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The Complete Sun Singles, vol. 1

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The Complete Sun Singles, vol. 1 album cover
01
Crazy Arms
2:47
02
End of the Road
1:51
03
It'll Be Me
2:53
04
Whole Lot of Shakin' Going On
2:55
05
Great Balls of Fire
1:55
06
You Win Again
2:07
07
Down the Line
2:16
08
Breathless
2:45
09
High School Confidential
2:35
10
Fools Like Me
2:56
11
Break Up
2:42
12
I'll Make It All Up To You
3:05
13
It Hurt Me So
2:46
14
I'll Sail My Ship Alone
2:12
15
Lovein' Up a Storm
1:57
16
Big Blon' Baby
1:48
17
Let's Talk About Us
2:17
18
The Ballad of Billy Jo
3:02
19
Little Queenie
2:29
20
Little Queenie I Could Never Be Ashamed of You
2:24
21
Old Black Joe
2:07
22
Baby Baby Bye Bye
2:01
23
I Get the Blues When It Rains
2:24
24
In the Mood
2:20
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 24   Total Length: 58:34

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John Morthland

eMusic Contributor

John Morthland has been writing about music since the days of electronically rechanneled stereo and duophonic sound. His name has darkened the mastheads of Roll...more »

04.22.11
Jerry Lee Lewis, The Complete Sun Singles, vol. 1
Label: Sun Records

Herein resides some of the most explosive rock & roll of the '50s. Jerry Lee's piano style betrays no one major influence, but derives from the black boogie blues traditions of the rural Southern juke joint; there were a handful of country pianists like Moon Mullican (whose big hit was "I'll Sail My Ship Alone") playing boogie piano before Lewis, but they sounded unequivocally white — genteel, compared to the ominously rumbling left hand and hell-bent-for-leather right hand of the black piano pounders that the Killer synthesized. But his country credentials were also unimpeachable; his very first single paired one of his only original tunes ("End of the Road") with a rocked-up, drums-and-piano ride on Ray Price's dancehall shuffle "Crazy Arms." The next two singles are immortal: "Whole Lotta Shakin 'Going On" is a roadhouse grinder, complete with leering recitation, that stops just short of being too suggestive while still making its "meaning" unmistakable, and "Great Balls of Fire" calls for apocalypse now as it batters Jerry Lee's spiritual and carnal desires into one, er, great ball of fire. Lewis was brought down, of course, when it was revealed in 1958 that he had married his 13-year-old cousin; the charts… read more »

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