Memphis Sunset

Memphis Sunset

This is not a tribute album to one artist. It is a tribute album to Sun Records and the Memphis Recording Service at 706 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee ala 1952-1955.

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Memphis Sunset – Full Album (35:32)

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Text to Music Prompt

Instrumentation

Three instruments, nothing more. Slapped upright double bass — loud, woody, percussive, carrying the beat entirely. Acoustic steel-string rhythm guitar, strummed hard on the backbeat with a country chop. Lead electric guitar, clean and bright with no distortion, playing sparse melodic fills and bent single-note runs between vocal phrases. No drums. No piano. No other instruments. The silence between notes is part of the sound.

Production

Sam Phillips Sun Studio tape recording, stereo. Short slapback tape echo on every element — a single distinct repeat roughly 120–180ms behind the source, dry and tight, not washy reverb. The room is small and live. Slight tape saturation and natural low-end warmth. No compression, no EQ polish, no stereo width. Sounds like it was captured in one take by three men standing close together around one microphone.

Vocal Sound

Young male voice, mid-twenties, baritone-tenor. Naturally resonant but untrained-sounding — raw and instinctive. Phrases start smooth and country then break suddenly into rhythm-and-blues urgency. Hiccups, stutters, and melismatic runs appear without warning. Vowels stretch and bend. The delivery is intimate, close-mic’d, slightly breathless. Slapback echo matches the instruments. No vibrato affectation. No polish. Sounds like he’s making it up as he goes and it works perfectly.

Rhythm & Tempo

Up-tempo shuffle or straight-driving groove, 140–165 BPM. The feel is loose and slightly rushing — human, not metronomic. The slapped bass and rhythm guitar lock together as the only rhythm section. Energy comes from momentum and space, not density.

Lyrical Themes

Restless young male longing. A girl who won’t stay or can’t be reached. The feeling of Saturday night — charged, uncertain, a little reckless. Leaving and not knowing why. Simple declarative lines, blues phrasing, direct emotional statement with no cleverness. Heartache worn lightly, like it’s just the way things are.

Sun Records Memphis, 1954–1955. Three-piece only: slapped upright double bass carrying the beat, acoustic rhythm guitar with hard country backbeat chop, clean bright electric lead guitar with sparse fills and bent single-note runs between vocal phrases. No drums, no piano, no other instruments. Mono tape recording with short tight slapback echo (120–180ms) on all elements — not reverb, a single dry repeat. Small live room, slight tape saturation, no compression or polish. Young male baritone-tenor vocal, raw and instinctive, smooth country delivery breaking suddenly into R&B urgency, hiccups, stutters, stretched vowels, close-mic’d and breathless. Up-tempo shuffle, 140–165 BPM, loose human feel. Lyrics: restless longing, a girl he can’t hold, Saturday night energy, simple declarative blues phrasing. Sounds like one live take. Under 2:30.

Negative prompt — exclude these

No drums or drum kit. No piano. No full band. No horn section. No backing vocals or choir. No reverb wash or studio echo longer than 200ms. No distortion or overdrive. No modern production. No compression or limiting. No stereo spread. No orchestration. Not the RCA Victor sound. Not the Las Vegas sound. Not post-1955.

TRACKLIST

01 Cold Slate River

02 Gravel and Glass

03 Jukebox Moan

04 Mercury Ground

05 Midnight Line

06 Muddy Ditch Blues

07 New Leather Boogie

08 Run It Down

09 The Bare Heart

10 The Highway Jury

11 The Shake

12 Town Talk (Final Take)

13 Tupelo Sun

14 Tupelo Sun (Take 2)

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