
This undeservedly obscure album -- as accomplished as the acclaimed American Recordings Johnny Cash would do more than a decade later -- appears at last on CD. Cash has always been as much a folk singer as a country singer, and Johnny 99 has little to do with the cookie-cutter product, with its numbingly predictable lyrics and arrangements, ordinarily issuing from Nashville studios. Its high point is a stunning rendition of Eric von Schmidt's calypso-inflected "Joshua Gone Barbados," a true story of a failed strike on the West Indian island of St. Vincent in the 1960s. It's often been covered but never better than here. Cash also executes sensitive readings of two especially fine Bruce Springsteen compositions, the title tune and "Highway Patrolman." Other standouts include Guy Clark's "New Cut Road" and Vickery/Borches's "God Bless Robert E. Lee." Though some cuts are less satisfying than these, nothing on Johnny 99 is likely to make you lunge for the stereo in search of the "stop" button. The production, by the always reliable Brian Ahern, is spare and uncluttered. Cash has delivered his share of dreck over the years, but Johnny 99 shows us a great artist near the peak of his powers.
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