Elvis Presley's Jungle Room, Graceland, 3764 Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, TN

'Elvis: Way Down in the Jungle Room', From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee (1976) and Moody Blue (1977). Elvis Presley never called it the Jungle Room. For him, it was merely 'the den'. Constructed in 1965 as an addition to Graceland, it was a substantial addition (14 by 40 feet) on the rear (east) facade of the house. Elvis Presley's already-fabled Memphis headquarters, the room was the nerve center of his home life.

It became known as the Jungle Room because of its furnishings, as well as the built-in waterfall of cut fieldstone on its north wall. The one-story section at the house's north end was constructed as a four-car garage.

It was remodeled as an apartment in the mid-1960s, later used as offices, and currently provides additional exhibit space for the house museum.

The den received its evocative sobriquet from a journalist soon after Graceland opened to the public in 1982, five years after Elvis' death. The newly dubbed Jungle Room was an immediate fan favorite, and not just because of the novelty.

While other areas of the home make concessions to conventional aesthetics, the den brings you closest to the King's personality. His eccentric style, playful humor, manic moods and sheer bravado ooze from every corner. No wonder the room draws 600,000 people to bask in its faux-wood-paneled glory each year.

Elvis Presley Video The story of 'The Jungle Room' at Graceland

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2 DVD Set. 'Elvis Presley's Graceland: Ultimate Tour Edition DVD'

Recorded Live in the Jungle Room

The Jungle Rpom Sessions (FTD)

In 1976 RCA brought the studio to him and set up a mobile recording studio in his now-legendary Jungle Room. During February and October of that year, Elvis recorded some of his most heartbreaking material to date, as well as some rollicking good tunes, all in the comfort of his own home. The The Jungle Room Sessions FTD CD contains 17 undubbed alternate takes, many of them more fulfilling than the released versions. In fact, the otherwise sappy 'The Last Farewell' sounds absolutely majestic here, with Elvis putting heart and soul into every syllable. Outstanding!

Elvis sounds best here on the slower material, many of the songs mirroring his own personal feelings. 'I'll Never Fall in Love Again', although not as powerful as the released version, will certainly draw tears from even the most hardened criminal. 'Solitaire' and 'Bitter They Are, Harder They Fall' are almost as heartbreaking. 'Danny Boy', 'Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain', and 'She Thinks I Still Care' are powerful performances. When Elvis lightens up on tracks like 'Moody Blue' (with real cursing!), 'Way Down', and 'For the Heart', the results are enlightening. The unedited version of 'Pledging My Love' goes on for almost twice the length of the released version, but is undubbed and raw and very exciting.

Way Down in the Jungle Room (Sony)

The storied space also served as the site of Elvis' final recording sessions. On a handful of nights in February and October of 1976, Elvis and his handpicked team of musicians and engineers - including longtime guitarist James Burton, bassist Jerry Scheff and producer Felton Jarvis - cut 16 titles there with the help of mobile studio equipment. These tracks formed the bulk of Elvis' last two albums released before his death: From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee (1976) and Moody Blue (1977).

Now the historic tapes are getting new life via 'Elvis: Way Down in the Jungle Room'. The two-disc set, out now, is the most complete collection of Elvis' studio swansong ever assembled, including rare outtakes and alternate versions. Interest in Elvis' music has continued unabated for more than six decades, but the release has brought renewed attention to the Jungle Room. Alongside his birth home in Tupelo, Mississippi, and the floor of Memphis' Sun Studio, it remains one of the most holy places in all of Presleydom.

Elvis Presley Video 'The Jungle Room' Graceland (03:31)

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The 14-by-40-foot area that became the Jungle Room was originally an open patio at the rear of Graceland, just behind the kitchen. Its transformation began in the early Sixties, following Elvis' return from military duty in West Germany. Thrilled to be home, the singer embarked on a series of improvement projects. After toying with the idea of building a two-story octagonal building made entirely of aluminum to house offices and a home studio, he settled on the more modest task of converting the patio into a screened porch.

By 1965 this had been fully enclosed into what would today be called a 'man cave'. Thick drapery permanently cast the room into darkness, making it the ideal spot for Elvis and his boys to put up their feet at all hours of the day and night. Still, it had yet to receive its distinctive décor. 'None of the jungle stuff was there, then', remembered Elvis associate Marty Lacker in the book Elvis and the Memphis Mafia. 'Vernon Presley, Elvis' father decorated that room [with furniture] from Sears, with these big round tables like you'd see in a restaurant, with high chrome bottoms and big round black tops'. According to Graceland's housekeeper at the time, the space also contained two sectional couches and a large high-backed chair for Elvis, all upholstered in blond leather.

