Johnny Cash “The Fabulous Johnny Cash”
Johnny Cash “The Fabulous Johnny Cash” 1958. Today’s spin in honor of Johnny Cash, born on this date, February 26th, 1932 (d. 2003). I pilfered Cash’s second LP release from the kiddo’s collection (one he didn’t take to college with him) since I can’t find our Cash catalogue (it’s somewhere but not filed with the other “C’s” and I’m too busy/lazy to look). The Fabulous Johnny Cash was Cash’s first LP on the Columbia label after leaving Sun Records; it went to #19 on the best-selling LP chart in ’58. Country album releases were not specifically tracked by Billboard in ’58 but it probably would have hit #1 if they did. Both singles did chart: “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town” hit #1 on the country chart and #32 on the pop charts; “Frankie’s Man, Johnny” went to #9 (country) and #57 (pop). Our copy has that second single listed as “Frankie and Johnny” on the back cover: it’s a traditional American murder ballad with a murky inspirational past. It either refers to the real murder of Allen Britt by his lover Frankie Baker in 1899 or to the murder of Charles Silver by his wife Frances “Frankie” Silver; and a couple of turn-of-the-century songwriters have credit for the “original” song/melody. The song has been redone and repurposed at least 256 times according to Wiki, the most successful by Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley (1966). My top track on this country classic is the rockabilly-bent “One More Ride.”
On Memorial Day weekend in 2022 we spent several days in Nashville and visited the Johnny Cash museum. I didn’t take too many photos (it was packed and folks were getting crabby – zoom in on kiddo’s face LOL) but it was a great visit to learn more about the Man in Black.
Daily (maybe) pulls from the vault: 33-1/3, 45, 78, old, older, classic, new, good, bad. Subjective. Autobiographical. Occasionally putting a record up for sale.