Silver | 
| Artist: Johnny Cash Label: Sony Category: Music
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $5.99 You Save: $3.99 (40%)
New (9) Used (13) from $4.05
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 227267
Format: Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4
UPC: 696998679122 EAN: 0069699867912 ASIN: B00006GO97
Release Date: August 27, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Tracks:
| • | The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore | | • | Lonesome To The Bone | | • | Bull Rider | | • | I'll Say It's True (w/ George Jones) | | • | (Ghost) Riders In The Sky | | • | Cocaine Blues | | • | Muddy Waters | | • | West Canterbury Subdivision Blues | | • | Lately I Been Leanin' Toward The Blues | | • | I'm Gonna Sit On The Porch And Pick On My Old Guitar | | • | I Still Miss Someone )w/ George Jones) (Bonus Track) | | • | I Got Stripes (w/ George Jones) (Bonus Track) |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Not Silver, but Gold September 14, 2004 Sarah Carpenter (Ontario Canada) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I'll start this review off by critizing some of the critics of Johnny Cash. Everytime I read a review of an album, invariably someone says "I prefer" or "I'll stick with the Rick Rubin produced albums." Rick Rubin is a gifted man, he saw the inner spirit that Johnny had and brought it forth immaculately, but why do people compare the american albums with other efforts by the man in black. If you think that those cds are the greatest thing since sliced bread, of course you are going to be disappointed when you listen to anything else. To compare the two products would be like putting the Mona Lisa beside a child's drawing. IF YOU FEEL THAT WAY. I on the other hand beleive that Johnny Cash made terrific music his entire career. Even the cd's that I don't listen to all the time, I still love and could hear over and over. Silver is an awesome album, terribly underrated and beautifully produced. The horns on "The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore" add to the song, rather than detract. "Bull Rider" is another great song. "I'll Say It's True" the "duet" with George Jones, isn't much of a duet as the latter acts as more of a back up singer than an active participant, though I immensely enjoy the bonus tracks with him, especially his vocal on "I Still Miss Someone." John himself could never touch the stirring original version, my favourite, but this is nice nonetheless. To return to my opening remarks once more, I hope that everyone can enjoy the great music that Johnny Cash left behind. I have nearly thirty cd's (no greatest hits here, except ring of fire, which isn't really a greatest hits package) and that means a lot of good music for me to listen to. But if you only like Rick Rubin produced efforts, your cds should be limited to four (unless you get the amazing box set Unearthed).
Others are lukewarm, but I love this album February 6, 2003 Peter Durward Harris (Leicester England) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is one of my favorite Johnny Cash albums and always has been, although it appears that other Cash fans are less enthusiastic. I'm not sure why, as I feel the Brian Ahern production, using members of Emmylou's Hot Band, adds something extra to his music without in any way detracting from the main focus - Johnny's very distinctive singing voice and style.The big hit was Ghost riders in the sky, which reached number two on the American country charts. Johnny has never got as high as that again by himself, although he hit number one as a member of the Highwaymen. My favorite track is I'll say its true, on which Johnny is joined by George Jones. Other great tracks include the opening The L and N don't stop here anymore and the track which closes the original album, I'm gonna sit on the porch and pick on my old guitar. Two more duets with George Jones are added as bonus tracks - I still miss someone and I got stripes, both of which had been solo successes for Johnny around twenty years earlier.
Great Cash, Distracting Production October 10, 2002 Thomas A. Holmes (Johnson City, TN USA) 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
When SILVER first came out, it was significant in that Cash was collaborating with some of the hottest writers and musicians of the time. It also marked his first recording of "(Ghost) Riders in the Sky" and a hot, acoustic-driven studio version of "Cocaine Blues" (still a risky topic for a post-outlaw country album). Still, as much as I admire Brian Ahern's production of Emmylou Harris albums, I prefer the more spare production that Rick Rubin has given Cash's more recent efforts. The rugged integrity of Cash's performance, in my opinion, does not benefit from the polish of Ahern's production.
John Is His Own Genre March 4, 2007 C. C. Black (Princeton, NJ USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Silver leans toward the blues in materials and treatment, though the opening track--"The L & N Don't Stop Here Anymore"--is straight-ahead Cash, with some tweaks in instrumentation. George Jones fans will find here three tracks, two of them CD bonueses, on which he and Cash harmonize. Not great Cash, perhaps, but Silver is very, very good.
Overlooked Cash July 4, 2006 K. Burke (SF, CA, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I remember in the early eighties, listening to this record and hearing a "different" Johnny Cash. Although Johnny always had style, and his own sound, this was much more of a flexing of his raw talent than I had previously heard. The renditions are clean, interesting musically, and highly listenable. And it's the only recording I've ever heard of "I'll Say It's True" - which, in my mind, is a classic Cash song.
|
|
|