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Look again to the wind : Johnny Cash's Bitter tears revisited.

Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: 88843 06067 2 | MasterworksPublisher: New York, NY : Masterworks, [2014]Distributor: New York, NY : Distributed by Sony Music Entertainment Copyright date: â„—2014Description: 1 audio disc ( 52 min., 27 sec.) ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Other title:
  • Johnny Cash's Bitter tears revisited
Subject(s):
Contents:
As long as the grass shall grow (9:11) -- Apache tears (3:33) -- Custer (2:58) -- The talking leaves (6:11) -- The ballad of Ira Hayes (3:44) -- Drums (5:59) -- Apache tears (reprise) (2:57) -- White girl (3:44) -- The vanishing race (6:14) -- As long as the grass shall grow (reprise) (3:29) -- Look again to the wind (4:21).
Various lead vocalists: Gillian Welch (tracks 1, 7, and 10), David Rawlings, (tracks 1, 7, and 10), Emmylou Harris (track 2), Steve Earle (track 3), Nancy Blake (track 4), Kris Kristofferson (track 5), Norman Blake (track 6), [Milk Carton Kids] Kenneth Pattengale, Joey Ryan (track 8), Rhiannon Giddens (track 9); Bill Miller (track 11); with assisting musicians.Summary: Fifty years after its release, one of the albums that Johnny Cash held close to his heart is celebrated with new interpretations by Emmylou Harris, Kris Kristofferson, Gillian Welch, The Milk Carton Kids, and many more.
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Dr. James Carlson Library CD COUNTRY Cash, Johnny Available 33111008285542
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

As the '60s became a time of deep socio-political change and upheaval in America, the country music establishment wasted little time establishing itself as the voice of the "silent majority" who wanted to live in a quietly conservative nation (as opposed to the loudly conservative point of view that would arise in Nashville in the '80s and onward). One exception to this was Johnny Cash, who was often moved to speak out in favor of justice for the disadvantaged and disenfranchised. One of Cash's first and most powerful statements in favor of human rights was his 1964 album Bitter Tears, a song cycle that dealt with the way Native Americans had been wronged throughout United States history, and remarkably, one of its most powerful songs actually became a hit single -- "The Ballad of Ira Hayes," drawn from the true story of the Pima Indian soldier who helped raise the flag at Iwo Jima during World War II, only to face brutal racism and succumb to alcoholism after returning home. To honor the 50th anniversary of Cash's album, producer Joe Henry has assembled Look Again to the Wind: Johnny Cash's Bitter Tears Revisited, a collection featuring a handful of noted folk and country artists covering the songs from Cash's landmark album. The tone of Look Again to the Wind is gentler and more thoughtful than Cash's original album, largely due to the artists involved -- while Cash's voice was legendarily strong and dark, the vocalists here include Gillian Welch, Emmylou Harris, Nancy Blake, and Bill Miller, whose performances are heartfelt but less physically imposing than what Cash delivered in 1964. In addition, producer Henry has aimed for a sound more intimate and atmospheric than that of the originals, dominated by acoustic instruments and the often stellar picking of David Rawlings. But if this album is more subtle, the best work here is moving and eloquent stuff, especially Gillian Welch on the opening cut "As Long as the Grass Will Grow," Kris Kristofferson putting all of his gritty authority into "The Ballad of Ira Hayes," Rhiannon Giddens from the Carolina Chocolate Drops sounding sweet but strong on "The Vanishing Race," and Steve Earle having a grand time dishonoring the dead on "Custer." Ultimately, Look Again to the Wind is more about the fine songs on Bitter Tears (most written by Peter LaFarge) than Johnny Cash, but these performances certainly honor the courage of Cash, who was willing to speak out for Native American rights at a time when it was an issue that barely registered in the public consciousness. The issues raised on Bitter Tears are still relevant, and Look Again to the Wind reminds us that art can still speak eloquently about the best and worst parts of the human condition, and it's well worth investigating. ~ Mark Deming

Country music; covers of songs originally recorded by Johnny Cash for the 1964 album Bitter tears.

Principally written by Peter La Farge and John R. Cash.

Program notes by Joe Henry and lyrics (12 unnumbered pages : portraits) inserted in container.

Title from disc label.

As long as the grass shall grow (9:11) -- Apache tears (3:33) -- Custer (2:58) -- The talking leaves (6:11) -- The ballad of Ira Hayes (3:44) -- Drums (5:59) -- Apache tears (reprise) (2:57) -- White girl (3:44) -- The vanishing race (6:14) -- As long as the grass shall grow (reprise) (3:29) -- Look again to the wind (4:21).

Various lead vocalists: Gillian Welch (tracks 1, 7, and 10), David Rawlings, (tracks 1, 7, and 10), Emmylou Harris (track 2), Steve Earle (track 3), Nancy Blake (track 4), Kris Kristofferson (track 5), Norman Blake (track 6), [Milk Carton Kids] Kenneth Pattengale, Joey Ryan (track 8), Rhiannon Giddens (track 9); Bill Miller (track 11); with assisting musicians.

Recorded Sound Emporium, Nashville, TN; Garfield House, South Pasadena, CA; Cash Cabin, Hendersonville, TN.

Fifty years after its release, one of the albums that Johnny Cash held close to his heart is celebrated with new interpretations by Emmylou Harris, Kris Kristofferson, Gillian Welch, The Milk Carton Kids, and many more.

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