American V: A Hundred Highways

American V: A Hundred Highways

by Johnny Cash
American V: A Hundred Highways

American V: A Hundred Highways

by Johnny Cash

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

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Overview

American V: A Hundred Highways is the long-awaited album of Johnny Cash's final recordings, the basic tracks for which (i.e., Cash's vocals) were recorded in 2002-2003, with overdubs added by producer Rick Rubin after his death on September 12, 2003, at age 71. Between 1994 and 2002, Cash and Rubin had succeeded in fashioning a third act for the veteran country singer's career, following his acclaimed 1950s work for Sun Records and his popular recordings for Columbia in the 1960s and '70s. In the '80s, Cash's star had faded, but Rubin reinvented him as a hip country-folk-rock elder at 62 with American Recordings (1994), his first new studio album to reach the pop charts in 18 years. Unchained (1996) and American III: Solitary Man (2000) continued the comeback, at least as far as the critics were concerned, though none of the albums was actually a big seller. But American IV: The Man Comes Around (2002), propelled by Cash's cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt" and a powerful video, stayed in the pop charts longer than any Cash album since 1969's Johnny Cash at San Quentin. By 2002, however, Cash was in failing health, homebound and in a wheelchair, and he suffered a personal blow when his wife, June Carter Cash, died on May 15, 2003. The American series, which posited Cash as an aged sage and the repository for a bottomless American songbook, had already shown a predilection for gloom in the name of gravity; it's no surprise that the fifth and final volume would be even more concerned with, as three earlier Cash compilations had put it, God, Love, and Murder. The ailing septuagenarian certainly sounds like he's near the end of his life, but that said, he doesn't sound bad. Cash was never a great singer in a technical sense: he hadn't much range, his pitch often wobbled, and his lack of breath control sometimes found him grasping for sound at the end of lines. But he was a great singer in the sense of projecting a persona through his voice; his emotional range, which went from a Sinatra-like swagger to an almost embarrassingly intimate vulnerability, was as wide as the spread of notes he could hit confidently was narrow. Such a singer doesn't really lose that much with age; in fact, he gains even more interpretive depth. Listening to this album, one can't get around the knowledge that it is a posthumous collection made in Cash's last days, but even without that context, it would have much the same impact. The album begins with two religious songs, Larry Gatlin's "Help Me," a plea to God, and the traditional "God's Gonna Cut You Down," which, in a sense, answers that plea. The finality of death thus established, Cash launches into what is billed as the last song he ever wrote, "Like the 309," which is about a train taking his casket away. The same image is used later in the cover of Hank Williams' "On the Evening Train," in which a man and his child put the coffin of a wife and mother on another train. Cash sings these songs in a restrained manner, and even has a sense of humor in "Like the 309," in which he complains about his asthma: "It should be awhile/Before I see Doctor Death/So it would sure be nice/If I could get my breath." In between the two train songs come songs that may not have been about death when their authors wrote them, but sure sound like they are here. As written, Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read My Mind" seems to concern a romantic breakup expressed in literary and cinematic terms, but in Cash's voice, lines like "You know that ghost is me" and "But stories always end" become inescapably elegiac. Bruce Springsteen's "Further On (Up the Road)" is even easier to interpret as a call to the hereafter, with lines like "Got on my dead man's suit and my smilin' skull ring/My lucky graveyard boots and song to sing." These two songs make a pair with the album's two closing songs. Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds" is, like the Lightfoot selection, a folk standard by a Canadian songwriter, also nominally about romantic dissolution, although here the singer who is "bound for moving on" doesn't seem likely to come back. And the closing song, "I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now," may have lyrics implying that the unjustly imprisoned narrator has been set free, but in Cash's voice it sounds like he's been executed instead and is singing from beyond the grave. The four songs in between "On the Evening Train" and "Four Strong Winds," dealing with faith and love (the former expressed in a previously recorded 1984 Cash copyright, "I Came to Believe"), are weaker than what surrounds them, but they serve to complete the picture. And it's worth noting that Cash at death's door still outsings croaking Rod McKuen on the songwriter's ever-cloying "Love's Been Good to Me." Cash may never have heard Rubin's overdubs, but they are restrained and tasteful, never doing anything more than to support the singer and the song. If the entire series of American recordings makes for a fitting finale to a great career, American V: A Hundred Highways is a more than respectable coda. ~William Ruhlmann

Product Details

Release Date: 07/04/2006
Label: Lost Highway
UPC: 0602517005099
Rank: 28391

Tracks

  1. Help Me
  2. God's Gonna Cut You Down
  3. Like the 309
  4. If You Could Read My Mind
  5. Further on up the Road
  6. 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

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Johnny Cash   Primary Artist
Benmont Tench   Harpsichord,Organ,Piano
Pat McLaughlin   Guitar
Smokey Hormel   Guitar
Jonny Polonsky   Guitar
Randy Scruggs   Guitar

Technical Credits

Pete Wade   Musician
Dan Leffler   Mixing Assistant
Vlado Meller   Mastering
Mark Santangelo   Mastering Assistant
Christine Cano   Design,Art Direction
Martyn Atkins   Photography
Lou Hersher   Composer
Lou Herscher   Composer
Lindsay Chase   Production Coordination
Saul Klein   Composer
Traditional   Composer
Dennis Crouch   Musician
Jimmy Tittle   Assistant Engineer
Larry Perkins   Musician
Larry Gatlin   Composer
Don Gibson   Composer
Greg Fidelman   Mixing
Mac Wiseman   Musician
Hugh Moffatt   Composer
Rod McKuen   Composer
Rick Rubin   Producer,Liner Notes
Marty Stuart   Musician
Laura Cash   Musician
Paul Fig   Mixing Assistant
Bruce Springsteen   Composer
Hank Williams   Composer
Gordon Lightfoot   Composer
Ian Tyson   Composer
John Carter Cash   Executive Producer
Johnny Cash   Composer
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