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  1. Jun 14, 2007 · "Suspicious Minds" was one of the great 'pop dramas' of its time, and the fadeout.....fade in return was fun. Not for DJ's & radio people at first, but it worked. And that's what matters, what works.

  2. He added: "So when Jarvis took the tape of 'Suspicious Minds', he added this crazy 15-second fade toward the end, like the song was ending, and brought it back by overdubbing to extend it. I have no idea why he did that, but he messed it up.

  3. According to Elvis' good friend Marty Lacker, who convinced him to record in Memphis with Chips Moman, the song's fake ending was a result of tampering by Elvis' longtime producer Felton Jarvis. "When Chips cut 'Suspicious Minds' and mixed it, the fade and bump at the end was not there," Lacker told Goldmine magazine.

  4. Jun 14, 2007 · It was most likely Felton Jarvis' idea. Chips Moman didn't like the final mix. He was angry with the Colonel because he had to give up the publishing rights to Suspicious Minds and didn't get a producer's credit on the From Elvis In Memphis album. So he told them to **** off and never come back.

  5. Between Suspicious Minds and a similar scene in Six, there are two opportunities to state clearly that TUD is known as existing within the storyline’s present, but it keeps revealing to be a future vision- coming back to El and the 1983 event.

  6. Elvis' primary producer Felton Jarvis made the unusual decision to add a premature fade-out to the song starting at 3:36 and lasting for 15 seconds before fading back in. The first verse then continues repeatedly until it completely fades out.

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  8. Feb 17, 2021 · Moman stated “So when Jarvis took the tape of ‘Suspicious Minds,’ he added this crazy 15-second fade toward the end, like the song was ending, and brought it back by overdubbing to extend...

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