When I first got this CD in the mail I
was a little taken aback at the idea of a bunch of people getting together
and recording Johnny Cash songs. It felt too much like someone trying
to take the place of a beloved uncle and tell all the stories he told.
Of course once I listened to the CD I realized I was mistaken in the fear
that the only thing that makes a Johnny Cash song great is his signaling
of it, and it also reminded me why Cash is an icon. His popularity has
less to do with his physical presence and more to do with his spiritual
presence. There is a universal feeling Cash's songs that transcends his
grasp and is up for grabs for any singer who can feel the spirit of Cash
in the words they sing. Harry Manx, one of the artist featured says of
Cash that he "manages to carry the whole history of country music
in his songs, all the while doing it in his own unique way." I could
probably have saved myself a paragraph of writing if I had just quoted
Manx from the start.
Northern Blues has done a great job of
collecting just such a set of singers for, Johnny's Blues, their tribute
to the man in black. All of the artists have their own take on the blues.
From Rockabilly, to old-timey, to lounge, to regge tinged blues this CD
manages to show the scope and flexibility of Cash's music more than either
of the recent Cash tributes, Kindred Spirits and Dressed in
Black. The thing that separate this recording from the others is that
even though it's based in the blues, all the artists pepper the songs
with their own style so each song cleans your musical palate for the next
one and you're never bored. Just when the gin joint version of "Get
Rhythm" ends after getting you in the easy breezy mood, the acoustic
Maria Muldaur cover of "Walking the Blues" comes in and takes
you on a internal tour of heartbreak.
Due to the miracle of e-mail I was able
to ask a few of the artist, who are located all over the globe, some questions
about their feeling for the spirit of Johnny Cash.
Benjy Davis, who performs with Clarence
"Gaemouth" Brown on a cover of "Get Rhythm" that makes
you want to get up and dance swing style all night long. Paul Reddick,
who does a straight on funky backwoods version of "Train of Love"
that you would expect to hear while knocking back some moonshine at a
riverside bar.
Chris Thomas King who covers "Rock
Island Line" a traditional song which Cash arranged. King's version
which see saws brilliantly between traditional story ballad and modern
folk.
Garland Jeffreys, choosing to cover "I
Walk the Line", is perhaps the bravest of the artist I talked to.
He stayed faithful to the Cash rendition of the song in praise of what
he calls Cash's mastery of "integrity and simplicity," but still
manages to give it an almost punk sensibility.
Corey Harris has perhaps the most unique
cover. Using West African instruments and a reggae beat he has created
a haunting cover of "Redemption" that makes you feel like you're
attending a religious event.
Paul Reddick's foot stomping version "Train
of Love" gives us a piece of music fueled by an upright guitar and
an electric dobro that makes you want to suck down some whiskey by the
riverside and dance to this song about "everybodies baby but mine
comin' home."
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Carlye Archibeque: Did you select
which song you would cover on the CD. If not, how was it decided and which
song would have been your first choice; if you did chose the song why
did you chose the one you did?
Benjy Davis: No. I got an e-mail
from my manager asking me if I wanted to record a song by Johnny Cash
and I said, hell yeah so he sent me the words and I learned them. I would
like to have have done 'Hurt' which he just covered by Nine Inch Nails.
It's awesome.
Corey Harris: Yes.
Garland Jeffreys: Yes, I picked
the song. It was presented to me as a project I couldn't resist. I went
through a list of songs and listened to a CD of his music to see what
would work. I tried one other, but picked "I Walk The Line" because it
was a classic and because it seemed to fit my style best. I hope I did
it justice.
Chris Thomas King: Yes, I did. I
chose it because I liked Johnny's version of it, but I had also played
Leadbelly in [a production of] "Good Night Irene" in 2002 and I really
loved Leadbelly's style of folk music. Johnny's version was about New
Orleans and I liked that because I'm from there. So, I thought it was
a good chance to combine Johnny's New Orleans version and Leadbelly's
version.
