Original releaes on LP RCA Victor LPM 2426
(US 1961, October 1)
Elvis movies
never came bigger than "Blue Hawaii", the 1961 romantic musical comedy whose
success helped push Presley into near full-time filmmaking for the bulk of the
'60s. Not only was the flick a hit but so was the soundtrack, going Gold by the
end of 1961, a success partially fueled by the ballad "Can't Help Falling
in Love," a song so good it suggests the rest of the record might contain
other gems. That's not the case. The record has its moments, including the
dreamy title track, but as an album, "Blue Hawaii" is undone by a film that
demands a good chunk of its tunes carry a Hawaiian flavor. Often, this
mid-century Polynesian exotica has its charms - Elvis croons sweetly on the
swaying luaus and everybody involved has the good sense to embrace the
project's inherent silliness, letting themselves josh around on deliberate
fluff like "Rock-A-Hula Baby" and the vaudevillian rhumba that's
"Beach Boy Blues." Both of these are ridiculous but on record,
they're slightly preferable to the steady march of island tunes ("Aloha
Oe," "Ku-U-I-Po," "
The soundtrack was recorded at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, California, in March 1961. The sound engineer was Thorne Nogar, and the musicians were:
Guitar: Scotty Moore, Hank Garland and Tiny Timbrell
Bass: Bob Moore
Drums: D.J. Fontana, Hal Blaine and Bernie Mattinson
Piano: Floyd Cramer
Piano & Celeste: Dudley Brooks
Sax: Boots Randolph
Steel-guitar: Alvino Ray
Harmonica: George Fields
Ukulele: Fred Tavares and Bernie Lewis
Vocal accompaniment: The Jordanaires and The Surfers
Guitar: Scotty Moore, Hank Garland and Tiny Timbrell
Bass: Bob Moore
Drums: D.J. Fontana, Hal Blaine and Bernie Mattinson
Piano: Floyd Cramer
Piano & Celeste: Dudley Brooks
Sax: Boots Randolph
Steel-guitar: Alvino Ray
Harmonica: George Fields
Ukulele: Fred Tavares and Bernie Lewis
Vocal accompaniment: The Jordanaires and The Surfers


