Thursday, October 23, 2008

The Johnny Cash TV Show (dvd review)

The Johnny Cash TV Show
by Live Music Head
June 2008

I recently received a burn of
the Johnny Cash TV Show (1969-1971), lucky me!
And although there are
some very special guest performances by Bob Dylan
(I Threw it All Away),
Neil Young (Needle and The Damage Done),
and a duet with Joni Mitchell (Long Black Veil),
the first noteworthy performance for me came with
Kris Kristofferson and his performance of
Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again).
This is a favourite of mine ever since seeing
Willie Nelson and Dyan Cannon cover it in the movie,
Honeysuckle Rose.
And seeing the songwriter himself performing it here,
was a first, and a treat for me.
But then came Ray Charles and his version of Ring of Fire.
Ray Charles, a ridiculously precious talent,
gave me goosebumps that came and went,
came, went, and came back again as I watched him.
It was his 40th birthday during the taping,
and he got a standing ovation for it.
No ticket stubs were had back in the general admission days of
the Ontario Place Forum shows in Toronto
(to remind me of dates),
but I did see Ray Charles there on the revolving stage one year.
But back to Kris Kristofferson...
his fond feelings for Johnny Cash are evident on the dvd
when he reminisces about The Man in Black
defying the censors by singing the song
Sunday Morning Coming Down in its entirety,
as it was written,
including the scandalous line….
"wishing Lord that I was stoned".
Scandalous, oh my!
Johnny Cash always seemed to get his way,
and I believe it's true when the critics remark on
the huge impact his show had on music,
religion, politics, and race relations;
an impact that wasn't as apparent then, as it is now.
Another highlite was Johnny and June Carter performing Jackson.
From the opening line...
"We got married in a fever, hotter than a pepper sprout",
another true favourite of mine that
brings back memories of my dad and I
seeing Johnny and June Carter, again,
back in the days of the Ontario Place Forum.
I recall June getting so excited that she
raised her skirts, kicked her legs in the air,
and her shoes sailed off her feet straight into the crowd.
And in the dvd,
June's gutsy vocal reply to Johnny's bad ass delivery...
"When I breeze into that city, people gonna stoop and bow
All them women gonna make me
teach 'em what they don't know how…"

puts this in my top 5 greatest country duets ever.
Derek and the Dominos are another big highlight
of this compilation.
They perform a perfect version of It's Too Late.
Sounding awfully good vocally and on guitar,
but then, has Eric Clapton ever sounded bad?
I was all of about eight or nine years old
the first time I heard my father singing,
"My name is Sue… how do you do?!"
So Cash performing A Boy Named Sue here,
really took me back as well.
The music of Johnny Cash,
and real traditional country and bluegrass
was the earliest music I heard on the soundtrack of my life.
Although my memories are fuzzy,
I was definitely propped up against some couch pillow as a kid
watching the Johnny Cash TV Show with my dad
at the time it originally aired.
But what I like about seeing it again on dvd,
is the bonus features.
And the most exciting bonus feature with this one
is the performance Cash does with Louis Armstrong.
The song?
A bluesy tune written from the streets of Memphis, Tennessee,
called Blue Yodel #9.
I got to know this song from the Jerry Garcia version,
but to see Louis Armstrong blow his trumpet
alongside Johnny on guitar, is precious, I tells ya!
How can anyone not love Louis Armstrong?
He has a smile that's completely contagious.
And if that wasn't exciting enough,
Stevie Wonder invites us to church with the next bonus feature...
Heaven Help Us All,
a song that raised the hair on my arms, head and everywhere else.
This performance clip reminds you why Stevie Wonder
is the giant star he is today.
Derek and the Dominos appear again in the bonus features
when they team up with Johnny and Carl Perkins
to perform Matchbox,
but it's the father of bluegrass, Bill Munroe
and his great fiddle player
who end this great dvd experience.
And they end it with a song that pulls on my heart strings
each and every time I hear...
"Well, I said Blue Moon of Kentucky just a-keep on shinin'
shine on the one who's gone and left me blue...
I said Blue Moon of Kentucky, keep on shinin'
shine on the one that's gone and left me bluuuue! "


The Johnny Cash TV show...
http://www.amazon.com/Johnny-Cash-Show-Best-1969-1971/dp/B000TLMWMY