The List [B&N Exclusive Version] Rosanne Cash

BUY THIS ITEM

  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=5099968480523&productCode=MU&maxCount=100&threshold=3

Enter a zip code

CD - Exclusive Bonus Track

  • Release Date: 10/06/2009
  • Label: MANHATTAN RECORDS
  • UPC: 5099968480523

Listener Rating: (3 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Stimulating" See All

More Formats 
CD$11.99
Vinyl LP$18.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

The List [B&N Exclusive Version]

1LISTENMiss the Mississippi and You 3:14
2LISTENMotherless Children 3:08
3LISTENSea of Heartbreak 3:08
4LISTENTake These Chains From My Heart 3:34
5LISTENI'm Movin' 3:47
6LISTENHeartaches By the Number 3:23
7LISTEN500 Miles 3:06
8LISTENLong Black Veil 3:12
9LISTENShe's Got You 3:09
10LISTENGirl From North Country 3:35
11LISTENSilver Wings 3:47
12LISTENBury Me Under the Weeping Willow 3:35
13LISTENSweet Memories Bonus Track 3:30

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

After the dark and chilling themes of 2006's Black Cadillac, which saw Rosanne Cash dealing with the deaths of her mother, Vivian Liberto, her father, Johnny Cash, and her stepmother, June Carter Cash -- all of whom passed within a two-year span -- one might assume that her next project would move into an even deeper level of bleakness, but with The List, it's immediately clear that she has instead found a more measured place to stand, and it's a lovely and redemptive outing that looks back to go forward. When Cash turned 18, her father, alarmed that his daughter only knew the songs that were getting played on the radio, gave her a list of what he considered 100 essential American songs; Cash kept that list, and now she's drawn on it for this wonderfully nuanced outing that brims with a kind of redemptive timelessness. The List is a renewal and a testament to life, and it belongs to her father as much as it belongs to her, a beautiful restatement of her father's passions, only now, they've become his daughter's treasures, as well. It's an affirming story, but that's all it would be if Cash didn't sing her heart out here. And she does sing her heart out. The opener, a version of Jimmie Rodgers' "Miss the Mississippi and You," is full of comfortable grace and sentiment, and Cash keeps that fine emotional tone throughout this set. Songs like the folk classic "500 Miles" feel at once both lovingly rendered and reborn for a new century in Cash's hands, and she doesn't update them so much as find redemption and solace in them, which in turn gives these songs a bright relevance, and because of the connection to her father and the list he gave to her, it also feels like a deep personal statement. There's so much to take comfort in here, including her fine rendering of Bob Dylan's "Girl from the North Country," a nice turn at Harlan Howard's "Heartaches by the Number" (which features Elvis Costello), a calm but still spooky duet with Jeff Tweedy on the faux-murder ballad "Long Black Veil," and a duet with Bruce Springsteen on Hal David and Paul Hampton's "Sea of Heartbreak." Cash sings with a calm, measured authority, and all these the songs fit together with the same sort of refreshing resignation and care. Contemporary country radio probably won't touch anything here, since country these days seems to be more about name-checking than any actual preservation, but Cash is after something else again -- it's about connecting with the past and carrying it forward as an act of personal faith. It has nothing to do with hats or belt buckles. [A Barnes & Noble exclusive was also released.] Steve Leggett, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

REAL GOOD OLD COUNRTY UPDATED MUSIC WITH CLASSby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

October 15, 2009: I ENJOY THIS DISC WITH SUCH A SOULFUL TONE FROM CASH VOCAL.

Time to go back to the basics!by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

September 24, 2009: Writing this after hearing one song: Sea of Heartbreak, a duet with Springsteen, who's in good company here. I plan to pre-purchase on the strenght of hearing that one song and the other duets listed on the track details. So go ahead, head for the country and try to remember the quote her sister said about that genre description.

I Also Recommend: My Dusty Road, Nashville Rendez-Vous [2 CD], Written in Chalk, Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J., The Best of the Hightone Years.