It was 67 years ago today (July 5th, 1954), that the future “King of Rock N' Roll,” Elvis Presley, taped his first professional recording session at Memphis' Sun Studios. Produced by Sun owner Sam Phillips, the session featured Elvis on acoustic guitar and vocals, Bill Black on double bass, and Scotty Moore on lead guitar. The session — which was recorded in hopes of issuing an actual single, followed a 1954 demo session and two 1955 studio rehearsals at Sun — featured two other songs, the ballad “Harbor Lights” and “I Love You Because.”
A song from Elvis' second Sun session, recorded on Wednesday, July 7th, yielded the eventual B-side to “That's All Right,” the nearly equally classic, “Blue Boon Of Kentucky.” Two weeks after it was recorded, Sun Records released the first Elvis single — “That's All Right” backed with “Blue Moon Of Kentucky.” The single broke new ground, mixing R&B, country, and rockabilly, and is widely regarded as the first rock n' roll single.
“That's All Right” ended up selling around 20,000 copies upon its original release, and although not enough to make the Billboard and Cashbox charts, it went as high as Number Four on the local Memphis charts.