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Johnny Cash - Out Among the Stars (2014) Lossless

BAND/ARTIST:

Johnny Cash - Out Among the Stars (2014) Lossless

Artist: Johnny Cash
Title Of Album: Out Among the Stars
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Columbia Nashville Legacy
Genre: Country, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: FLAC
Total Time: 39:31 min
Total Size: 251 MB

Tracklist:

01 - "Out Among the Stars" (Adam Mitchell)
02 - "Baby Ride Easy" (Richard Dobson)
03 - "She Used to Love Me a Lot" (Kye Fleming, Dennis Morgan, and Charles Quillen)
04 - "After All" (Ed Bruce and Patsy Bruce)
05 - "I'm Movin' On" (Hank Snow)
06 - "If I Told You Who It Was"
07 - "Call Your Mother" (Cash)
08 - "I Drove Her Out of My Mind"
09 - "Tennessee"
10 - "Rock and Roll Shoes"
11 - "Don't You Think It's Come Our Time"
12 - "I Came to Believe" (Cash)

If Out Among the Stars had come out when its sessions were completed, it would’ve appeared sometime in 1984, arriving between 1983′s flinty Johnny 99 and 1985′s slippery, sentimental Rainbow. Allegedly, this album — discovered by Legacy and John Carter Cash during some archival work in 2012 — was shelved because its Billy Sherrill production was just a little bit too pop for Johnny Cash‘s taste, but that reasoning isn’t sound, particularly with the Chips Moman-produced crossover of sugar of Rainbow taken into consideration. Moman had been riding high on the hits he produced for Willie Nelson — notably “Always on My Mind,” Willie‘s last great crossover smash — and he applied a similar heavy-handed touch to Cash, who at that point was several years away from his last Country Top 10 hit (“The Baron” went to 10 in 1981). Sherrill had a lighter touch with Cash than Moman, something that might surprise listeners who associate his name with his symphonic, string-heavy productions for George Jones, but the producer winds up simply sweetening Johnny without changing his core sound. Comprised of sessions from 1981 and 1984, Out Among the Stars is generally chipper and bright, containing a couple of spare, reflective moments — the sentimental “After All,” the June Carter Cash bluegrass duet “Don’t You Think It’s Come Our Time,” and “I Came to Believe,” the gospel-ish closer that ambles along nicely — that add a little dimension to a cheerful album. “Out Among the Stars” nicely updates the signature Cash train-track rhythm, a cover of the Dave Edmunds/Carlene Carter duet “Baby Ride Easy” rolls along with spirit, Cash yucks it up with Waylon Jennings on a cover of the Hank Snow standard “I’m Movin’ On,” and “I Drove Her Out of My Mind” conjures some of the old outlaw magic. Every one of these seem like they could have some kind of potential on the charts, so the fact they were shelved is a bit of a mystery because, when taken together — despite misguided novelties like “If I Told You Who It Was” — it adds up to one of Cash‘s stronger ’80s albums.




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