
Elvis Presley's recording of
Hound Dog is #19 on
Rolling Stone's list of
The 500 Greatest Songs of
All Time.
The song was originally written in 1952 by the
legendary team of
Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller;
two white teenagers who went on to write hits
such as
Yakety Yak,
Charlie Brown,
Poison Ivy and
Jailhouse Rock.
Leiber and Stoller originally wrote
Hound Dog for
Blues and R&B singer
Big Mama Thornton; and for
seven weeks in 1952, her recording of the song
was #1 on the Billboard R&B charts.
Four years later, Elvis saw
Hound Dog performed in
Las Vegas by
Freddie Bell and the Bellboys; he was
impressed.
Within two weeks, he added it to his act, and
two months later, recorded it at New York's
RCA Studios.
Check out the video below for more on the origin
of Elvis's
Hound Dog.
The soundtrack of the above video is a brief excerpt
of a program in the
NPR's 100 series, which can be
heard
here.