The den's focal point was a massive color television, one of 14 in the home. He could also afford elaborate customizations to his den. The well-known flagstone waterfall was added a year after the room's construction. Builders curtained off the north wall until the finished product was presented to Elvis in a grand unveiling. Although he was initially delighted, problems soon became apparent. 'It was a great idea ... except it flooded everything', Elvis' former wife Priscilla told Larry King in 2007. 'It never worked. The whole room would get flooded'. Marty Lacker also remembers the accessory being more trouble that it was worth at times. 'Vernon got this cheap-ass plumber - some $4-an-hour guy - to do it originally, and the guy botched the job', he grumbled. 'The whole wall leaked and water would flood the backyard'. The primitive plastic mechanism had to be overhauled by Laskey's brother-in-law Bernie Grenadier, who would later oversee construction on Elvis' meditation garden.

The 'Jungle Room', Graceland, Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee.
The 'Jungle Room', Graceland, Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee, and the records recorded live in 1976.

Even after the repairs, the feature was not flawless. In the middle of Graceland's 1971 Christmas party, far from festive due to Elvis and Priscilla's angry bickering, the waterfall shorted out and started a small fire. A frantic Vernon attacked the wall with a sledgehammer in a desperate attempt to reach the wiring before the entire home was set ablaze. Elvis later claimed it was the highlight of his evening.

The fire was the sole bright spot in an otherwise troubling holiday. Five Christmases after Elvis had proposed to Priscilla, relations with his 26-year-old wife had deteriorated beyond repair. They would ultimately go their separate ways by February 1972.

The den, a place that promised emotional refuge for Elvis, was littered with bittersweet reminders of happier times. On the coffee table lay a cigarette case with a built-in music box that played his hit 'Surrender' - a gift from Priscilla on their first Christmas together at Graceland in 1962. On the bar was a metal tray, etched with a photo of their wedding day. When Elvis' new girlfriend Linda Thompson moved into the mansion later that year, the couple marked this fresh start with a frenzy of redecorating.

Elvis Presley MP3 Audio'The story of 'The Jungle Room' + 'She Thinks I Still Care' Take 2 (19:24)

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The changes were severe. Author Karal Ann Marling would later christen mid-Seventies Graceland 'the Taj Mahal of aesthetic misjudgment'. It's known among Elvis scholars as the 'red period' for the yards of bright scarlet carpet that flooded the hallways. Thompson had made the selection at a local flooring store, and Graceland's color scheme was soon altered to match. Antebellum pillars, balustrades and doorways were shrouded in heavy red velvet fabric, lassoed with gold tassels like a Las Vegas Versailles. Enormous overstuffed Louis XV chairs were reupholstered in candy-apple satin studded with rhinestones. Walls dripped with mirrors and black velvet paintings. Floors were cluttered with white fur rugs, robust caryatids and gaudy lamps bejeweled with fake rubies and sequins. Even Liberace would have blushed.

Designer Bill Eubanks nominally oversaw the alterations, but he ultimately disowned the job in the book Graceland: Going Home with Elvis. '[That's] not my house. Nobody could ever make Elvis' taste anything other than what it was'. Elvis' friend Alan Fortas described the appointments as 'all the furniture you wouldn't buy - not in a million years'. Fellow Memphis Mafioso Lamar Fike was more blunt: 'Let's face it - Elvis's taste sucked ... if something wasn't overdone it was abnormal to Elvis'.

The den would not be spared from this extreme home makeover, although the exact circumstances are contested. Elvis apologists insist he was fully aware that the mass-produced tiki furnishings were delightfully horrible and merely wanted to pull a prank on his father. In a story supported by several of Elvis' friends, Vernon returned home one day in 1974 exclaiming, 'I just went by Donald's Furniture Store and they've got the ugliest furniture I've ever seen in my life'. After describing it, Elvis replied, 'Good, sounds like me'. By afternoon Vernon found the same furniture sitting in the den, along with his laughing son.

