Cash, Johnny
American V: A Hundred Highways
The ethical questions surrounding this final album in the American Recordings series are as unavoidable as they are,
ultimately, peripheral. While the vocal tracks were recorded in the months just prior to Johnny Cash's passing in
September 2003, the arrangements weren't undertaken until two years later. And though producer Rick Rubin had become a
trusted friend, the Man in Black wasn't around to approve or disapprove, let alone guide, the final sessions. However,
if the pure power of these recordings doesn't quiet the skeptics, nothing will. With Heartbreakers Mike Campbell and
Benmont Tench and slide guitar session pro Smokey Hormel on board (all three of whom appear on earlier Cash albums),
along with guitarists Matt Sweeney and Johnny Polansky, the sound is stately and acoustic, but rarely staid, even as the
dynamics of earlier recordings in the series are absent. Instead, the songs have a measured, elegiac intensity, the
sound of musicians choosing their notes carefully and making just the right choices.
The songs Cash sings are, unsurprisingly, confessional and reflective: his mortality and his mistakes, his maker and his
salvation, and the loss of his wife June and the end of his career may have weighed on his mind, but in these songs he
both embodies and transcends his personal history. On "God's Gonna Cut You Down," as the musicians clap and stomp behind
him, his voice cuts through the air like that same avenging hand. On the new original "Like the 309"--the last song Cash
ever wrote--he cops to being short of breath, and that voice becomes a metaphor for what each of us will one day face.
On Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Read My Mind," Rubin flirts with overwhelming the damp bittersweetness of Cash's phrasing
in tasteful atmospherics, but the voice is implacable, hitting and finding notes one never expected he'd have the will
to find. Likewise, it's hard to believe this is his first recording of Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds"; the elemental
narrative seems to have been written for him. Two songs, however, Cash has recorded before: the bornagain hymn "I Came
to Believe" and the final spiritual, "I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now." The latter especially is a definitive
testament, as is his version of Bruce Springsteen's "Further On (Up the Road)." "One sunny morning we'll rise, I know /
And I'll meet you further on up the road," he sings. If only, John, if only. --Roy Kasten
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
04-03-2014
Label
Item-nr
914507
EAN
0602517005099
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
HELP ME
2
GOD'S GONN CUT YOU DOWN
3
LIKE THE 309
4
IF YOU COULD READ MY MIND
5
FURTHER ON UP THE ROAD
6
ON THE EVENING TRAIN
7
I CAME TO BELIEVE
8
LOVE'S BEEN GOOD TO ME
9
A LEGEND IN MY TIME
10
ROSE OF MY HEART
11
FOUR STRONG WINDS
12
I'M FREE FROM THE CHAIN GANG NOW