About The Song
Hold onto your hats, folks, because we’re about to take a rocket ride back to the dawn of rock ‘n’ roll, where a young buck named Elvis Presley unleashed a firecracker of a song: “Blue Moon of Kentucky”. This ain’t your standard crooner fare, mind you. This is the King at his rawest, a wildcat tearing through a bluegrass ballad and igniting a musical revolution that still smolders today.
Picture this: 1954, Sun Studios in Memphis. A nervous energy crackles in the air. A 19-year-old Elvis, fresh off the cotton fields of Mississippi, picks up his guitar and starts messin’ around with Bill Monroe’s bluegrass classic. What comes out ain’t nothin’ your grandpappy ever heard.
Elvis takes that slow, mournful waltz and injects it with a shot of rock ‘n’ roll adrenaline. His voice, raw and potent, rips through the verses, punctuated by Scotty Moore’s twangy guitar and Bill Black’s thumping bass. It’s a hillbilly hootenanny on amphetamines, a hollerin’ good time that shakes the foundations of the music industry.
“Blue Moon of Kentucky” wasn’t just a song; it was a manifesto. It was a young Elvis, bursting with talent and restless energy, announcing his arrival on the world stage. He wasn’t playing by the rules of the Nashville establishment, with their slick crooners and polished harmonies. He was singing for the folks back home, the ones who felt the grit under their fingernails and the heartache in their hearts.
This song was a bridge between worlds. It blended the twang of the banjo with the pulse of the bass, the lonesome wail of the blues with the raw energy of rock ‘n’ roll. It spoke to teenagers in bobby socks and farmers in overalls, uniting them with its infectious rhythm and rebellious spirit.
And Elvis? He was the preacher, the pied piper, the star-boy leading the charge. He poured his soul into every verse, his voice soaring and growling, his hips swiveling, his charisma blinding. “Blue Moon of Kentucky” wasn’t just a song; it was a performance, a glimpse into the electrifying stage presence that would soon captivate the world.
So, crank up the volume, let the banjo pick, and feel the tremor of that “Blue Moon of Kentucky” rise. It’s a reminder that sometimes, the most powerful music comes from the rawest places, from the hearts of those who dare to break the mold and set the world on fire. And Elvis Presley, that young king from Tupelo, did just that, one moonlit tune at a time.
Video
Lyrics
“Blue Moon Of Kentucky”
keep shining bright.
Blue moon, keep on shining bright,
You’re gonna bring me back my baby tonight,
Blue moon, keep shining bright.I said blue moon of Kentucky
keep on shining,
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.
I said blue moon of Kentucky
keep on shining,
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.
Well, it was on one moonlight night,
Stars shining bright,
Wish blown high
Love said good-bye.
Blue moon of Kentucky
Keep on shining.
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.
Well, I said blue moon of Kentucky
Just keep on shining.
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.
I said blue moon of Kentucky
keep on shining.
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.
Well, it was on one moonlight night,
Stars shining bright,
Wish blown high
Love said good-bye.
Blue moon of Kentucky
Keep on shining.
Shine on the one that’s gone and left me blue.