Johnny Cash, his voice both rich with authority and fragile with old age, injects a kind of intimate dignity to Nine Inch Nails's pathos ridden postscript to 'The Downward Spiral' album, but where Trent Reznor was whispering a reflective eulogy on self destruction, Cash is being ravaged by the gradual physical disintegration that will probably get every one of us in the end. As I'd kind of expect with Rick Rubin producing, it sounds very intimate and simple, just an acoustic guitar and gentle piano chords backing that voice... emotional, naked and unadorned, like the legendary 'Man In Black' is in there with you, singing to you in your room. I didn't miss the erratic electronic textures and effects that were prominent on the original, and though it's occasionally evident that this is a singer wandering in territory far away from his musical origins, it's almost impossible not to be won over by the serene beauty of this record.
..Worth mentioning that the second track (It was so much cooler when you could call them B-sides!) contains another foray into industrial classics, namely a cover of Dépeche Mode's anthem, 'Personal Jesus', which is styled into a dark acoustic blues rock stomp that suits it well,and also worth highly recommending the album these tracks are taken from - 'American IV: The Man Comes Around', released last year on American Recordings
Track Listing
- 'Hurt'(album version)
- 'Personal Jesus'(album version)
- 'Wichita Lineman'(vinyl version)
- 'Hurt' (video)
Johnny Cash - Hurt
Re: Johnny Cash - Hurt
Re: Johnny Cash - Hurt
With respects to 'Hurt', I shed my big tears when the original came out. This was the bit on 'Downward Spiral' that tied the album together, and cut through to the bone, much like 'Something I Will Never Have' On 'Pretty Hate Machine'. Both songs made me bawl at the time, and the latter still tingles the same nerve ten years later.
Johnny Cash - Hurt
Re: Johnny Cash - Hurt