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  1. G.I. Blues is the third soundtrack album and his seventh overall, released on September 23, 1960, via RCA Victor. The album coincided with the release of Presley’s movie of the same name, which ...

  2. Stationed in West Germany, soldier Tulsa McLean hopes to open up a nightclub when he gets out of the army. Tulsa may lack the capital for such a venture, but a chance to raise the cash comes his way through a friendly wager. Local dancer Lili (Juliet Prowse) is a notorious ice queen, and Tulsa bets everything he has that a friend of his can earn her affections. But, when that friend is ...

  3. G.I. Blues is the third soundtrack album and seventh album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley, released by RCA Victor in mono and stereo, LPM/LSP 2256, in October 1960. It is the soundtrack to the 1960 film of the same name in which he starred. Recording sessions took place on April 27 and 28, and May 6, 1960, at RCA Victor Studio C and Radio Recorders in Hollywood, California. The ...

  4. tom: C [C]They give us a room with the view of the beautiful Rhine, [C7] [F]They give us a room with the view of the beautiful [C]Rhine, Gimme a [G7]muddy old creek in [F7]Texas any old [C]time {chorus} [C]I've got the hup, two, three, four, occupation GI blues [C7] (Gi blues) >From my [F]GI hair to the heels of my GI [C]shoes, and if I [G7]don't go state-side [F7]soon, I'm gonna blow my [C ...

  5. YouTube Music. Save Album. Elvis had been enormously proud of his achievement in King Creole, both the music and the movie. He was disappointed to almost as great a degree in his new movie. Leiber and Stoller had a last-minute business falling-out with Hill and Range (precipitated mostly by the Colonel’s deep-seated suspicion of their ...

  6. 9 de out. de 2014 · Elvis adopts an on-screen persona he knows well in real life--a singin' G.I. in West Germany. Eager to open a stateside nightclub after his hitch in khakis, ...

    • 3 min
    • 12,3K
    • Paramount Movies Digital
  7. G.I. Blues has its share of sloppiness; the pacing is poor, and the seemingly endless 2nd Unit footage does not mesh with the remainder shot on Hollywood soundstages. Elvis' handlers and producer Wallis intended to give his fans the treat of seeing Elvis on the big screen as a soldier in Germany, and yet the final product provides an unfortunate disconnect.