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Personal File (Dig) (Slip) (Spkg)

Personal File (Dig) (Slip) (Spkg)
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  • List Price: $15.99
  • Buy New: $11.14
  • as of 2/14/2012 10:03 EST details
  • You Save: $4.85 (30%)
In Stock
  • Seller:abundatrade
  • Sales Rank:69,837
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:2
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.3
  • Dimensions (in):5.5 x 5 x 0.6
  • Release Date:May 23, 2006
  • MPN:827969426524
  • UPC:827969426524
  • EAN:0827969426524
  • ASIN:B000F6YW08
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Disc 1 Tracks
  • The Letter Edged In Black
  • There's A Mother Always Waiting At Home
  • The Engineer's Dying Child
  • My Mother Was A Lady
  • The Winding Stream
  • Far Away Places
  • Galway Bay
  • When I Stop Dreaming
  • Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes
  • I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen
  • Missouri Waltz
  • Louisiana Man
  • Paradise
  • I Don't Believe You Wanted to Leave
  • Jim, I Wore A Tie Today
  • Saginaw, Michigan
  • When It's Springtime In Alaska (It's Forty Below)
  • Girl In Saskatoon
  • The Cremation Of Sam McGee
  • Tiger Whitehead
  • It's All Over
  • A Fast Song
  • Virgie
  • I Wanted So
  • It Takes One To Know Me
Disc 2 Tracks
  • Seal It In My Heart And Mind
  • Wildwood In The Pines
  • Who At My Door Is Standing
  • Have Thine Own Way Lord
  • Lights Of Magdala
  • If Jesus Ever Loved A Woman
  • The Lily Of The Valley
  • Have A Drink Of Water
  • The Way Worn Traveler
  • Look Unto The East
  • Matthew 24 (Is Knocking At The Door)
  • The House Is Falling Down
  • One Of These Days I'm Gonna Sit Down And Talk To Paul
  • What On Earth (Will You Do For Heaven's Sake)
  • My Children Walk In The Truth
  • No Earthly Good
  • Sanctified
  • Lord, Lord, Lord
  • What Is Man
  • Over The Next Hill (We'll Be Home)
  • A Half A Mile A Day
  • Farther Along
  • Life's Railway To Heaven
  • In The Sweet Bye And Bye


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
Deep within the House of Cash, Johnny Cash’s recording studio, office suite, and museum in Hendersonville, Tennessee, behind the studio’s control room, was a small vault-like space in which many of his most prized possessions were stored. A collection of rare firearms dating back to the 18th Century, some personal effects of Jimmie Rodgers, artwork and letters from fans all over the world and much more was carefully arranged and locked away for safekeeping. Then there were the tapes. Hundreds of them. Demos from songwriters, album masters, multi-tracks of the ABC television series, and some boxes marked simply "Personal File." These are Johnny’s most intimate sessions, recorded mostly in 1973 and then subsequently at his leisure. Just a lone voice and an acoustic guitar, singing songs and telling stories about them. A concept that has since come to be thought of as revelatory but, as is evident in this stunning new set, is something Johnny Cash had been doing all along—if only for his personal file. This 2-CD collection features 49 previously unreleased recordings.
Amazon.com
The recordings Johnny Cash started making for Rick Rubin's American label in 1993 launched a journey through the Great American Songbook--from traditional tunes to alt-rock--that continued until, literally, the end of his life. What wasn't known at the time was that Cash had anticipated the American Recordings concept 20 years earlier. A series of informal private sessions he recorded in 1973 featuring just voice and guitar--with a few numbers added between then and 1982--were left untouched at his House of Cash studio, unearthed only after his death in 2003. These 49 songs, labeled "Personal File," show him exploring 19th-century parlor tunes, Tin Pan Alley pop, gospel, little-known Cash originals, classic and contemporary country, and even a recitation of Robert Service's poem "The Cremation of Sam McGee." On many, his spoken introductions reveal personal ties to a given number. Cash reprises early country fare like Jimmie Rodgers's "My Mother Was a Lady" and "The Letter Edged in Black." He also revisits later country classics like the Louvin Brothers' "When I Stop Dreaming," close friend Johnny Horton's hit "When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)," John Prine's "Paradise," and stepdaughter Carlene Carter's "It Takes One to Know Me." The second disc is a virtual hymnbook, blending traditional gospel and A.P. Carter tunes with a sacred composition by Rodney Crowell and Cash gospel originals. For those enchanted by the illness-ravaged soulfulness of Cash's later American recordings, hearing him in his prime is not only breathtaking--it underscores the depth of his still-remarkable musical vision. --Rich Kienzle

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