New Releases by Johnny Cash

Johnny Cash is the author of Man in White (1987), Johnny Cash Collection (1986), Orange Blossom Special (1985), Johnny Cash (Songbook) (1982), The Best of Johnny Cash (1982).

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Man in White

release date: Oct 07, 1987
Man in White
This powerful novel from one of America''s greatest songwriters covers Saul''s early obsession with destroying the Christian movement, describes his extraordinary conversion on the road to Damascus, and follows his career as a missionary to the gentiles.

Johnny Cash Collection

release date: Jan 01, 1986

Orange Blossom Special

Orange Blossom Special
(String Solo). Hillbilly concert piece for violin and piano.

Johnny Cash (Songbook)

Johnny Cash (Songbook)
(E-Z Play Today). This updated third edition features 28 Cash classics: Big River * A Boy Named Sue * Cry, Cry, Cry * Daddy Sang Bass * Don''t Take Your Guns to Town * Folsom Prison Blues * I Walk the Line * Jackson * The Man in Black * Orange Blossom Special * Ring of Fire * Sunday Mornin'' Comin'' Down * Tennessee Flat Top Box * and more.

Johnny Cash Presents a Concert Behind Prison Walls

Johnny Cash Sings the Ballads of the True West

Songs of Our Soil (sound Recording).

American V: A Hundred Highways

American V: A Hundred Highways
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 born-again 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.
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