Category: Country (Page 33 of 33)

From beyond the grave, his gravely voice sings again…

Producer Rick Rubin has put the finishes touches on the late Johnny Cash’s final album, American V.

Appropriately for an American institution, the album will be released on the 4th of July; it will feature the work Cash did in the short time between his wife June Carter Cash’s passing and his own death.

“Johnny said that recording was his main reason for being alive,” said Rubin, in an interview with Billboard Magazine. “And I think it was the only thing that kept him going, the only thing he had to look forward to.”

The collection, in addition to featuring covers of Gordon Lightfoot’s “If You Could Read My Mind” and Bruce Springsteen’s “Further On (Up The Road),” will include the last song ever written by Cash: a train song called “Like the 309.”

If July 4th seems too far away, take solace in the face that, on May 23rd, Columbia/Legacy will be releasing Personal Life, a heretofore-unreleased collection of tracks Cash recorded in the ’70s which stylistically resemble the work he would later come to do with Rubin.

Willie cut that tribute a liiiiiiiiiiittle close…

Country music songwriter Cindy Walker died Thursday at the age of 89. Only two weeks ago, Willie Nelson released his latest album, You Don’t Know Me: The Songs of Cindy Walker, on Lost Highway Records…so at least she got to see that tribute before her passing. Not that she hadn’t scored many an accomplishment over the years, mind you. Her songs were recorded by Dean Martin (“In The Misty Moonlight”), Bob Wills (“Sugar Moon,” which was later recorded by k.d. lang), Jim Reeves (“Distant Drums”), Roy Orbison (“Dream Baby”), and Ray Charles (“You Don’t Know Me”), among others. She was a charter member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1997. Not a bad resume. So long, Cindy…

Now which one was he? “Picking” or “Grinning”…?

Sadly, country music legend Buck Owens has died at the age of 76.

For years, I only knew him as the co-host of the cornpone comedy classic known as “Hee-Haw” (alongisde banjo-picker Roy Clark), but as I grew into this music journalist thing and read more about him, I discovered that “Hee-Haw” was the least of his accomplishments. He was the originator of the so-called “Bakersfield sound” of country music (a torch he later passed to Dwight Yoakam), but his footnote in rock and roll history comes from one of his biggest hits, “Act Naturally,” which the Beatles turned into a rollicking, Ringo-sung number. Recently, the Kentucky Headhunters resurrected another one of his songs, “Made in Japan,” for their 2005 collection of covers. Long story short, he’ll be sorely missed, but here’s hoping that his passing will at least serve to inspire folks to investigate some of his material. In closing, I can only say…bye-bye, Buck.

Hello, he’s Johnny Cash…

…and he’s got a CD coming out in May. And, man, is it gonna be sweet. Personal File, which will be a 2-disc set, will consist of material which was recorded in July of 1973. It’s a predecessor of sorts to the recordings Cash did with Rubin during the winter of his life, given that it consists of sparse, acoustic recordings that are mostly just Johnny…but the difference is that he was in full voice in ’73. Count me in from the minute Best Buy opens its doors that Tuesday.

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