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Personal File (Dig) (Slip) (Spkg)
Johnny Cash
Personal File (Dig) (Slip) (Spkg)
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (24) - Disc #2

Deep within the House of Cash, Johnny Cash?s recording studio, office suite, and museum in Hendersonville, Tennessee, behind the studio?s control room, was a small vault-like space in which many of his most prized possessi...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Johnny Cash
Title: Personal File (Dig) (Slip) (Spkg)
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 5/23/2006
Genres: Country, Pop
Style: Classic Country
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPCs: 827969426524, 0886973524220, 886973524220

Synopsis

Album Description
Deep within the House of Cash, Johnny Cash?s recording studio, office suite, and museum in Hendersonville, Tennessee, behind the studio?s control room, was a small vault-like space in which many of his most prized possessions were stored. A collection of rare firearms dating back to the 18th Century, some personal effects of Jimmie Rodgers, artwork and letters from fans all over the world and much more was carefully arranged and locked away for safekeeping. Then there were the tapes. Hundreds of them. Demos from songwriters, album masters, multi-tracks of the ABC television series, and some boxes marked simply "Personal File." These are Johnny?s most intimate sessions, recorded mostly in 1973 and then subsequently at his leisure. Just a lone voice and an acoustic guitar, singing songs and telling stories about them. A concept that has since come to be thought of as revelatory but, as is evident in this stunning new set, is something Johnny Cash had been doing all along?if only for his personal file. This 2-CD collection features 49 previously unreleased recordings.

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CD Reviews

Whip The Devil
K. H. Orton | New York, NY USA | 05/25/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"First off, if you're merely superficially curious after the hype surrounding, "Walk The Line" this isn't for you. Many songs feature spoken word introductions that may wear on the listener in time. So this isn't something you'd throw on at a party, or are likely to bop around to while plugged into your i-pod. These recordings are best appreciated while sitting down and listening to as an entire album. The end effect is like having The Man In Black in your living room, giving you your own private concert. Much like the magic wrought on the 1st American Recordings album.



Though his later recordings with Rick Rubin were compelling, the ravages of illness were apparent. In addition, some song choices ("Personal Jesus", anyone?) seemed a little "calculated". Not so here. This is sound of Cash in his prime, singing songs that deeply left their mark on him. This is a mix of now obscure covers & sepia toned traditionals. Not to mention, some unheard & truely inspired originals. In terms of sound quality, this is far from some bootleg Cash's former label dusted off in order to capitolize on a posthumous surge in popularity. Even if it were, the passion here will leave you breathless.



The 1st disc consists of so many unheard gems it's hard where to begin. If the morbid sentimentality of "Engineer's Dying Child" doesn't choke you up, there's something wrong with you. Same goes for his take on the Louvin Brothers', "When I Stop Dreaming" & C. Walker's, "Jim, I Wore A Tie Today". In less committed hands, alot of the material here would've come off as mawkish. But not here. Among the orginals, "I Wanted So" is as starkly personal as it gets. The opening line, " I wanted so to tell that old man, oh so many things" is delivered with such dignified regret it can't help but hit home. Same goes for the disc's closer, "It Takes One To Know One". A song written by his step-daughter, Carlene that he masterfully makes his own.



Where disc I is more secular in nature, disc II is dedicated to Cash's oft overlooked Gospel side. But don't let that scare you off. If anything, things get even more powerful. The weariness of "Way Worn Traveller" & "Look Unto The East" are undeniable regardless of belief. Themes of Faith & Doubt wrestle throughout but it all comes to a fore with the Cash original, "Sanctified". The way he belts out, " I'm trying to whip the devil, I'm trying to get sactified" you can just hear the demons barely kept at bay.



Along with the Unearthed boxed set, this is an all too generous & unexpected offering. But where Unearthed was released with an air of eulogy & epitaph, Personal File is the unadorned sound of Cash at his most vital & inspired. In short, essential listening for fans & detractors alike."
Hypnotizing
Soulboogiealex | Netherlands | 05/23/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Johnny Cash is without a doubt one of the most distinct voices in music history. Although his medium is country music, the man transcends it. Cash has throughout the years appealed to a wide audience. In the sixties he appealed to the protest nation, in the seventies he was a darling to the Punk scene; by the start of the nineties the alternative audiences embraced him when he started working with Rick Rubin for the American Recordings. On these sessions Cash was recorded naked, just the man and his guitar. Cash hadn't sound so fresh since the late sixties. Creatively his career seemed to have gone down hill during the second half of the seventies and the eighties. The release of the Personal Files show us that Cash's muse was never missing during that period of time.



The music on Personal Files are all culled from the period his career seemed slacking. Sonically they resemble the first release of his American Recordings; yet as the title promises these recordings have a far more intimate feel. Throughout these two discs you get the idea you're privy to a living room concert for your ears only. The fact that some songs have a spoken intro heighten this experience. Some of the material here is very familiar and found its way to the studio eventually, other songs are brand new to our ears, others still have been a part of the American songbook for generations.



Here we get just Cash and his guitar, though bare, never boring. Cash has a hypnotizing quality that leaves you hanging on his lips, not missing a word. Like no other artist his material covers al aspects of life yet the most dominant themes are always guilt and redemption with Cash. His main strength is he capability to remind of our own humanity. We all falter, we all fail from time to time, yet most of us manage to pick ourselves up every time round and atone for out faults (or sins) in our own way. Cash confronts us with this constant duality in our lives, our desire to better ourselves despite the fact we're destined to fall at times. If you don't get Cash, you've got a hole in your soul."
An all too rare glimpse into the person behind the legend of
T. Ransom | Woodstock, GA USA | 08/14/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Personal File is just that - personal. The sparse arrangements and accompanying stories breathe the true life of Johnny Cash. Too often, a man like Cash is overshadowed by the legend produced by the media, including excellent films like "Walk the Line". With Personal File, we are allowed to follow Johnny into a darkened studio. We get to hear him pull out his guitar and lead us through a musical journey that sees him come to life in the lyrics and the stories of remembrance. Most of these songs are not the kind that would sell an album. Those songs are brought to the singer by A&R experts with dollar signs in their eyes. These songs are life songs and death songs and faith songs. The listener is invited to sit quietly and let the moments sink in. And, they do sink in. If you are a fan of A Boy Named Sue and Folsum Prison, this may not be the best choice for you. If you thirst for an intimate knowledge of a man and the music deep in his soul, do not miss your chance to experience Personal File. I am blessed to have nearly all of Cash's music on CD. But, Personal File quickly became my favorite."