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January-February 2008
ARTIST: VARIOUS
TITLE: THE BEST OF THE JOHNNY CASH TV SHOW
LABEL: COLUMBIA/LEGACY
RELEASE DATE: 2008
By Dave Soyars
It’s hard to imagine in this hundreds-of-channels-at-the-touch-of-a-button
age, but not so very long ago- during my lifetime, in fact, TV was home to very
few programming choices, and any music, particularly good music, was rarely
found. Variety shows like the Ed Sullivan
Show would have the occasional pop act between the dancing elephants and
such, and there were occasional shows dedicated to pop music, but vaudeville,
rather than anything current, was the benchmark.
So it’s all the more impressive that it was not an ambitious
musician of the rock generation, which was (arguably) at its boldest artistic
point, but the most successful mainstream country artist of his time that most
effectively bridged the gap between musicians of various genres in the late 1960s.
For two seasons spanning a year and a half, on a major network during prime
time at that, the Johnny Cash show was not just the best place on TV to find
traditional country artists like George
Jones and Waylon Jennings, but
the also home to the best of the then-current singer/songwriters storming the
charts at the time, such as James Taylor
and Joni Mitchell, both of whom
appear here, the latter in a duet with the host. Genre was not a determining
factor, rather a certain level of quality and devotion to singing a good song. This
CD of some of the best music done on the show (which ran from 1969-1971) is loaded
with great performances.
Thing is, it’s not as if Johnny just got hip when Rick Rubin discovered him. Johnny was
tuned in to all kinds of great music from the very beginning. And as big a
commercial success as he was at the time, he was no purist. His own songs, now
classics, such as Flesh and Blood and
Daddy Sang Bass, are the basis of some
of the best performances here. But he also knew a good song when he heard it,
whatever the source, be it then up-and-coming Kris Kristofferson or from Eric
Clapton’s Derek and the Dominoes,
the country influence on which Johnny is only too eager to point out in his
introduction to their version of the Chuck
Willis hit, It’s Too Late.
The other performances are likewise uniformly great and
adventurous. Ray Charles turns
Cash’s Ring of Fire into a lowdown
blues, to huge, well-deserved applause from the studio audience. Jones and Roy Orbison both do medleys of their
best-known hits. Tammy Wynette sings
the heck out of Stand by Your Man.
Even the spoken bits occasionally heard between the songs are
wonderful; Cash gently makes fun of ex-roomate Jennings,
but also announces Jennings’
fresh Grammy win to the audience in a voice bursting with pride in his good
friend. In addition to his trademark “hello, I’m Johnny Cash” at the beginning
of the show, there are plenty of asides and greetings to crew, audience member
and artist alike. Not since President Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats had broadcasts
seemed so unaffected, as if you were hanging out in the living room of the
host.
Point being, I could go on and
on about the many great artists here, and how wonderful Johnny’s own
performances are, and how great it was that he presented so many great, classic
artists -many for the first time- on national TV, but this is just one CD’s
worth. There’s even tons more than this. It’s just one more reason to
appreciate what a giant of music the man was.
Dave Soyars is a guitarist, electric bass player, a
singer/songwriter, and a print journalist with over fifteen years experience.
His column features happenings on the folk and traditional music scene both
locally and internationally, with commentary on recordings, as well as live
shows, and occasionally films and books. Please feel free to e-mail him at
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