The Essential Johnny Cash | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Johnny Cash |
Cover: | JC_Essential.jpg |
Released: | February 2002 |
Recorded: | September 1954 - May 1993 |
Genre: |
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Length: | 103:53 |
Label: | |
Producer: |
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Prev Title: | Return to the Promised Land |
Prev Year: | 2000 |
Next Title: | At Madison Square Garden |
Next Year: | 2002 |
The Essential Johnny Cash is a double-compact disc compilation by Johnny Cash released as part of Sony BMG's Essential series. It was compiled to commemorate Cash's 70th birthday. It is not to be confused with the three-CD box set of the same name released by Columbia Records in 1992.
The double album concentrates mainly on Cash's first 15 years as a recording artist with Sun Records and Columbia, contains only eight post-1970 selections, and no selections from Cash's work with Rick Rubin for American Recordings: Cash's final hit single, a cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt", was released ten months later. The album was certified gold and platinum on February 5, 2005 and was certified 3× platinum on March 3, 2016 for sales of 1,500,000 copies by the RIAA.[1] It has sold 1,845,400 copies in the US as of October 2019.[2]
Amongst the 36 tracks on the compilation are two songs that feature Cash prominently but are from other artists' albums: "Girl from the North Country" from Bob Dylan's 1969 album Nashville Skyline, and "The Wanderer" from U2's 1993 album Zooropa, which makes its first appearance on an American Johnny Cash album with this release.
As a tribute to Cash's influence on country, rock, and other modern musics and his wide fan base, the liner notes feature testimonials and 70th birthday greetings from an array of artists – from friends and collaborators like Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Tom Petty, ex-stepson-in-law Nick Lowe, and wife June Carter Cash, and also from Keith Richards, Elvis Costello, Corey Taylor and Shawn Crahan of Slipknot, Metallica's Kirk Hammett, and Henry Rollins.
A vinyl edition of The Essential Johnny Cash was released in 2015 as a double LP.[3] The vinyl release reduces the track list to 28 songs, compared to the 36 on the standard CD release.
The following people provided testimonials and/or 70th birthday greetings for the CD's liner notes (in this order):
Chart (2003) | Position | |
---|---|---|
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[4] | 64 | |
Chart (2017) | Position | |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[5] | 52 | |
Chart (2018) | Position | |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[6] | 81 | |
Chart (2020) | Position | |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[7] | 24 | |
Chart (2021) | Position | |
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[8] | 38 |