On This Day

On This Day in 1956, Elvis Presley Began a Historic Chart Run With His Biggest-Selling Single Ever

Ironically, given how much of the Elvis Presley legacy ties itself to this singleโ€™s B-side, the King of Rock โ€˜nโ€™ Roll made chart history with the release of this signature trackโ€™s A-side, which would become the biggest-selling single of his career. The song was a staple in his three-performance run on The Ed Sullivan Show. (Complete with random shrieks and squeals from the women in the studio audience.)

The recording process for the single was especially fascinating, marking a paradoxical turning point that would see Presley take creative control in the studio while โ€œprotestersโ€ picketed outside of the studio, accusing the King of losing touch with his true self.

Videos by American Songwriter

Elvis Presley Makes History With Biggest-Selling Single in 1956

One can easily trace Elvis Presleyโ€™s crowning as the King of Rock โ€˜nโ€™ Roll to his historic rise to the top of the charts in 1956. In July of that year, Presley released โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ as an A-side single with โ€œHound Dogโ€ serving as the B-side. On September 15, 1956, the singer was at the top of the Pop, Country, and R&B charts. โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ remained at No. 1 on the pop chart for a staggering 11 weeks. In just half a year, Presleyโ€™s โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ sold four million copies, making it his biggest-selling single yet. Itโ€™s a record the song would maintain for the rest of Presleyโ€™s career.

Some might associate Presleyโ€™s sound with the rowdier โ€œHound Dogโ€. However, โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ captured the musicianโ€™s rhythmic prowess and performative charm. But chart performance alone isnโ€™t what makes this track so extraordinary in Presleyโ€™s career. โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ was the first single Hill & Range representative Freddy Bienstock offered to Presley. The song also marked the first time that Presley took control in the studio. Presley demanded that the band re-record the song until they performed it to his liking. In total, Presley cut โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ 28 times and โ€œHound Dogโ€ 31 times. Far past what producer Steve Sholes would have normally allowed.

While Presley was in the studio, feeling sure of himself, critical fans camped outside of the building with signs demanding โ€œThe Real Elvis.โ€ The fans were angry about Presleyโ€™s performance on The Steve Allen Show the night before, in which he performed a campy rendition of โ€œHound Dogโ€ to a female basset hound. (To be fair, Presley didnโ€™t propose the idea. That was the television studioโ€™s way to keep the performance from being too suggestive or controversial.)

The King of Rock โ€˜Nโ€™ Roll Thought This Singer Did It Even Better

Elvis Presley leaned into his biggest-selling single for the rest of his career, incorporating โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ in countless television and on-stage performances. But Presley believed all of these renditions paled in comparison to Jackie Wilson, an R&B singer whom Presley watched perform โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€ while in Las Vegas. While visiting Sin City in November 1956, Presley attended four Billy Ward and His Dominoes shows just to watch Wilson perform his chart-topping song.

That next month, Presley was jamming with the โ€œMillion Dollar Quartetโ€ (Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Johnny Cash) in Memphisโ€™ Sun Studios when the King of Rock โ€˜nโ€™ Roll began imitating Wilsonโ€™s version of โ€œDonโ€™t Be Cruelโ€. โ€œHe tried so hard,โ€ Presley said, per Pete Guralnickโ€™s Elvis Day By Day. โ€œTill he got much better, boy, much better than that record of mine. Man, he was cutting out. I was under the table when he got through singing.โ€

Photo by Bettmann/Getty Images