Titled Greatest
Hits, this record features some of his best early work, the stuff from
those Sun Records years, all of these songs having been released as singles. It
begins with one most people know, “Cry! Cry! Cry!” This song has some excellent
lyrics, like these opening lines: “Everybody knows where you go when the sun goes down/I think you only
live to see the lights of town/I wasted my time when I would try, try, try/When
the lights have lost their glow, you’re going to cry, cry, cry.” It’s
followed by one of his most famous songs, “Folsom Prison Blues,” which still
works every time. “But I shot a man in
Reno/Just to watch him die/When I hear that whistle blowing/I hang my head and
cry.” And listen to his voice get low when he sings the line, “And that’s what tortures me.” Man, he
just doesn’t hide anything, but gives it to you straight, and it’s all there in
his vocal delivery. For me, that’s one of the keys to his great and continued
appeal. Another of his most popular songs, “I Walk The Line,” is included (I
always love that hum he delivers). The film Walk
The Line turned a new audience onto this song, as well as several other
Johnny Cash songs, including “Home Of The Blues,” which is also included on this
record.
The Johnny Cash song I’ve probably heard the most is “Big
River,” though as done by the Grateful Dead. The Dead turned me on to a lot of
country and folk songs, and it was one of their recordings of this song that I
first heard back in my early teens (it might have been the version released on Steal Your Face, but more likely it was
a bootleg tape). But Johnny Cash’s original rendition, included here, has more
attitude, and is bloody fantastic. “She
loves you, big river, more than me.”
Though it’s a compilation of hits, some of these tunes
might not be as well known to everyone, songs like “So Doggone Lonesome,” “Straight
A’s In Love,” and “Katy Too.” But these are little gems too. I love what he
does with his voice on certain lines of “So Doggone Lonesome,” a strange sort
of love song. It’s almost like a little laugh, or slight quaver. “Well, I know I’ll keep on loving you ‘cause
true love can’t be killed/I ought to get you off of my mind, but I guess I
never will/I could have a dozen others, but I know I’d love you still/’Cause I
get so doggone lonesome.” How is that for a declaration of love? One of my
favorite tracks is “Train Of Love.” Like a lot of songs about trains, the music
itself has the feel of a train moving along the tracks. But it is the vocal
line and the lyrics which really make this one something special. Check out
these lines: “Now stop your whistle
blowing/’Cause I've got ways of knowing/You’re bringing other people's lovers/But
my own keeps going/Train of love this evening/When she's not gone, she's leaving/Ever
so often everybody's baby gets the urge to roam/But everybody's baby but mine's
coming home.”
“Guess Things Happen That Way” is a ridiculously
delightful song, in part because of those somewhat goofy backing vocals, and
then the way Johnny Cash interacts with them. But it’s about carrying on after
losing his woman, and features some wonderfully honest lyrics. You won’t find
any answers here, and it’s because nobody has any answers. “Well, you ask me if I’ll forget my baby/I
guess I will someday/I don’t like it but I guess things happen that way.” I
love that pause he gives before the word “someday.”
“You ask me if I’ll find another/I don’t
know, I can’t say/I don’t like it, but I guess things happen that way.” “The
Ways Of A Woman In Love” is another of his well-known hits and features some
nice work on piano toward the end. I also like the piano
part in “Thanks A Lot.” In “You’re The Nearest Thing To Heaven,” Johnny Cash sings,
“I have searched for happiness so long
and far/But my search for love was through/The day that I found you/Because you’re
the nearest thing to heaven, yes you are.” That’s how I feel about my
girlfriend, but if I said that to her, she would likely roll her eyes and tell
me I was being mushy and corny. I don’t think anyone ever accused Johnny Cash
of being corny.
Track List
Side 1
- Cry! Cry! Cry!
- Folsom Prison Blues
- So Doggone Lonesome
- I Walk The Line
- There You Go
- Train Of Love
- Next In Line
- Home Of The Blues
- Ballad Of A Teenage Queen
- Big River
- Guess Things Happen That Way
- Come In Stranger
- The Ways Of A Woman In Love
- You’re The Nearest Thing To Heaven
- Thanks A Lot
- Luther Played The Boogie
- Katy Too
- Straight A’s In Love
- I Love You Because
- Oh, Lonesome Me
Greatest Hits was
released on November 3, 2017 through Charly Acquisitions.
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