Hate to say it, but three words. No, no, and no. :)
Unless you have more money than California.
A stock bottom end is getting stressed at 5500. Better rods and a 4-bolt main will get you to 6500 maybe if you have a perfect balance, but the pushrod valvetrain will be very hard to control.
Nascar engines get their high RPMs by raising the cam in the block to limit valvetrain weight and prevent deflection of the pushrods. They also use a good amount of Titanium, special block castings and alloys, billet components, dry sump oiling, 18 degree heads... the whole thing costs over $50,000 to get into the realm of RPMs you're talking. Even at that level of money, you frequently see one go kablooey during a race. They sometimes don't last the 500 miles of the race. I could understand something like this for a huge oval track
Not to mention, even if you successfully made it to hold together at that level, the amount of cam, intake, and compression required to get that RPM and power levels will make it a completely useless engine for anything but super hardcore racing. It won't make any useable torque until 6000 rpms, it will overheat at any speed below about 80mph, and require race-only fuel at about $14/gal plus about $500 per 55 gallon barrel to ship hazmat.
Sorry to be debbie downer, but what you're asking from an engine that was designed in 1955 is just not going to happen. You will need some serious aftermarket race equipment to get your goals. SB1 won't cut it. I don't care how many bolts you have in the main, how light a crank and how short a stroke you use, not gonna happen. You'll rip the whole bottom end out or snap a rod or crank.
Fewer gears actually means you want LESS RPMs in a lot of ways. You need an engine that builds mountains of torque, then use gearing to attain whatever highway RPMs you want. There are likely a host of 4, 5, and 6 speed transmissions you can slap behind an SBC for a lot less than $50,000 for a useless engine.
Let's start with what you have, what you want to use it for, and a budget. It's possible to get 650 hp from an old SBC. It will be expensive, and might not last long, but you don't need 8000 rpms to get it.