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3. Johnny London: āDrivinā Slowā
Two years after the studio opened, Phillips launched his own label, Sun Records, out of the same building. Though Sun would come to be best known for distributing rock and rockabilly singles, its first release was this casually cool jazz number by the 16-year-old alto saxophone player Johnny London.
ā¶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
4. Elvis Presley: āThatās All Rightā
An 18-year-old Elvis Presley first showed up at Sun Studio on July 18, 1953, to record two demos; legend has it that he wanted to give his mother a record of him singing as a birthday present. Phillips soon realized Presleyās potential, and brought him in for subsequent sessions. This sultry and soulful rendition of Arthur Crudupās 1946 blues ditty āThatās All Right, Mamaā was Presleyās debut single ā and an instant sensation.
ā¶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
5. Johnny Cash: āI Walk the Lineā
In 1954, inspired by Presleyās success, an appliance salesman and aspiring musician named Johnny Cash auditioned for Phillips at Sun Studio. The following year, Sun Records released Cashās debut single, āCry Cry Cry,ā which became a minor hit. In 1956, though, he had a bona fide smash with this tune, his first No. 1 on the country charts. Perhaps youāve heard it before?
ā¶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
6. Carl Perkins: āBlue Suede Shoesā
In late 1955, Presley departed Sun for a more lucrative contract with RCA Victor ā which meant that Phillipsās label could really use a hit. Luckily, the first Sun single to sell a million copies was released in January 1956: Carl Perkinsās suave, self-penned rockabilly classic āBlue Suede Shoes.ā Presleyās own version would become an even bigger and more indelible hit, but in deference to his former label and his friend Perkins, he delayed its release until that August so it would not compete with Perkinsās version on the charts.
ā¶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
7. Jerry Lee Lewis: āWhole Lotta Shakinā Goinā Onā
After signing with the label in late 1956, Jerry Lee Lewis quickly became both a prolific session pianist at the studio ā he played on Perkinsās hit āMatchbox,ā among many other singles ā and a fledgling Sun solo artist. His breakout hit was this fiery 1957 rockabilly number, a rework of a song first recorded two years prior by Big Maybelle. Another unforgettable Sun single by Lewis, āGreat Balls of Fire,ā was released later in 1957.
ā¶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
8. Roy Orbison featuring the Teen Kings: āOoby Doobyā
Roy Orbison is yet another musical icon who made some of his earliest recordings at Sun, even if his career didnāt quite take off until he signed to Monument Records in 1959. Recorded with his backing band the Teen Kings in 1956, the light, jumpy āOoby Doobyā finds a young Orbison emulating Presley, a few years before perfecting his signature style of brooding, dreamy balladeering.
Read More: Listen to the Dawn of Rock ānā Roll, Captured at Sun Studio