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Elvis album teams king, philharmonic

By Randy Lewis, Los Angeles Times
Published: September 18, 2016, 6:03am

Elvis Presley’s voice is posthumously teamed with the full forces of an orchestra for a second time with “The Wonder of You: Elvis Presley with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra,” a collection due Oct. 21 that adds newly recorded orchestral accompaniment to more than a dozen of the King’s original recordings.

It follows last year’s “If I Can Dream” album, which has sold just under 100,000 copies in the U.S., according to Nielsen Music, and about 1.5 million copies worldwide, according to Sony Music Entertainment’s Legacy Recordings label that assembled both projects.

“The Wonder of You” set features new arrangements recorded at London’s Abbey Road Studios, blended with Presley’s vocals and some or all of the original instruments from his own recordings.

The track list includes the title track plus such hits as “Suspicious Minds,” “Kentucky Rain,” “Memories,” “Don’t” and “A Big Hunk O’ Love” along with “I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby,” “Just Pretend,” “Starting Today,” “Let It Be Me” and his version of “Amazing Grace.” Rounding out the song list are “Always On My Mind,” “Love Letters,” “I Just Can’t Help Believin'” and a duet version of “Just Pretend” with singer Helene Fischer.

“As with the first time we stepped into this amazing world, it is the extraordinary intimacy of Elvis’ vocal performances that is truly breathtaking,” Nick Patrick, who co-produced both albums with Nick Reedman, said in a statement.

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