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Solitary Man: American III
 
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Solitary Man: American III

Johnny Cash Audio CD
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio CD (13 Feb 2006)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Rhino
  • ASIN: B000E8R9MK
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 57,470 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

As the title suggests, this is the third of the albums that Cash has recorded since his career was resuscitated in 1993 by a fortuitous coming together with Def American founder Rick Rubin. Though Rubin was principally famous as a hip-hop producer, he brought out the best in Cash, having the sense to strip the recordings back to the bare minimum needed to support Cash's peerless voice. The first two records they made together, American Recordings and Unchained were two of the best albums of Cash's long and incalculably influential career, and Solitary Man is better than either. The album is about evenly split between Cash originals and covers of traditional songs that have influenced him, and newer material clearly written under his influence. His own songs embrace both the unabashed spiritualism of his under-regarded gospel recordings ("Field Of Diamonds", "Before My Time") and his eternal fascination with the rural America he was born into ("Country Trash"), and they are just great. The real gems, however, are the covers. Though Cash could now bring a baleful, Old Testament portent to "I Should Be So Lucky", his knelling baritone finds a hundred new shades of black in Neil Diamond's "Solitary Man", Nick Cave's "The Mercy Seat" and, most surprisingly but most effectively, U2's "One". --Andrew Mueller

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
64 of 64 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
In 2000, Johnny Cash’s health had weakened considerably, but this release confirmed that his creative powers were still very much intact. ‘Solitary Man’ ranks among the finest moments in a recording career that lasted for over half a century.

‘Solitary Man’ begins on a defiant note with Tom Petty’s ‘I Won’t Back Down’. Certainly the presence of Petty’s backing vocals and organ playing should be noted, but Cash gracefully appropriates the song, adding a measure of gravitas that was absent from the original. The track is given an impact and poignancy that help transcend the original’s pop leanings.

Cash’s ability to allow the listener to identify with a song was never greater than on this album, but some credit for that must go to Rick Rubin for his trademark under-production. Paring down the instrumentation and arrangements allows the listener to more easily identify with the sentiments being expressed by Cash’s words – whether they are his own or not. Never is this more obvious than on his remarkable re-casting of Nick Cave’s death row narrative ‘The Mercy Seat’. Cash replaces Cave’s hysterics with a more conversational delivery. The original frantic Bad Seeds instrumentation is reduced to a hovering organ and a swirling piano melody. Despite the comparatively minimalist approach, the result is no less powerful.

Elsewhere, the title track, a version of Neil Diamond’s 1966 hit, and the soulful cover of U2’s melancholy stadium-ballad ‘One’ offer further evidence that Cash has an uncanny talent for transforming the works of others. However, it is his interpretation of Bonny Prince Billy’s (Will Oldham) ‘I See A Darkness’ that stands out. If nothing else, the stark contrast between Cash’s gnarled voice and Oldham’s youthful tone is heartbreaking. When Cash quavers, “There’s a hope that somehow you can save me from this darkness”, all but the callous eyes will be welling up.

However, not all the covers on ‘Solitary Man’ are borrowed from recent and current artists. Cash’s versatility (in addition to his musical heritage) is once again highlighted, as he resurrects the self-mocking ‘Nobody’, a one-hundred-year-old vaudeville tune written by Egbert Williams. Cash also revisits the old treasures ‘That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)’ and ‘Mary Of The Wild Moor’, upon which Sheryl Crow contributes.

Cash’s own compositions are no less compelling that the cover versions however. Rather the show signs of weakness so late in his career (like so many of his contemporaries), Cash’s song writing is as sharp as ever. ‘Before My Time’ is a touching love song as well as a humbling consideration of his own place in history. Similarly tender is ‘Field Of Diamonds’. While it was originally recorded in 1986 with Waylon Jennings, this new version is enhanced by the backing duet of June Carter Cash and Sheryl Crow.

Cash’s version of the old spiritual ‘Wayfaring Stranger’ is perhaps the most poignant track on the CD. As Cash lists the family members with whom he will be reunited with in death you can’t help but think that this is a sublime closer to not only an album but to a career. Tragically, his career would only last three more years, but ‘Solitary Man’ is a wonderful reminder that whether the subject was love, God or murder, Cash was the finest storyteller of them all.

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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful
One of his finest 12 April 2006
Format:Audio CD
From start to finish, this album is fantastic and is a superb example of Cash's unique voice. This album has a distinctly more modern feel than his earlier work - 'Solitary Man' presents us with guitar ballards rather than the 'country + western' music which brought him worldwide fame. However, this album never loses sight of what Cash's music is about: perhaps most clearly shown in his version of Nick Cave's 'The Mercy Seat' - here, Cash's deep and frail voice complements a very lyrical song perfectly. One of the great things about this album is that, although the majority of songs on it are covers, Cash has arranged and performs them in a distinctly personal way and consequently the album has a refreshingly origional feel to it. If you liked 'The Man Comes Around', you'll love this album.
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
The emotional power of Cash's voice and personality turn the sounds on this album into a tour de force of human strength.
Honestly one of the best albums I have heard for a long while.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Excellent
I'm not really a country music listener but this guy with this album .... he's really got me.
Published 23 months ago by M. Jankovsky
Solitary Man, Johnny Cash - A great man sings great songs and a great...
In the second to last album recorded before his death, the legend that was Johnny Cash managed to build on all his experience and talent to record an album that holds its own with... Read more
Published on 19 Oct 2009 by Victor
Sublime
For me Solitary Man is the best CD in the 'American Series' I bought them all! I was never 'into' Johnny Cash until I discovered this set of CDs. Read more
Published on 9 Jan 2009 by Lee Newman
Very, very suggestive performances
Not being an expert on country music or on Johnny Cash, I must say this album is moving and very very suggestive; with simple but clever arrangements, beautiful songs and amazing... Read more
Published on 15 July 2008 by Nikica Gilic
2nd Best of the American Series
Of the 5 American Series Cash released during his last years, this album is my 2nd favorite, very close to being IMHO as good as my favorite, A Man Comes Around IV. Read more
Published on 11 Jun 2008 by gnagfloW
Perhaps the best late Cash album
This 3rd album in the 'American' series of recordings is amongst the best things Johnny Cash has ever done. Read more
Published on 20 May 2007 by S J Buck
The best album I've heard in years
I have bought American 2, 3 and 4 so far and this is my favourite. The selection of songs is second to none and Cash rises to the occasion to give a powerful set of performances... Read more
Published on 9 May 2007 by A. E. Holmes
Awesome end of an era..
It is so sad listening to this and thinking that hes gone, it is more devastating to think that we could have experienced much more fantastic songs if he was still alive. Read more
Published on 16 Jan 2005 by "crazyyellowlizard"
Listen without prejudice.
I am not a country fan but this is NOT a country album.
It's a man who has lived life to the full covering great songs by great artists, (most of whom you would not associate... Read more
Published on 13 Nov 2003 by Patrick Kelly
Generation Gapping
I was never sure about Rick Rubin's work with Johnny Cash. Rubin's hand seemed a bit too obvious in the records. Read more
Published on 8 Sep 2003 by "sr_ignacio_moreno"
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