Paul Reddick: Colin Linden, the
records producer, who also played on the track, suggested this tune to
me.
CA: Can you tell me a little about
your introduction to Johnny Cash. Can you remember the first time
you heard a Johnny Cash song and what it was; can you remember the
first time you "felt" a Johnny Cash song?
BD: I had a roommate at boarding
school that introduced me. Other than that just random songs in
the background at a restaurant. My roommate showed me 'Ring of Fire'
and I felt that. It's a great song.
CH: The first Johnny Cash song I heard
was "I Walk the Line." I remember digging his smooth vocal delivery
on that tune. The first time I ever felt a Johnny Cash tune was
when I heard "Redemption" while preparing for this record. I was
taken by the lyrics, and knew that I wanted to record the tune.
GJ: I think I first heard Johnny
Cash in the 60s on the radio, but when I really focused on him as
a singer and as a force was when he duetted with one of my favorite
artists of all time, Bob Dylan, on [Dylan's 1969 album] Nashville
Skyline. I've always been impressed with the sound of Cash's voice,
because it's powerful. It can't be confused with someone else's
voice.
CTK: The earliest thing I can recall
is being a very young kid and hearing his music in movies. I think
he was an actor, wasn't he? "A Boy Named Sue" and "I Walked the
Line" - his music was used in films prominently. I wasn't really
familiar with him as an artist when I was a kid, but he wasn't just
a folk or country artist, he crossed over and he was everywhere,
his music was everywhere. It wasn't until in the last few years
when he started recording other people's songs, like U2 and other
bands, that I took notice of him as an artist, really. I had heard
his songs and they didn't connect as a kid, but in the 90s as he
covered others' songs it caught my attention and I gained a lot
of respect for him. The way he could take these popular songs and
make them his own.
PR: My parents had the Live at San
Quentin album when I was a kid, as well Nashville Skyline by Bob
Dylan - Johnny sings on that, and wrote the liner notes for it.
I think "I walk the line" was the first Johnny song I really listened
to - was amazed by, I heard this on the radio when I was about 9.
1971.
CA: Did you feel nervous recording
a song that had already been done by an artist who is so revered?
BD: Yes.
GJ: No, I didn't. It was so, in a way, a
left-field kind of thing for me to do because I'm not a country
artist. But I do have a versatile voice, and when I look back, I
think it worked. So, no, I wasn't nervous.
CH: not really, since I changed the tune
to fit my style, which I very different from the original. I chose
"Redemption" because I thought I could do something different with
it than had been done before.
CTK: No.
PR: No, I loved doing the song, I
could hear the bluesy ness of Johnny's singing, most of the words
are sung sliding up or down the note, like a slide guitar - that
determined my choosing to do the song in the style of Fred McDowell.
A great song is a pleasure to sing, and easy to sing.
CA: Do you have a song that you would
like to see Cash cover? What is it and how do you imagine his style
enhancing it?
BD: 'No Rain' by Blind Melon. He
could pull it off. I don't know how but he could.
CH: I don't really have any songs that
I would like to see Johnny Cash cover.
GJ: Yes, my song "Matador" which
is my biggest hit, especially in the European markets. It's a long
song, and quite spiritual, but in a unique way. It's obviously in
tune with Cash's life right now, a difficult time for him with his
wife's recent passing and his own body not as strong as it used
to be. I think "Matador" would be good for him because it calls
on a certain kind of strength from a spiritual force - not any particular
god or organized religion or anything - but a universal energy.
CTK: I'd like to hear him cover my
song "Wanna Die With a Smile on My Face" because I think he'd bring
out the essence of the song. The lyric is a love song about a man
longing to be with a woman he can't be with, but if they're together,
he's at peace. So he's got that big smile. I think Johnny could
bring out the essence of the song like that.
PR: I would like him to cover something
from the new Bob Dylan CD. Johnny's stark clarity would go so well
with Dylan's poetry.
CA: If you could narrow down Cash's
appeal to a single word, what would that word be? BD: