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List Price: $3.98 | | Label: Rhino / Wea
Salesrank: 808563
Released: July 1, 1991 |
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| Used Price: $18.00 |
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| Media: Audio Cassette |
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The Sun Years Track Listing:
1. Folsom Prison Blues
2. Hey Porter
3. I Walk the Line
4. Get Rhythm
5. Guess Things Happen That Way
6. Rock Island Line
7. Home of the Blues
8. Luther Played the Boogie [*]
9. Mean Eyed Cat [*]
10. Big River
11. Next in Line [*]
12. Come in Stranger
13. Train of Love
14. There You Go
15. Ballad of a Teenage Queen
16. So Doggone Lonesome
17. Ways of a Woman in Love
18. Give My Love to Rose [*]
Editorial Review:
82 tracks including all of his master recordings released by Sun, as well as a number of fascinating alternate takes, demos and fragments from studio rehearsals. The set's deluxe, fully-illustrated booklet includes detailed track-by-track analysis, an int
Description of The Sun Years:
With the steady churn of the Tennessee Two behind him, Cash introduced his unmistakable pared-down sound with these 18 late-1950s tracks. Cash's stark lyrics and dark baritone find sympathetic support from Luther Perkins' bare-boned twang and his own persistent strumming. "Folsom Prison Blues," "Hey Porter," and "Big River" show Cash's ability to build vivid imagery with simple lyrics. "I Walk the Line" and "Give My Love to Rose" exemplify his direct emotional appeal. Though his work and his sound remained consistent throughout his career, this compilation is the one to get if you want a one-disc introduction. It serves as both a collection of hits and an ideal demonstration of his minimalist style. --Marc Greilsamer
The Sun Years Reviews:
The Start Of Greatness And A CD That Is ESSENTIAL 
2007-10-24 - An essential purchase for any music lover chronicling the A Sides of the country legend prior to his tenure with Columbia records and the subsequent stardom.
The influence and greatness of Cash as one of the major figures ,on all major forms of roots music is unparalled and these Sun recordings capture him in the pristine clarity and rawness of his early days and truthfully the best way to approach this artist is on this set of classics.
Not to be missed.
Excellent 
2007-05-19 - The Sun Years..is a excellent CD if your a Johnny Cash fan..some old songs that we haven't heard in a long time.If your a country music person...this is perfect for you.
The early years of Johnny Cash recording for Sun Records in Memphis 
2006-01-17 - I am not absolutely sure but I have every reason to believe that the first Johnny Cash song I heard was "A Boy Named Sue." So when I first encountered the Cash persona it was as the guy who was performing to convicts on the classic "Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison" and "Johnny Cash at San Quentin" albums. What I did not not know was that "Folsom Prison Blues" was one of the first songs that Cash ever wrote back in 1954 when he was in the Air Force and it was not recorded until two years later when he signed with the legendary Sam Phillips at Sun Records in Memphis. These are some of the things that I learned from the Cash bio-pic "Walk the Line," and I suspect I am not alone in being interested in checking out Cash's early work after watching the film. That is what led me to track down this 18-track collection of Johnny Cash during "The Sun Years."
"Folsom Prison Blues" was set up in the film as Cash's first hit for Sun, but in fact when Cash came back to show Phillips that he could do more than gospel what he really played was "Hey Porter," which was released with "Cry, Cry, Cry" on the flip side and made #14 on the Country Singles chart in in 1955. The following year "Folsom Prison Blues" hit #4 and Cash had his first pair of #1 country hits with "Get Rhythm" and "Walk the Line." There are three more top Country singles with "Guess Things Happen That Way," "There You Go," and his biggest hit, "Ballad Of A Teenage Queen," which topped the charts for ten weeks. In 1958 Cash signed with Columbia and wrote fini to his days at Sun. Virtually every song here was a top ten single on the Country charts, "Give My Love to Rose" being the exception because it only made it to #13. You look at the chart success of these songs and you can see why Cash became a major figure in Country music in the 1950s: "Home Of The Blues: (#3), "Big River" (#4), "Next In Line" (#9), "Come in Stranger" (#6), "Train of Love" (#7), "So Doggone Lonesome" (#4), and "The Ways of a Woman in Love." Backing up Cash on all of these songs are the Tennessee Two, which originally consisted of guitarist Luther Perkins and bassist Marshall Grant.
There are only 18 tracks here so this is not a comprehensive collection (there is a five-disc version that has a better claim to that distinction). A few hits like "Don't Make Me Go" (#9), "All Over Again" (#4), and "What Do I Care" (#7), so there is room to quibble, but they are minor all things considered (remember, this is a Rhino album and they are the masters of reissuing blasts from the past). Besides, the three songs that are included that are not "hits"--"Rock Island Line," "Luther Played the Boogie," and "Mean Eyed Cat"--certainly represent the early Johnny Cash, which is ultimately what this album is all about. Just do not be surprised if this collection only whets your appetite for going back to the early years and hearing more from that period.
Root fifth only 
2005-11-06 - Wow, Johnny cash songs with only Luther Perkins' root fifth guitar work. Every song has the unmistakable Luther Perkins beat. Amazing stuff!
Didn't Luther play the boogie strange? 
2005-04-09 - This is a solid 18 track collection of some of the best songs that Johnny Cash recorded for Sun Records. Of course, almost everything Johnny Cash recorded for Sun Records was good, so this is by no means a complete collection of all his essential Sun recordings. But it is an excellent place to begin to discover the early years of Johnny Cash. Highly recommended.