David Allan Coe - Johnny Cash Is A Friend Of Mine (1998)
Artist: David Allan Coe
Title: Johnny Cash Is A Friend Of Mine
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: King Records
Genre: Country, Country Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 34:39
Total Size: 189 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Johnny Cash Is A Friend Of Mine
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: King Records
Genre: Country, Country Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 34:39
Total Size: 189 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. One Piece At A Time
02. Folsom Prison Blues
03. Sunday Morning Coming Down
04. Ballad Of A Teenage Queen
05. Hey Porter
06. Get Rhythm
07. I Walk The Line
08. Ring Of Fire
09. Cry! Cry! Cry!
10. Doin' My Time
Johnny Cash was a formative influence on the music of outlaw country artist David Allan Coe. Throughout Coe's career, he crossed paths with Cash often enough to be given a belt buckle by Cash with this album's title emblazoned on it. Cash was the original country bad-boy, and his hard-hitting ethos informs much of Coe's rebellious work, so its only fitting that Coe recorded this tribute to the Man in Black.
The disc opens with Coe talk-singing the relatively obscure "One Piece at a Time," a humorous "Boy Named Sue"-style number. After that, though, its straight into a program of signature Cash tunes. "Ballad of a Teenage Queen" and "I Walk the Line" feature arrangements that sticks close to the Cash/Tennessee Two mode, but Coe gives "Get Rhythm" a Waylon Jennings-ish feel, and Coe adds his own unique country-rock spin to "Folsom Prison Blues," a tune into which his own jail experiences undoubtedly give him particular insight.
The disc opens with Coe talk-singing the relatively obscure "One Piece at a Time," a humorous "Boy Named Sue"-style number. After that, though, its straight into a program of signature Cash tunes. "Ballad of a Teenage Queen" and "I Walk the Line" feature arrangements that sticks close to the Cash/Tennessee Two mode, but Coe gives "Get Rhythm" a Waylon Jennings-ish feel, and Coe adds his own unique country-rock spin to "Folsom Prison Blues," a tune into which his own jail experiences undoubtedly give him particular insight.