Description: Brand NEW & SEALED!!!Genuine & Authentic. Free Shipping.Will ship out within 24 hours. It's widely acknowledged that Johnny Cash's time at Mercury didn't find the Man in Black at either his commercial or creative peak. Cash moved to the label in 1986, just after he departed his longtime home of Columbia, and he stayed there through 1991, a half-decade stint that resulted in only one Country Top 40 hit (1988's "That Old Wheel," which charted thanks to the momentum of Cash's duet partner, Hank Williams, Jr.) and has subsequently been framed as the wilderness years before he righted himself on Rick Rubin's American Recordings. The 2020 box set The Complete Mercury Albums 1986-1991 is the first opportunity to challenge this conventional wisdom, a place where it's possible to concentrate on the relative merits of the handful of LPs he recorded for the label. The box expands upon the original five records for Mercury by adding a bunch of bonus tracks, plus a full album's worth of alternate mixes of the 1988 covers collection Classic Cash: Hall of Fame Series and the 1986 collaborative set Class of 55, where he was joined by fellow Sun Records survivors Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Roy Orbison for a set of new songs written in the style of the oldies. Class of 55 opens this chronological set on a shaky note, thanks to freeze-dried Chips Moman production that steers each of these greats toward their worst instincts. It's one of the worst LPs credited to any of the four, and having it open the set suggests that Cash's Mercury stint is as bad as its rep, but 1987's Johnny Cash Is Coming to Town is a better yardstick to gauge this era by. Produced by Jack Clements, Coming to Town opens with a careening version of Elvis Costello's "The Big Light" and then proceeds to run through covers, cornball novelties, sincere ballads, and story songs. It's a dynamic, entertaining record and Cash returned to its formula often on Mercury to admittedly varied but often entertaining results. Clement also helmed 1988's Water from the Wells of Home, a record that gets weighed down by its cameos, but the guests can also conjure some unexpected delights, such as Paul McCartney's appearance on "New Moon Over Jamaica." Producer Bob Moore kept 1990's Boom Chicka Boom tight and focused. The 1991 set The Mystery of Life comprised cobbled-together leftovers from Johnny Cash Is Coming to Town and sessions for a new album that didn't quite come to fruition; it's uneven but has more than its share of moments, including a new version of Bob Dylan's "Wanted Man."Listened to collectively, these records sound much better than their reputation suggests. Even Classic Cash: Hall of Fame Series, a collection of re-recordings of his old hits, is livelier than its description suggests, benefitting from Cash sounding spry and invested in the material. That none of these LPs generated hit singles at the time can be chalked up to a matter of age. Cash was on the other side of 50 when he made this music and he'd been a hitmaker for 30 years. He was a known property who couldn't fit into the sound of modern country radio, which happened to be running away from veterans like Cash in the first place. All these personal and cultural changes doomed Cash's Mercury records to commercial failure, and while the albums still have a distinct gloss endemic to the '80s, each of them has its share of moments, and Comes to Town and Boom Chicka Boom are strong records in their own right. ~ Stephen Thomas ErlewineTracks on Disc 1:1.Birth of Rock and Roll2.Sixteen Candles3.Class of '554.Waymore's Blues5.We Remember the King6.Coming Home7.Rock and Roll (Fais-Do-Do)8.Keep My Motor Running9.I Will Rock and Roll With You10.Big Train [From Memphis]Tracks on Disc 2:1.The Big Light2.The Ballad of Barbara3.I'd Rather Have You4.Let Him Roll5.The Night Hank Williams Came to Town6.Sixteen Tons7.Letters From Home8.W. Lee O'Daniel (And the Light Crust Dough Boys)9.Heavy Metal (Don't Mean Rock and Roll to Me)10.My Ship Will SailTracks on Disc 3:1.Ballad of a Teenage Queen2.As Long as I Live3.Where Did We Go Right4.The Last of the Drifters5.Call Me the Breeze6.That Old Wheel7.Sweeter Than the Flowers8.A Croft in Clachan [The Ballad of Rob MacDunn]9.New Moon Over Jamaica10.Water From the Wells of HomeTracks on Disc 4:1.A Backstage Pass2.Cat's in the Cradle3.Farmer's Almanac4.Don't Go Near the Water5.Family Bible6.Harley7.I Love You Love You8.Hidden Shame9.Monteagle Mountain10.That's One You Owe MeTracks on Disc 5:1.The Greatest Cowboy of Them All2.I'm an Easy Rider3.The Mystery of Life4.Hey Porter5.Beans for Breakfast6.Goin' by the Book7.Wanted Man8.I'll Go Somewhere and Sing My Songs Again9.The Hobo Song10.Angel and the Badman
Price: 134.99 USD
Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan
End Time: 2024-08-19T05:16:41.000Z
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Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Material: Vinyl
Speed: 33 RPM
Type: Box Set
Edition: Collector's Edition, Deluxe Edition, Limited Edition
UPC: 602567726944
Release Year: 2020
Format: Record
Genre: Country
Record Label: Mercury Nashville, Mern
Artist: Cash, Johnny
Release Title: The Complete Mercury Albums (1986-1991)