Johnny Cash In Ireland - 1993 (Mercury/UMe), released October 31,
2006,captures the Man in Black and his entire revue performing at
the Olympia Theatre in Dublin for an Irish television production.
Presented in various superior sound formats, including 5.1 Surround
Sound, the approximately one-hour-long concert showcases Cash singing
many of his greatest hits--I Walk The Line, Folsom
Prison Blues, Get Rhythm, A Boy Named Sue,
(Ghost) Riders In The Sky, Daddy Sang Bass
and Ring Of Fire plus I Still Miss Someone.
He also sings with wife June Carter Cash (their classic duet Jackson),
son John Carter Cash (No Use In Treatin Me This Way),
Kris Kristofferson (Big River and Long Black Veil),
and The Carter Family, who perform their own gems too--Keep
On The Sunny Side, Will The Circle Be Unbrokenand
Wabash Cannonball. In addition, John Carter Cash solos
Chuck Berrys Johnny B. Goode and Irish popster
Sandy Kelly joins Cash, Kristofferson and The Carter Family on Forty
Shades Of Green, the Johnny Cash-penned tribute to Ireland.
Visit Official
Johnny Cash Site
JOHNNY CASH IN IRELAND - 1993, NEVER-BEFORE-RELEASED CONCERT
PERFORMANCE INCLUDING JUNE CARTER CASH, JOHN CARTER CASH, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON,
THE CARTER FAMILY, AND IRISH STAR SANDY KELLY, MAKES DEBUT ON DVD
In the last year or so, the final recordings of music giant Johnny
Cash were issued on American V: A Hundred Highways, which soared
to #1 Pop and #1 Country. A new hits compilation, The Legend Of
Johnny Cash, went #5 Pop and #2 Country as well as double platinum.
Now Cash's voluminous vault yields a never-before-released live
performance that makes its debut on DVD.
Johnny Cash In Ireland - 1993 (Mercury/UMe), released October 31,
2006, captures the Man in Black and his entire revue performing
at the Olympia Theatre in Dublin for an Irish television production.
Presented in various superior sound formats, including 5.1 Surround
Sound, the approximately one-hour-long concert showcases Cash singing
many of his greatest hits--"I Walk The Line," "Folsom
Prison Blues," "Get Rhythm," "A Boy Named Sue,"
"(Ghost) Riders In The Sky," "Daddy Sang Bass"
and "Ring Of Fire" plus "I Still Miss Someone."
He also sings with wife June Carter Cash (their classic duet "Jackson"),
son John Carter Cash ("No Use In Treatin' Me This Way"),
Kris Kristofferson ("Big River" and "Long Black Veil"),
and The Carter Family, who perform their own gems too--"Keep
On The Sunny Side," "Will The Circle Be Unbroken"
and "Wabash Cannonball." In addition, John Carter Cash
solos Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" and Irish popster
Sandy Kelly joins Cash, Kristofferson and The Carter Family on "Forty
Shades Of Green," the Johnny Cash-penned tribute to Ireland.
Though seemingly everything that can be said about Cash has been
said, one aspect of his career rarely explored is how his popularity
in Ireland and the U.K. helped sustain and revive him. Celtic music
was a foundation of both folk and country and his continued adulation
there owed much to that tradition. Touring Ireland in 1989, he heard
on the radio Kelly's version of the Patsy Cline hit "Crazy"--the
country's biggest selling record of the year. He invited her to
one of his shows and brought her on stage to sing. He later invited
her to Nashville and they recorded "Woodcarver" together,
which went gold in Ireland. So it was natural that she would again
appear with him in Ireland in 1993.
Between record companies that year, he also sang on "The Wanderer"
from Ireland's biggest music artist, U2, for that enormously popular
group's Zooropa. Buoyed by the praise of a new generation, he then
signed with Rick Rubin's American Recordings and Johnny Cash began
the final phase of perhaps the most extraordinary career in modern
American music.
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