Cousin David Stanley claims Elvis hated shopping for furniture and bought whatever was in the window display just to get out of the store. Still others say he simply saw an ad for Donald's Furniture on TV, spotted the set and decided then and there that he had to have it. Whatever the case, it's agreed that Elvis moved quickly, purchasing the lot in a single 30-minute shopping spree. Delivery took longer when some items proved so unwieldy that they had to be loaded in through the oversized picture windows.

The result was the stuff of Don the Beachcomber's wildest fantasies. Joke or not, Elvis grew to love the dark pine couches, stools, lamps, credenza, wet bar and end tables adorned with chainsaw-carved sea serpents and gargoyles. They reminded him of Hawaii, a frequent vacation destination and scene of some of his greatest triumphs. There he had filmed three of his most beloved movies - Blue Hawaii, Girls Girls Girls and Paradise, Hawaiian Style - and made television history with 1973's Aloha From Hawaii satellite broadcast. In his den, holding court from his ornate wooden throne, cooled by a trio of air conditioning units and surrounded by friends, family and ceramic animal figurines, Elvis was still king of the jungle.

But outside the walls of Graceland this was less often the case. As he approached the age of 40, it seemed that his career had plateaued. Though he continued to play sold-out shows across the country, the performances could be lackluster. His health also became an increasing concern.

Perhaps even more troubling to executives at RCA, Elvis had grown disinterested in recording. The year of 1974 came and went without a single studio visit, forcing the label to make do issuing live tracks, outtakes and repackaged hits. The following March he spent only three days in Hollywood's RCA Studio C, recording songs that would yield that spring's Today album. It would be his last time working in a professional studio setting.

RCA did what it could to make the recording process more enticing. They offered to hold sessions in Memphis, but top-of-the-line local facilities like American Sound Studios and Stax had recently shuttered. Facing limited options, producer Felton Jarvis had a novel idea: Why not bring the studio to Elvis? The concept was not entirely without precedent. Two tracks from 1973's Raised on Rock had been taped in the singer's Palm Springs home with great success. Elvis liked the idea, and it was agreed that they would record in Graceland.

The den's expansive floor plan provided the ideal space for a live room, and rolls of thick green shag carpeting - which, in the high Seventies fashion, covered parts of the ceiling as well as the floor - acted as natural sound absorbers. An RCA mobile studio truck was dispatched from Nashville, but it broke down just outside of Memphis and had to be towed through the gates of Graceland. Not the most auspicious start to the project.

The furniture was cleared, the burbling waterfall switched off, and blankets hung as sound baffles. On February 2nd, 1976, Elvis and his team were ready to roll. The makeshift studio lacked the isolation rooms or vocal booths found in more formal set-ups, and more than a dozen band members and their instruments all squeezed in, elbow to elbow. '[Elvis] always wanted the musicians and the singers right with him', says James Burton, a fixture on guitar since 1969. 'That's because Elvis fed off of the emotion and the dynamics that you can get when communicating as musicians and artists', continued drummer Ronnie Tutt, 'And that is the best way that music is made'.

A dozen songs were completed over the course of six nights. Sessions usually began at 9 p.m., with Elvis seldom making his entrance before midnight. Once everyone warmed up with a few gospel standards, work would continue until the early hours of the morning. Felton and engineer Brian Christian monitored the proceedings via closed circuit camera from their command center in the studio truck parked outside the windows. Elvis would deliver his vocal parts on the landing adjacent to the kitchen, bathed in the glow of an ever-changing colored light bulb - swapped out as the mood of the song dictated. 'We need a red light in here like a whorehouse, so these guys will be playing better', he quipped.

In spite of the homey nature of these sessions, Elvis chose to record some the most heartbreaking material of his career. The first song he attempted was a Larry Gatlin number, 'Bitter They Are, Harder They Fall', and it set the tone for the predominantly downbeat set list. The 1962 George Jones hit 'She Still Thinks I Care' and Roger Whittaker's 'The Last Farewell' were also cut the same night, and the next evening was entirely spent capturing Neil Sedaka's 'Solitaire'. Elvis frequently retreated upstairs to his bedroom between takes, where he'd espouse numerology, show off his collection of police badges or share his fool-proof plan for busting Memphis drug kingpins. Anything, it seemed, but record music. He appeared to be distracted, or maybe hiding.

It was obvious that Elvis was lonely and adrift. His relationship with Linda Thompson had begun to falter, and they would split later in the year. Session tapes reveal a man working through his regrets the only way he knows how: through his music.

