American IV: The Man Comes Around

Release date
1 Oct 2002
Running length
16 tracks
Running time
56:52

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Tracklist

    Track     Duration Listeners
1 The Man Comes Around (Early Take) 3:49 18,996
2 Hurt 3:37 817,920
3 Give My Love to Rose 3:27 266,671
4 Bridge Over Troubled Water 3:55 166,505
5 I Hung My Head 3:53 191,038
6 First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 3:52 90,699
7 Personal Jesus 3:19 319,695
8 In My Life 2:57 164,730
9 Sam Hall 2:39 142,581
10 Danny Boy 5:07 135,008
11 Desperado 3:13 139,899
12 I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 3:03 148,297
13 Tear Stained Letter 3:39 122,957
14 Streets Of Laredo 3:33 98,886
15 We'll Meet Again 2:57 134,885
16 Big Iron 3:52 23,816

About this album

American IV: The Man Comes Around is the fourth album in the American series by Johnny Cash, released in 2002. The majority of songs are covers which Cash performs in his own spare style, with help from producer Rick Rubin. For instance, for the song “Personal Jesus”, Rubin asked Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante to re-work an acoustic version of Martin Gore’s song, which featured a simple acoustic riff that stripped down the song to a blues style. He receives backing vocal assistance from various artists, including Fiona Apple, Nick Cave, and Don Henley. American IV was the final Cash album released during his lifetime; though the Unearthed Box Set was compiled prior to his death, it was not released until two months later. It was also his first non-compilation album to go gold (selling over 500,000 copies) in thirty years. Additionally, the album won “Album of the Year” award at the 2003 CMA Awards.

The video for “Hurt”, a song written by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails in 1994, was nominated in seven categories at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards and won the award for Best Cinematography. In February 2003, mere days before his 71st birthday, Cash won another Grammy Award for Best Country Male Vocal Performance for “Give My Love To Rose,” a song Cash had originally recorded in the late 1950s. The music video for “Hurt” also won a Grammy for Best Short Form Video at the 2004 Awards.

Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor admitted that he was initially “flattered” but worried that “the idea sounded a bit gimmicky,” but when he heard the song and saw the video for the first time, Reznor said he was deeply moved and found Cash’s cover beautiful and meaningful.
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