At Madison Square Garden
- List Price:
$7.99
- Buy New: $3.60
-
as of 2/14/2012 14:16 EST details
- You Save: $4.39 (55%)
- Seller:Florida Media
- Sales Rank:98,125
- Format:Live, Original recording remastered
- Media:Audio CD
- Discs:1
- Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
- Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
- Release Date:August 27, 2002
- MPN:696998680821
- UPC:696998680821
- EAN:0696998680821
- ASIN:B00006GO9D
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tracks
- Big River
- I Still Miss Someone
- Five Feet High And Rising
- Pickin' Time
- Remember The Alamo
- Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream
- Wreck Of The Old 97
- The Long Black Veil
- The Wall
- Send A Picture Of Mother
- Folsom Prison Blues
- Blue Suede Shoes (w/ Carl Perkins)
- Flowers On The Wall (w/ The Statler Brothers)
- Wildwood Flower (w/ The Carter Family)
- Worried Man Blues w/ The Carter Family)
- A Boy Named Sue
- Cocaine Blues
- Jesus Was A Carpenter
- The Ballad Of Ira Hayes
- As Long As The Grass Shall Grow
- Sing A Travelin' Song
- He Turned The Water Into Wine
- Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)
- Daddy Sang Bass
- Finale Medley
- Suppertime
Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com
Johnny Cash has long been both country legend and American icon. But once upon a time, in the late '60s, Cash was something more mercurial--pop culture superstar. This 26-song, previously unreleased concert recorded in December 1969 at a Madison Square Garden packed with 21,000 enthusiastic fans from across the cultural and political spectrum documents what's arguably the peak of Cash's career. One story-song slides naturally into the next in a set that not only documents the high points of his already rich and colorful career, but paints a compelling autobiography of the singer and his hardscrabble roots. Whether taking a bold antiwar stance as a "dove with claws" (imagine a post-Lee Greenwood country star being as brave) on "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream," taking a tough, unflinching look at prison life in a four-song stretch book-ended by "The Long Black Veil" and "Folsom Prison Blues," or examining the plight of the Native American and his own religious beliefs, Cash gives a performance that underscores the honesty and integrity that made him a conquering American folk hero. The singer's generosity toward his backing musicians and songwriters is also noteworthy, acknowledging Shel Silverstein's presence as the writer of his massive hit "A Boy Named Sue," turning over the show to the Carter Family for a couple slices of Appalachian roots music, and letting the Statler Brothers showcase "Flowers on the Wall" and fellow Sun legend-turned-sideman Carl Perkins rip through an explosive, show-stopping "Blue Suede Shoes." Cash's presence here is more than mere performance; it's a frank reminder that American values remain considerably more complex than nostalgia, apple pie, and flag-waving. --Jerry McCulley
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