Topic: Johnny Cash on American Recordings

It was my birthday recently and my wife and kids got me a terrific gift.  They purchased all six Johnny Cash recordings released by American.  I have enjoyed Johnny Cash music since I was a young boy.  My mother was a huge fan, and I grew up listening to Ring of Fire and his many other hits.  I think I was the only one who bought a few of his 1980's releases.  Back Stage Pass to a Willy Nelson Show is a very fun song, Don't Drink the Water and such like that. 

Well, these six albums produced by Rick Rubin, with Tom Petty and the Blackhearts backing him up in the studio on some of them, is his best work.  Absolu-stinking-lutely the best he's done.  Which is saying quite a lot, given that he had previously changed the sound and presence of country music AND rock music AND folk music. 

I have learned of previously unreleased recordings called "Cash Unearthed", which I will be buying.  Apparently he approved the release before his death, but did not live to see the release of them.  I've heard a few cuts and they're phenomenal. 

- Zurf

Granted B chord amnesty by King of the Mutants (Long live the king).
If it comes from the heart and you add a few beers... it'll be awesome! - Mekidsmom
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Re: Johnny Cash on American Recordings

Sounds like a great gift, zurf.  I love old collections like that.  Happy belated birtday and hope you enjoy the music.

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Re: Johnny Cash on American Recordings

bensonp wrote:

Sounds like a great gift, zurf.  I love old collections like that.  Happy belated birtday and hope you enjoy the music.

This is new stuff.  It's all stuff he recorded at American, but didn't get included on any of the albums he released.  For each of the six albums, with fifteen or so songs on each album, they recorded hundreds of songs.  Some covers, some original, some covers of his own materials. 

I read Johnny Cash's autobiography a year or so ago.  In it, he was saying that Rick Rubin re-energized his life and his music.  He had been doing the same show at the same theater in Branson and was simply sick of it.  He had quit and gone back on the road, even though he was having trouble filling high school auditoriums he loved being on the road.  So when Rick Rubin said he wanted to record him, he wasn't so sure.  Rick Rubin had never done a country artist and all the music was heavily engineered in studios.  Johnny Cash asked him what he wanted to do and the answer was, "Whatever you want to do, however you want to do it."  It's so stripped down and bare that for much of it you can practically see the flickering flames and smell the smoke of a campfire as you listen.  They just recorded, and recorded, and recorded, and recorded, and recorded.  Then they figured out what to put on the albums.  So there's just tons of stuff unreleased.  Some of it probably ought to stay that way, but from what I've heard of the cuts from Unearthed, a lot of it needs to get released too. 

It's kind of like Willie Nelson.  I read an article on him.  His bar has a recording studio attached to the stage.  Apparently folks come by the bar.  Willie and them get to talking and decide to try something and it gets recorded.  They've got something like 80 albums worth of material in the can. 

- Zurf

Granted B chord amnesty by King of the Mutants (Long live the king).
If it comes from the heart and you add a few beers... it'll be awesome! - Mekidsmom
When in doubt ... hats. - B.G. Dude

Re: Johnny Cash on American Recordings

The both of them are great american artist's. A happy late birthday too you zurf!

my papy said son your going too drive me too drinking if you dont stop driving that   Hot  Rod  Lincoln!! Cmdr cody and his lost planet airman