Easy Street Records

American IV: The Man Comes Around [Limited Edition 2 LP]
Artist: Johnny Cash
Format: Vinyl
New: In Store Now $41.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. The Man Comes Around 4:26
2. Hurt 3:36
3. Give My Love to Rose 3:27
4. Bridge Over Troubled Water 3:54
5. I Hung My Head 3:53
6. First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 3:52
7. Personal Jesus 3:19
8. In My Life 2:57
9. Sam Hall 2:39 1
10. Danny Boy 3:18 1
11. Desperado 3:12 1
12. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 3:02 1
13. Tear Stained Letter 3:39 1
14. Streets of Laredo 3:33 1
15. We'll Meet Again 2:58

More Info:

Limited vinyl LP pressing of this 2002 album from the Country legend. This is the last album released before his death in 2003. The majority of songs are covers which Cash performs in his own spare style, with help from producer Rick Rubin. To the present day, Cash's studio albums for the American series have continued to sell extremely well.

Reviews:

The success he experienced with his previous interpretations of contemporary songwriters (Soundgarden's "Rusty Cage," Nick Cave's "The Mercy Seat") is applied to this album with varying degrees of success. His throaty reading of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt" easily fits into his "Man in Black" persona, and the spiritual conviction underlying Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus" is certainly powerful. Unfortunately, the inclusion of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" (featuring a lost-sounding Fiona Apple) and a passionless snooze through the Beatles' "In My Life" should have been so much stronger (given the subject matter of both songs and Cash's prolific life story). One of the reasons his previous covers were so successful is that in the past he had chosen some pretty obscure songs (Bonnie Prince Billy's "I See a Darkness" and Beck's "Rowboat," to name a couple) and reinterpreted them with his unique perspective and unmistakable voice. However, there is really no need to hear his versions of the Irish standard "Danny Boy" or the clunky rendition of Sting's "I Hung My Head," since something about them just doesn't fit -- either Cash wasn't entirely comfortable with the song or the performance was never fully realized. Luckily, the new songs Cash wrote for the album are pretty strong, and his cover of the standard "We'll Meet Again" is among the best versions of the song ever recorded. It is a relief to hear that, although Cash's voice is clearly older and not the booming powerhouse it was in the earlier Sun and Columbia days, he's still got some punch left in him, and the wisdom he's gained in his later life seeps through between the grooves, revealing a man who has lived through it all and lived to tell the tale.

        
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