sábado, 12 de noviembre de 2011

NOVEMBER 5, ON THIS DAY IN ELVIS HISTORY

November 05, 1955
Elvis performed at the Louisiana Hayride, Municipal Auditorium, Shreveport.
November 05, 1956
Without notice Elvis made an appearance a "Beginner Driving Range".
November 05, 1957
Elvis sailed for Honolulu on the USS Matsonia.
November 05, 1963
The filming on location of Kissin' Cousins was completed. Elvis and the whole cast and crew returned to Los Angeles.
November 5, 1966
"It's Now Or Never" hit #1 in the U.K.
AND
Elvis' single "Spinout" hit #40 in the U.S.
November 05, 1971
Elvis performed at the Metropolitan Sports Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Imperials were no longer on this tour with Elvis.
 Maybe because of their schedules, maybe because of the Colonel, who was unwilling to pay more, but the Imperials soon learnt 
they were permanently replaced by the Stamps and J.D.Sumner. Also the opening act by a comic was now given to Jackie Kahane.
 This was the first time that Elvis would close the show with his arms flung wide and his cape spread out, just like he liked to do 
at the ends of songs like How Great Thou Art, The Impossible Dream and Bridge.
Date:05 Nov 1971
Time:8.30pm
Venue:Minneapolis, MI.
Metropolitan Sports Center
Tickets:17,600
Costume:White 'Red Lionhead' suit
Track list:
Unknown
Recordings:0
Photos:

CONCERT DETAILS:
Tour Ref: On Tour number 4 - November 5th - November 16th 1971
Date: November 5 1971
Venue: Metropolitan Sports Center
Location: Minneapolis MN
Showtime: (8:30 pm)
Crowd: 17600
REVIEWS:
Article *:
ELVIS ATTIRE:
Suit: White Matador suit
Belt: Lion Head belt
Cape: Red cape
GROUP ATTIRE:



The Sweet Inspirations: Long White Dress


Musicians: Black Suit
TICKET STUBS:
SONGS - TRACKLISTINGS:
Heartbreak Hotel
Blue Suede Shoes
Love Me Tender
Proud Mary
Bridge Over Troubled Water
** Taken From Review. Is Incomplete

PICTURES FROM CONCERT:
© © ©




















Newspaper Articles



CONCERT DATE: November 5, 1971 (8:30 pm). Minneapolis, MN.

Thousands Cheer As Elvis Takes Stage
by Mike Anthony
Minneapolis Tribune
November 6, 1971



When Elvis Presley sauntered onto the stage of Met Sports Center Friday, night - his guitar slung over his shoulder - the flash bulbs lit up the room and 17,600 people gave out a bellow that might have been heard in Osseo.

At that moment, Joanned Azzoni, 21, St. Paul, put her hands above her ears and screamed, "I can't believe it. I can't believe it."

Miss Azzoni is an Elvis fan. She has posters all over her room at home, she said, and a menu on top of her TV set, from Presley's last appearance in Las Vegas, Nev., as well as a bunch of rocks, supposedly from Presley's home in Memphis, Tenn. The rocks were given her by her grandmother.

The day tickets went on sale for Elvis's show, Miss Azzoni was at the Met Center along with several hundred others at 7 a.m. "And I have been crying since I got them," she said.

Five minutes before the show started she and her friends, Julie Jaeger, 20, and Linda Jaeger, 28, were waiting, binoculars poised.

"I couldn't concentrate at work all day," said Julie "Who could concentrate? All the orders, I sent out, they must have been all wrong, I have no fingernails left.

Said Linda, "I've waited 15 years for this. When I first saw Elvis on the Sullivan Show I vowed I'd see him some day."

Seemingly everybody brought binoculars and a camera. The flash bulbs popped all evening. Three middle aged women sat in the balcony before the show peering at the stage. "Is that him?" said one. "No it can't be. He's got a moustache,"

Diane Nelma, 28, flew in from Chicago, Ill, Friday night to see the show and planned to fly right back afterward. "Why?" Because I just love him," she said.

The age range of the audience was wide but it was predominantly later 20s and early 30s, ran through 70 minutes of many of his old favorites ("Heartbreak Hotel," "Blue Suede Shoes," "Love Me Tender") and some newer songs ("Proud Mary" and "Bridge over Troubled Waters"). He sounded better than ever.

Clad in all white, he finally threw the flowing red scarf from around his neck into the audience. It landed on a policeman seated below the stage and six girls leaped at the policeman. One lucky girlgot the scarf and ran to her seat.


Courtesy of Scott Hayward


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