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Disco de Johnny Cash: “Water from the Wells of Home”
| Información del disco : |
| Título: |
Water from the Wells of Home |
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Fecha de Publicación:1988-05-01
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Tipo:Desconocido
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Género:Country, Gospel, Vintage Country
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Sello Discográfico:
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Letras Explícitas:Si
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UPC:042283477810
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| Lista de temas : |
| 1 |
Ballad Of A Teenage Queen Video |
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| 2 |
As Long as I Live |
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| 3 |
Where Did We Go Right |
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| 4 |
Last of the Drifters |
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| 5 |
Call Me the Breeze |
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| 6 |
That Old Wheel |
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| 7 |
Sweeter Than the Flowers |
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| 8 |
Croft in Clachan (The Ballad of Rob Macdunn) |
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| 9 |
New Moon Over Jamaica |
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| 10 |
Water From The Wells Of Home |
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Análisis (en inglés) - :
By 1988, neither {$Johnny Cash} nor his label, {@Mercury}, wanted much to do with each other, and it's easy to see why -- {@Mercury} was simply not supporting {$Cash}, not letting him tackle challenging material, and {$Cash}, in turn, wasn't delivering hits. Of course, making him re-record such classics as {&"Ballad of a Teenage Queen"} was no guarantee of getting him back in the charts, but that's exactly how {^Water from the Wells of Home} kicks off. It gets quite a bit better from there, as {$Cash} sings a variety of material from {$Roy Acuff}'s {&"As Long as I Live"} (also featuring {$Emmylou Harris}) and {$Tom T. Hall}'s {&"The Last of the Drifters"} to {$J.J. Cale}'s {&"Call Me the Breeze"} and {&"New Moon Over Jamaica,"} which was co-written with {$Paul McCartney}, who also appears on the song. In fact, the album is filled with guest appearances, including {$June Carter}, {$Glen Campbell}, {$Jessi Colter}, {$the Everly Brothers}, {$Waylon Jennings}, {$Hank Williams, Jr.}, {$Rosanne Cash}, and {$John Carter Cash}. It's almost too many cameos for one album -- it might have garnered attention, which is exactly what {@Mercury} would have wanted, but it tends to obscure {$Cash} himself. Still, it makes for an interesting curio, and several cuts are strong enough to make the record worth a listen for hardcore fans. It's likely, however, that they'd rarely return to it after that initial listen. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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