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Burning Love and Hits from His Movies, Volume 2 is a compilation album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley. The album was released on November 1, 1972, on the budget label, RCA Camden . [ 1 ]
"Burning Love" is a 1972 song by Elvis Presley, written by Dennis Linde, originally released by Arthur Alexander earlier in 1972. Presley found major success with the song, it becoming his final Top 10 hit in the American Hot 100 or pop charts, peaking at number 2 (it was kept out of the top spot by Chuck Berry 's " My Ding-a-Ling ").
While the A-side ("Burning Love") made it to number two on the Hot 100, [5] the flip side ("It's a Matter of Time") charted both on the Billboard Easy Listening and Hot Country Singles charts. [6] "Burning Love / It's a Matter of Time" became the last Elvis Presley's single to be certified platinum. [7]
The following year (1971), he wrote "Burning Love" which became a worldwide hit when it was recorded by Elvis Presley. The song was written, Linde said, "on a lark". [7] He had just bought a set of drums and was putting a drum track on tape at his home studio, sort of learning to play them, and the words and melody came to him.
Elvis: The '56 Sessions, Vol. 1 "It's Only Love" [BS] / "Beyond the Reef" 1980 — — — 3 Elvis Aron Presley "Santa Claus Is Back in Town" — — 25 41 — "The Sound of Your Cry" 1982 — — — 59 The Sound of Your Cry "Green Green Grass of Home" 1984 — — — 76 I Can Help and Other Great Hits "The Last Farewell" — — — 48 Elvis ...
Burning Love (band), a hardcore punk band from Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Burning Love and Hits from His Movies, Volume 2, a 1972 compilation album by Elvis Presley "Burning Love", a song by Kix from the album Cool Kids, 1983 "Burnin Love", a song by Dido from the album Safe Trip Home, 2008
In 1966, "Tell Me Why" was a hit for Elvis Presley.Presley recorded the track in 1957, but it was not released at that time. It was issued in late 1965 during a period in which his label, RCA Victor, was issuing previously unreleased archival recordings, [4] to make up for the fact Presley was, at the time, recording exclusively film soundtracks (see the 1965 album, Elvis for Everyone! which ...
Robert Christgau gave the album his highest rating out of all of Elvis's albums that he has reviewed and felt that the album showed that Elvis's life was "a continuous whole". [17] Parke Puterbaugh, in his Rolling Stone review of the album, gave the album five out of five stars and felt that the recordings had improved sound quality.