The Sound of Johnny Cash

The Sound of Johnny Cash
Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released August 1962
Recorded April 28, 1961 - February 12, 1962
Genre
Length 25:12
Label Columbia
Producer
Johnny Cash chronology
Hymns from the Heart
(1962)
The Sound of Johnny Cash
(1962)
All Aboard the Blue Train
(1962)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [1]

The Sound of Johnny Cash is the twelfth album by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, released in 1962 (see 1962 in music). Among other songs, it contains "In the Jailhouse Now", a Jimmie Rodgers cover which reached No. 8 on the Country charts, and "Delia's Gone", which Cash would re-record years later, on American Recordings, in 1994. Cash would also go on to record a significantly slower, more ballad-like version of "I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now", which was ultimately released in 2006 on American V: A Hundred Highways as the last track on the album.

During the recording sessions for the album, Cash rerecorded his Sun Records hits "Folsom Prison Blues", "Hey Porter" and "I Walk the Line", but none of these versions were ultimately used on the album and sat unreleased until the 1990s.

Cover imagery

The original 1962 album features a photograph of Johnny Cash taken by American photographer Leigh Wiener at his studio in Los Angeles, California.

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Lost on the Desert"  Dallas Frazier, Buddy Mize 2:01
2. "Accidentally on Purpose"  Darrel Edwards, George Jones 1:56
3. "In the Jailhouse Now"  Jimmie Rodgers 2:23
4. "Mr. Lonesome"  Tompall Glaser 2:18
5. "You Won't Have Far to Go"  Chuck Glaser 1:50
6. "In Them Old Cottonfields Back Home"  Lead Belly 2:34
7. "Delia's Gone"  Karl Silbersdorf, Dick Toops 2:01
8. "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know"  Cecil Null 2:27
9. "You Remembered Me"  Cash 2:05
10. "I'm Free from the Chain Gang Now"  Lou Herscher, Saul Klein 1:51
11. "Let Me Down Easy"  Tompall Glaser, Jim Glaser 1:46
12. "Sing It Pretty, Sue"  Cash 2:00
Total length:
25:12

Personnel

Charts

The album did not chart in the Billboard album charts. In 1962 the single "In the Jailhouse Now" peaked at #8 in the Billboard Country Singles.[2]

References

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