Ride This Train
- Buy New: $21.95
-
as of 2/14/2012 09:07 EST details
- Seller:Media Medley
- Sales Rank:68,232
- Format:Original recording remastered
- Media:Audio CD
- Discs:1
- Shipping Weight (lbs):0.3
- Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
- Release Date:March 19, 2002
- MPN:696998633223
- UPC:696998633223
- EAN:0696998633223
- ASIN:B0000636Y5
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tracks
- Loading Coal
- Slow Rider
- Lumberjack
- Dorraine Of Ponchartrain
- Going To Memphis
- When Papa Played The Dobro
- Boss Jack
- Old Doc Brown
- The Fable Of Willie Brown
- Second Honeymoon
- The Ballad Of The Harpweaver
- Smiling Bill McCall
Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
Japanese remastered pressing includes 4 bonus tracks. Ride This Train took Cash's conceptual explorations into previously unimagined realms. A full-blown concept album featuring sound effects and lengthy narratives would never have happened on Sun founder Sam Philips's watch, but the newly unfettered Cash reveled in the opportunity to make this striking, distinctive record. The album was billed as a "travelogue of America," and Cash neatly combines his passions for American history, storytelling, and the magic of trains to present portraits of the country he loved. Each track on the album begins with Cash delivering a monologue over train sounds, taking the roles of characters from different walks and eras of American life, followed by a song further illustrating the tale. CBS. 2006.
Amazon.com
This concept album ranks with the most thematically ambitious of Johnny Cash's career, though the title's a little misleading. Instead of a collection of train songs (the sort featured in the Cash catalogue from "Hey Porter" to "Orange Blossom Special"), he alternates the spoken-word narrative of a rail trip that crosses the country (and cuts across centuries) with songs about the characters you might meet along the way. From a Kentucky coal miner ("Loading Coal") to an Oregon logger ("Lumberjack") to a convict on a Mississippi chain gang ("Going to Memphis"), Cash inhabits the various manifestations of what he calls "the heart and muscle of this land." In "Slow Rider" he combines the folk standard "I Ride an Old Paint" with the gunfighter legend of John Wesley Hardin. The reissue of this 1960 release adds four bonus tracks, story songs in a similar spirit but without the narration. --Don McLeese
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