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Johnny Cash
American Country American
V
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Titles
in red have been reviewed. Those in black are to be reviewed
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JOHNNY
CASH
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American
V - A Hundred Highways - 7.5
Johnny Cash comes to terms with
mortality in his last CD recorded before and after his death. And
with the subject matter and the resurgence of Cash-Mania thanks to
the film "Walk the Line" it comes as a timely reminder of
the only axiom that there's nothing certain in life except death and
taxes.
Johnny is no longer concerned with
the latter, but this album is anything but mawkish and, despite its
depressing content, is somehow shot through with hope. It includes the final song he
wrote "Like the 309". Many of the other songs
foretell of Cash's imminent demise but others hark back to happier
times and, if the voice is slightly cracked and dusty, it only adds
to the overall feel of a successful pre-cursor to the final voyage. "On the Evening Train"
tells the story of a widower watching his wife's coffin being loaded
onto a train and has obvious overtones of the death of his wife June
Carter. In other songs he comes face to face
with his maker and some of the titles such as "I'm Free From
the Chain Gang Now" scarcely need explanation. Away from the doom and gloom he
covers songs like Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read
My Mind" and Rod McKuen's " Love's Been Good to Me"
(from which the title A Hundred Highways comes). Cash has come out
of this extremely well
considering producer Rick Rubin had to record the album when Cash
felt strong enough to sing. Overall the album sits as a fitting
epitaph to the Man in Black.
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