You're a Heartbreaker explained

You're a Heartbreaker
Type:song
Artist:Elvis Presley
A-Side:Milkcow Blues Boogie
Recorded:December 8, 1954
Genre:Rockabilly
Label:
    • Sun RCA Victor
Producer:Sam Phillips
Prev Title:Good Rockin' Tonight
Prev Year:1954
Next Title:Baby, Let's Play House
Next Year:1955

"You're a Heartbreaker" is a song recorded by Elvis Presley in December 1954 during the fourth of Presley's eight sessions at Memphis' Sun Studio. The recording was released as the B-side of Presley's third single on the Sun label (Sun 215), whose A-side was a cover of Kokomo Arnold's "Milkcow Blues Boogie".[1] [2]

Session

The song was recorded "November or December, 1954"[3] with personnel:

The single was reissued on RCA Victor records (47-6382). It is listed as 2:10 minutes long, with the publisher Hill & Range BMI. It was also later included on Elvis' seventh studio album, For LP Fans Only in 1959.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2009-02-06 . YOU'RE A HEARTBREAKER - Elvis Presley . 2024-05-03 . Letras.com . en.
  2. Web site: You’re A Heartbreaker . 2024-05-03 . Elvis Presley Official Site . es-ES.
  3. Jorgensen, Ernst, Elvis Presley: A Life in Music, The Complete Recording Sessions, foreword by Peter Guralnick, St. Martin’s Press, New York, 1998