His spirits lifted on the fourth night when he tackled 'For the Heart', an uptempo track penned by Dennis Linde, who had written 'Burning Love' years before. Several run-throughs left Elvis primed to take on Roy Hamilton's 'Hurt' with a power and passion unseen so far during the session. Previous nights had seen Elvis being forced to change keys to accommodate his vocal cords, weathered by middle age. But there were no such compromises on 'Hurt'. He assailed the first few bars with a primal roar that could have only originated in the Jungle Room. That famous voice was back; the King had returned. The moment is a highlight not only of the sessions, but also of his entire Seventies output.

The high was not to last. Work sputtered to a stop on February 8th when Elvis failed to appear for recording. After several hours of waiting, the band was sent home. But RCA got their album, releasing the 10-track From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee that May. It shot to number one on the Billboard Country charts.

Despite the unceremonious ending, Elvis enjoyed the experience and even considered converting the den into a permanent home studio. Though these plans were never carried out, the Jungle Room sessions had a brief revival for two nights in October 1976. Much looser than the previous dates, these sessions yielded four songs before Elvis' demons began to overwhelm him. With Linda Thompson gone for good, and distraught by the news that three former bodyguards were writing a tell-all exposé about his sex life and drug abuse, he was in no mood to make music.

Offering his apologies to the band, Elvis canceled the remaining dates and retired upstairs to his private quarters - where he would die on August 16th, 1977. The fruits of those final sessions were issued weeks before his death on the album Moody Blue, which topped the Country charts and reached Number Three on the Billboard 200.

For Elvis fans, the Jungle Room remains a tiki-tinged, shag-carpeted mecca - the place where the King let his world-changing voice soar on record one last time.

'Elvis : Way Down In The Jungle Room' 2 CD Set.
'Elvis : Way Down In The Jungle Room' 2 CD Set.

Way Down In The Jungle Room may be pre-ordered now at ElvisPresleyShop.com

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Track listing

Elvis Presley : 'Way Down In The Jungle Room' 2 CD

Disc 1 - The Masters

  1. Way Down (2:38)
  2. She Thinks I Still Care (3:51)
  3. Bitter They Are, Harder They Fall (3:17)
  4. Pledging My Love (2:51)
  5. For The Heart (3:22)
  6. Love Coming Down (3:07)
  7. He'll Have To Go (4:32)
  8. Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain (3:41)
  9. Hurt (2:07)
  10. Never Again (2:51)
  11. Danny Boy (3:56)
  12. Solitaire (4:40)
  13. Moody Blue (2:49)
  14. It's Easy For You (3:27)
  15. I'll Never Fall In Love Again (3:44)
  16. The Last Farewell (4:02)

Disc 2 - The Outtakes

  1. Bitter They Are, Harder They Fall - take 1 (5:15)
  2. She Thinks I Still Care - take 10 (6:30)
  3. The Last Farewell - take 2 (4:15)
  4. Solitaire - take 7 (5:37)
  5. I'll Never Fall In Love Again - take 5 (4:04)
  6. Moody Blue - take1 (3:53)
  7. For The Heart - take 1 (3:55)
  8. Hurt - take 3 (2:30)
  9. Danny Boy - take 9 (4:02)
  10. Never Again - take 9 - 3:56
  11. Love Coming Down - take 3 (3:17)
  12. Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain - take 4 (4:59)
  13. She Thinks I Still Care - (alternate version) take 2 (4:26)
  14. It's Easy For You - take 1 - (5:24)
  15. Way Down - take 2 - 3:50
  16. Pledging My Love - take 3 (5:34)
  17. For The Heart - take 4 (4:13)

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Elvis Presley Video Tupelo's Own Elvis Presley DVD

Never before have we seen an Elvis Presley concert from the 1950's with sound. Until Now! The DVD Contains recently discovered unreleased film of Elvis performing 6 songs, including Heartbreak Hotel and Don't Be Cruel, live in Tupelo Mississippi 1956. Included we see a live performance of the elusive Long Tall Sally seen here for the first time ever. + Plus Bonus DVD Audio.

This is an excellent release no fan should be without it.

The 'parade' footage is good to see as it puts you in the right context with color and b&w footage. The interviews of Elvis' Parents are well worth hearing too. The afternoon show footage is wonderful and electrifying : Here is Elvis in his prime rocking and rolling in front of 11.000 people. Highly recommended.

Tupelo's Own Elvis Presley DVD Video with Sound.