Johnny Cash Albums The Columbia Years No 1
2nd Studio Album by Johnny Cash
Released November 3, 1958
Recorded July 24–August 13,
1958
Studio Bradley Film and
Recording Studio
(Nashville)
Genre Country · folk · gospel ·
rockabilly
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law
Note: His Discography Has This Album Listed as #2 Studio Album. I Cannot for the life Of Me Find His # 1 Studio Album On Columbia
3rd Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released March 2, 1959
Recorded July 24, 1958 – January
23, 1959
Studio Bradley Film and
Recording Studio
(Nashville)
Genre Gospel · Country
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law
Note: Columbia Promised Johnny Cash That When He Signed With Them That They Would Let Him Record A Gospel Album. Were As Sam Phillips Would Never Let him Do One.
6th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released July 6, 1959
Recorded July 24, 1958 – March
13, 1959
Genre Country
Length Original: 25:40
Re-issue: 29:34
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Al Quaglieri
7th Studio Album by Johnny Cash
Released May 2, 1960
Genre Country · honky-tonk
Length 26:19
Label Columbia/Legacy
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
(Photo To The Right) It was in this Pierce bridge hotel that the author encountered a remarkable clock that inspired the song.
“My Grandfather’s Clock” is a song written in 1876 by Henry Clay Work, the author of “Marching Through Georgia”. It is a standard of British brass bands and colliery bands and is also popular in bluegrass music. The Oxford English Dictionary says the song was the origin of the term “grandfather clock” for a longcase clock. In 1905, the earliest known recording of this song was performed by Harry Macdonough and the Haydn Quartet (known then as the “Edison Quartet”).
The song, told from a grandchild’s point of view, is about his grandfather’s clock.
The clock was purchased on the morning of the grandfather’s birth and works perfectly for 90 years, requiring only that it be wound at the end of each week.
The clock seems to know the good and bad events in the grandfather’s life; it rings 24 chimes when the grandfather brings his bride into his house, and near his death it rings an alarm, which the family recognizes to mean that the grandfather is near death and gathers by his bed. After the grandfather dies, the clock suddenly stops, and never works again.
8th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released August 1, 1960
Recorded December 14, 1959 –
February 16, 1960
Genre Country · Western
Label Columbia
12th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released June 4, 1962
Recorded April 28, 1961 –
February 12, 1962
Genre Country · rockabilly ·
blues
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Frank Jone
11th Studio Album By Johnny Cash. His Seconded Gospel Album On Columbia
Released: April 2, 1962
Producer Don Law
The Lure of the Grand Canyon is a classical music album by
Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra. It featured a guest spoken word appearance by country singer Johnny Cash. It was released
in 1961 (see 1961 in music) by Columbia Records
Genre Classical -Spoken Word – Label Columbia
15th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released January 7, 1963
Recorded June 7, 1962 – August
22, 1962
Genre Country · folk · blues
Label Columbia/Legacy
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
17th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released November 11, 1963
Recorded August 14, 1959 –
September 17, 1963
Genre Pop · Christmas ·
country
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
Johnny Cash Released A Single – on 45 RPM (The Little Drummer Boy) In 1959. It Debut on The Billboard Country Chart on January 24, 1960 It went # 24 Position. Flip Side Was I’ll Remember You.
Compilation album by Johnny Cash
Released July 8, 1963
Recorded July 24, 1958 – March
25, 1963
Genre Country · gospel ·
rockabilly
Length 33:36
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
Johnny Cash’s Compilation Album Ring Of Fire Sold 500,000 Copies In The United States And Was Certified A Gold Record On February 11, 1965
Johnny Cash – vocals, guitar
Luther Perkins, Jack Clement, Norman Blake, Billy Strange, Johnny Western, Roy Nichols – guitar
Marshall Grant, Buddy Clark – bass
Buddy Harman, Morris Palmer, W. S. Holland, Irving Kluger, Michael Kazak – drums
Bill Pursell, Marvin Hughes, James Wilson – piano
Maybelle Carter – autoharp
Karl Garvin, Bill McElhiney – trumpet
Billy Latham – banjo
Bob Johnston – lute
Hubert Anderson – vibraphone
The Carter Family, The Jack Halloran Singers, The Anita Kerr Singers – backing vocals
The Carter Family & Special Quest Johnny Cash
Studio Album – Keep On the Sunny Side
Released April 6, 1964
Label Columbia CL 2152
19th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released June 22, 1964
Recorded June 13, 1963 – March
5, 1964
Genre Country · rockabilly
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
Album Billboard (United States)
Year Chart Position
1964 Pop Albums 53
The I Walk The Line Album was released on Columbia Records in 1964. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA in 1967. I Walk the Line
12th Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released October 26, 1964
Recorded March 5 – June 30,
1964
Genre Country · folk
Length 31:13
Bitter Tears: Ballads of the American Indian is a 1964
concept album, the twentieth album released by singer Johnny
Cash on Columbia Records. It is one of several Americana records
by Cash. This one focuses on the history of Native Americans in
the United States and their problems
21st Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released February 22, 1965
Recorded August 27, 1964 –
December 20, 1964
Genre Folk · country · gospel ·
rockabilly
23rd Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released May 2, 1966
Recorded March 12, 1965 –
January 29, 1966
Genre Country · novelty
Length 29:51
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law · Frank Jones
22nd Studio album by Johnny Cash
Released August 2, 1965
Recorded August 14, 1959 – April
26, 1965
Genre Country folk · Western Label Columbia Two Record Set
Johnny Cash Sings the Ballads of the
True West
Johnny Cash Sings the Ballads of the True West is a
concept double album and the 22nd overall album released by
country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1965
The Ballads of the True West was re-issued in 2002 (see
2002 in music) through Legacy Recordings, with two bonus
tracks, one of which is an instrumental version of a track available
on the album. The original album was included on the Bear
Family box set Come Along and Ride This Train.
Live album by Johnny Cash
Released May 6, 1968
Recorded January 13, 1968
Venue Folsom State Prison
(Folsom, California)
Genre Outlaw country ·
rockabilly · folk
Length 45:05
Label Columbia
Producer Bob Johnston
Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison is the first live album by
American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, released on Columbia
Records on May 6, 1968. After his 1955 song “Folsom Prison
Blues”, Cash had been interested in recording a performance at a
prison. His idea was put on hold until 1967, when personnel
changes at Columbia Records put Bob Johnston in charge of
producing Cash’s material
Live album by Johnny Cash
Released June 16, 1969
Recorded February 24, 1969
Venue San Quentin State Prison, California
Genre Country
Label Columbia
Producer Bob Johnston (original)
Johnny Cash at San Quentin is the 31st overall album and
second live album by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash,
recorded live at San Quentin State Prison on February 24, 1969,
The album was certified gold on August 12, 1969, platinum and
double platinum on November 21, 1986, and triple platinum on
March 27, 2003