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Johnny Cash - At Folsom Prison (Live) flac album

Johnny Cash - At Folsom Prison (Live) flac album
  • Performer Johnny Cash
  • Title At Folsom Prison (Live)
  • Date of release 2014
  • Country US
  • Style Acoustic, Country Rock
  • Other formats ASF MOD MP2 VQF TTA DTS APE
  • Genre Rock / World & Folk & Country
  • Size MP3 1195 mb
  • Size FLAC 1982 mb
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 393

At Folsom Prison is a live album by Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in May 1968. After his 1955 song "Folsom Prison Blues", Cash had been interested in recording a performance at a prison. His idea was put on hold until 1967, when personnel changes at Columbia Records put Bob Johnston in charge of producing Cash's material. Cash had recently controlled his drug abuse problems, and was looking to turn his career around after several years of limited commercial success.

At Folsom Prison (Live). At Folsom Prison (Live) Tracklist. 1. Folsom Prison Blues (Live) Lyrics. 2. Dark as the Dungeon Lyrics. On January 13, 1968, after two days of rehearsals in a Sacramento motel, Cash and June Carter, along with the Statler Brothers, Carl Perkins and the Tennessee Three, entered Folsom State Prison in Folsom, California, to perform one of the greatest live recordings in the popular music canon: the album was released in May of that year, becoming a hit in the United. States, reaching number one on the country charts and the top 15 of the national album chart. At Folsom Prison (Live) Q&A.

Johnny Cash taught me to enjoy my time, even if this is prison. I hope more people hear the recording that comes out of the concert because it speaks with such emotion and tells the true story of prisoners. Arguably one of the best live albums ever created. This is perhaps my all time favourite country album of all time. At Folsom Prison deals with johnny cash illustrate the conflicted nature of the american mind set, with his personal life and his music to. ach track giving out crude,compassionate and bad ass stories with his lyrics. This has to be his highest achievement throughout his discography. You can feel as if you're at the prison with the roaring cheerful crowd.

Johnny Cash had been breaking new ground for a decade when At Folsom Prison suddenly made the world at large take notice. The interaction of a volatile prison population starved for entertainment and a desperately on-form Johnny Cash was electrifying. His somber machismo finally found a home. I'm sure you will as well once you listen.

Backed by the Tennessee Three, Cash’s booming performance has real fire, and he brings the house down on standards like I Still Miss Someone, Orange Blossom Special, and Jackson. At Folsom Prison (Live) Johnny Cash. Outlaw country was invented here. In 1968, The Man in Black played his prison songs ( Folsom Prison Blues, I Got Stripes, 25 Minutes to Go ) and tales of drug-fueled murder ( Cocaine Blues ) to a hall of hardy convicts-and the genre was born. But it wasn’t merely context that makes this album iconic. Backed by the Tennessee Three, Cash’s booming performance has real fire, and he brings the house down on standards like I Still Miss Someone, Orange Blossom Special, and Jackson.

Five decades after Johnny Cash’s At Folsom Prison album was recorded, it remains as mythical as ever. The concert and its star bore into the international imagination and for various reasons never left it. Dressed in his trademark black on January 13th, 1968, he paradoxically celebrated prison and outlaw life while creating a damning portrait of the prison experience that pricked the era’s concern for society’s outcasts. The stories around the Folsom album – released 50 years ago this May – spiraled up like a dust devil, taking with it fevered speculation about Cash’s run-ins with the law and other half-truths and shady legends. Hollywood’s 2005 Walk the Line biopic portrayed the concert as something it was not, although it did get one thing right: On a very basic level, Folsom marked a personal and professional renaissance for Cash.

Folsom Prison looms large in Johnny Cash's legacy, providing the setting for perhaps his definitive song and the location for his definitive album, At Folsom Prison. The ideal blend of mythmaking and gritty reality, At Folsom Prison is the moment when Cash turned into the towering Man in Black, a haunted troubadour singing songs of crime, conflicted conscience, and jail. Folsom Prison looms large in Johnny Cash's legacy, providing the setting for perhaps his definitive song and the location for his definitive album, At Folsom Prison.

Cash was first introduced to the prison in the early 1950s when he saw the film Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison. It inspired him to write the song Folsom Prison Blues, which was included on his debut album in 1957 and became one of his signature songs. Though Cash had never spent any time in jail, prisoners related to him and the song. He started receiving requests to perform in prisons. His first performance was at Huntsville State Prison in Texas in 1957, and this was followed by San Quentin in California the following year. Cash performing in San Quentin Prison, California (1969).

Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Folsom Prison Blues
Written-By – J. Cash*
2:42
2 Dark As The Dungeon
Written-By – M. Travis*
3:04
3 I Still Miss Someone
Written-By – J. Cash*, R. Cash, Jr.*
1:37
4 Cocaine Blues
Written-By – T.J. Arnall
3:01
5 25 Minutes To Go
Written-By – S. Silverstein*
3:31
6 Orange Blossom Special
Written-By – E.T. Rouse*
3:00
7 The Long Black Veil
Written-By – D. Dill*, M. Wilkin*
3:57
8 Send A Picture Of Mother
Written-By – J. Cash*
2:10
9 The Wall
Written-By – H. Howard*
1:36
10 Dirty Old Egg-Suckin' Dog
Written-By – J.H. Clement*
1:30
11 Flushed From The Bathroom Of Your Heart
Written-By – J.H. Clement*
2:16
12 Jackson
Vocals – June Carter*Written-By – B. Wheeler*, J. Leiber*
3:12
13 Give My Love To Rose
Vocals – June Carter*Written-By – J. Cash*
2:40
14 I Got Stripes
Written-By – C. Williams*, J. Cash*
1:57
15 Green, Green Grass Of Home
Written-By – C. Putman*
2:29
16 Greystone Chapel
Written-By – G. Shirley*
6:02

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright (c) – Sony Music Entertainment Inc.

Credits

  • Bass – Marshall Grant
  • Drums – W.S. Holland
  • Electric Guitar – Carl Perkins, Luther Perkins
  • Mastered By – Darcy Proper
  • Producer [Original Recordings] – Bob Johnston
  • Vocals – The Statler Brothers
  • Vocals, Guitar – Johnny Cash

Notes

All tracks recorded live January 13, 1968 at Folsom Prison. Originally released 1968.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
CS 9639 Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison ‎(LP, Album) Columbia CS 9639 US 1968
CK 65955 Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison ‎(CD, Album, RE, RM) Columbia, Legacy CK 65955 US 1999
CK 65955 Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison ‎(CD, Album, RE, RM) Columbia, Legacy CK 65955 US 1999
CK 65955 Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison ‎(CD, Album, RE, RM, Sli) Columbia, Legacy CK 65955 US 1999
CS 9639 Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison ‎(LP, Album) CBS CS 9639 Singapore, Malaysia & Hong Kong Unknown