Speedway | |
Type: | soundtrack |
Artist: | Elvis Presley |
Cover: | Elvis Presley Speedway Stereo LP Cover with Hype Sticker.jpg |
Caption: | Original stereo cover still in shrink wrap with hype sticker |
Released: | June 25, 1968 |
Recorded: | May 1963, June–September 1967, January 1968 |
Studio: | MGM (Hollywood) |
Genre: | Rock, pop |
Length: | 28:26 |
Label: | RCA Victor |
Producer: | Jeff Alexander |
Prev Title: | Elvis' Gold Records Volume 4 |
Prev Year: | 1968 |
Next Title: | Elvis Sings Flaming Star |
Next Year: | 1968 |
Speedway is the seventeenth soundtrack album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley, released by RCA Victor in mono and stereo, LPM/LSP 3989, on June 25, 1968.[1] It serves as the soundtrack album for the 1968 film Speedway starring Presley. Recording sessions took place at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios in Hollywood, California, on June 20 and 21, 1967. It peaked at number 82 on the Billboard 200.[2]
Speedway took over the new low for chart position and album sales by Presley, selling fewer than 100,000 copies, and jeopardizing his recording career.[3] Much to his relief, it killed the soundtrack formula, this being the final Presley dramatic feature film to have a full soundtrack album. His last five movies of the decade — Stay Away, Joe, Live a Little, Love a Little, Charro!, The Trouble with Girls, and Change of Habit — concentrated on Presley the actor, not Presley the singer, with minimal song requirements.[3] It is also the last Presley album to be released in both stereo and mono editions as mono was being phased out by the industry, thus making the rare mono pressing of Speedway (LPM-3989) a sought-after item among collectors[4]
Eight tracks for Speedway were recorded at the sessions, with "Suppose", the only song that held interest for Elvis, dropped from the movie.[3] Two tracks were pulled for a single, "Your Time Hasn't Come Yet Baby" with "Let Yourself Go" on its flipside, and both sides made the lower reaches of the Billboard Hot 100 (respectively numbers 72 and 71) but bombed sales-wise.[3] "There Ain't Nothing Like A Song," rejected from the soundtrack for Spinout, was one of two songs that feature the lead vocals of Nancy Sinatra, here in duet with Presley.[3] All her vocals, and her "Your Groovy Self," the only time a track without Elvis featured on any of his releases, were recorded at a separate session on June 26, produced by Lee Hazlewood.[5] Three leftover tracks, including one from the May 1963 "lost album" sessions, were unearthed to round out the album.
Three songs from this album appear on (1995): the two sides of the single and the title track. In 2016 Speedway was reissued on the Follow That Dream label in a special 2-disc edition that contained the original album tracks along with numerous alternate takes.
Credits from Keith Flynn and Ernst Jorgensen's examination of session tapes and RCA and AFM paperwork.[6] [7]
June 26, 1967 session ("Your Groovy Self" by Nancy Sinatra only):