering that “Heartbreak Hotel” had a colossal impact – both on Elvis’ career and on rock & roll history. It was Elvis’ first nationwide hit after a string of regional successes, and it changed the lives of countless future stars – John Lennon, George Harrison, Keith Richards and Robert Plant have all proclaimed its transformative effect. Elton John, recalling the day he first heard the song, said, “That weekend, my mum came home with ‘Heartbreak Hotel’ and that changed my life. … Elvis Presley changed everyone’s life. I mean, there would be no Beatles, there would be no Hendrix. There would be no Dylan.” Paul McCartney once declared it nothing less than the most important artistic creation of the modern era.

                        Axton, a teacher and publicist as well as a songwriter and radio host, went on to become a big wheel in the country-music scene – the “Queen Mother of Nashville.” She’d interviewed Elvis in May 1955 during the Florida leg of a Southern tour, vowed she’d write his first million-seller. A few months later, she cajoled the singer into listening to a demo of “Heartbreak Hotel.” Reluctant, at first, to hear the pitch, Elvis was soon mesmerized by the song. “Hot dog, Mae, play it again!” he is said to have exclaimed. Axton played it 10 times. “He knew the whole song before he left the room,” writes Peter Guralnick, author of the highly acclaimed 1994 Elvis biography Last Train to Memphis.

                        Durden and Axton gave Presley the third writing credit when he agreed to record “Heartbreak Hotel” in January 1956, his first single after moving from Memphis-based Sun Records to Nashville’s RCA. Elvis’ sexually charged recording – combined with the singer’s electrifying TV performances that spring, particularly one for a Milton Berle special in April ’56 – catapulted him into a kind of celebrity orbit the world had never seen.

                        Axton died in 1997, Durden in 1999. To the end, they credited the brokenhearted man in that elusive newspaper article as their inspiration. Now, at last, from the digital morgues of old newspapers, comes a breakthrough. And it turns out that the story of the real-life man behind “Heartbreak Hotel” is as tragic and surreal as the gloomy scene “down at the end of Lonely Street.”

                        ****

                        Here’s a informative vid, that is if you have time ..

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