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Artist:Johnny Cash [ more ]
Song:Ghost Riders In The Sky
Album: [ info ]
Released:1964
Last Played:May 13, 2013 - 15:17
Avg. Rating:7.8  (Total Ratings: 1360)
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Ratings Dist:
1 votes: 23 (1.7%)2 votes: 17 (1.3%)3 votes: 24 (1.8%)4 votes: 14 (1%)5 votes: 23 (1.7%)6 votes: 76 (5.6%)7 votes: 221 (16%)8 votes: 500 (37%)9 votes: 302 (22%)10 votes: 160 (12%)
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263 comments for this song:spacerLog in above to post your comment

UltraNurd
(Boston, MA)
Posted: Nov 07, 2005 - 10:59 

michaelc wrote:
Hay Johnnie where are the Bullwhips ?
needs Bullwhips.



MORE COWBELL!!!
michaelc
(Walnut Creek, CA)
Posted: Nov 07, 2005 - 10:52 

Hay Johnnie where are the Bullwhips ?
needs Bullwhips.


jlind
(Chicago, IL)
Posted: Nov 07, 2005 - 10:50 

plutodazed wrote:
Until now I didn't know this was a Johnny Cash song.
I like the Outlaws' version better, and they picked a good song to cover.


I'm pretty sure its an old folk song that many many bands have covered. The Doors have a pretty good version too.
UltraNurd
(Boston, MA)
Posted: Nov 07, 2005 - 10:50 

Awesome song. Makes me wish I had watched more westerns as a kid.
mojoman
(Rocky Mountains, Colorado)
Posted: Oct 31, 2005 - 12:47 

Cynaera wrote:
I'm really not a Cash fan, but I truly appreciate how many people here at RP can get into his stuff. He went through a LOT in his life, and only someone who's been there can sing about it with any conviction. Mr. Cash definitely has conviction and a first-hand knowledge of the hard life. It lends credibility to his music, no matter what he chooses to sing.

The guy's a master, no doubt. He's just not really my cup of tea. He's Earl Grey, and I'm Orange Pekoe.


I've had the opportunity to see a very early screening of the Johnny Cash biopic "Walk the Line." Go see it. It's very good.
kazuma
(Austin, TX)
Posted: Oct 31, 2005 - 11:39 

He was great as the Space Coyote.
Imkirok
(Minneapolis, MN)
Posted: Oct 31, 2005 - 11:38 

plutodazed wrote:
Until now I didn't know this was a Johnny Cash song.
I like the Outlaws' version better, and they picked a good song to cover.


I liked the Outlaws version, too, except they left out the last verse. I had this record as a kid on a collection of JC songs. Still gives me chills.

Viva Johnny!

plutodazed
(Woodstock, GA)
Posted: Oct 23, 2005 - 20:34 

Until now I didn't know this was a Johnny Cash song.
I like the Outlaws' version better, and they picked a good song to cover.
jadewahoo
(Sedona Az, Beautiful Earth)
Posted: Sep 24, 2005 - 10:43 

Ghost Riders in the Sky... has haunted me since I first heard it. Being a horse person, spending years riding the Rockies, the imagery evoked is a poignant merging of the mythic and profane.
And it haunts me still to this day...
coentje
(Rotterdam or anywhere...)
Posted: Sep 24, 2005 - 10:39 

This is a joke? right? 8O
Cynaera
(South of Neanderthal)
Posted: Sep 09, 2005 - 16:40 

I'm really not a Cash fan, but I truly appreciate how many people here at RP can get into his stuff. He went through a LOT in his life, and only someone who's been there can sing about it with any conviction. Mr. Cash definitely has conviction and a first-hand knowledge of the hard life. It lends credibility to his music, no matter what he chooses to sing.

The guy's a master, no doubt. He's just not really my cup of tea. He's Earl Grey, and I'm Orange Pekoe.
winter
(hither and yon (mostly yon))
Posted: Aug 10, 2005 - 23:05 

This is some seriously cool classic stuff.
Madder
Posted: Jul 27, 2005 - 03:29 

cool.
RobRyan
(Canyon Country, CA)
Posted: Jul 12, 2005 - 08:45 

I know I'm supposed to like him, I've tried to like him, I respect him, I acknowledge his integrity, etc. but I just don't like his voice or his treatment of songs. I do like his cover of "Personal Jesus" but other than that, I turn the volume down whenever Johnny comes on.
Gregorama
(Austin, TX)
Posted: Jul 12, 2005 - 08:43 

Not to sound like too much of a heretic, but I like Burl Ives version better. And I usually don't care much for Burl Ives, but then again, I've seen Cash play, but never Burl Ives. I like Johnny. Maybe I am overthinking this...
beatlechick
(somewhere near a computer)
Posted: Jun 27, 2005 - 15:50 

awesome!!
serendipity_blue
(New York)
Posted: Apr 15, 2005 - 08:16 

I've never been much of a country fan, but Johnny Cash is just cool as hell.
beelzebubba
(Where the hell is Walldrug, South Dakota?)
Posted: Apr 15, 2005 - 08:13 

Beanie wrote:
This song is ruined for me, ever since I was at a bar that was doing karaoke one night, and this incredibly drunk woman got up and did this song, finishing with ripiing off her shirt and whipping it around her head.


So....did she have a nice rack?
Tarindel
(Davis, CA)
Posted: Mar 02, 2005 - 08:56 

Beanie wrote:
This song is ruined for me, ever since I was at a bar that was doing karaoke one night, and this incredibly drunk woman got up and did this song, finishing with ripiing off her shirt and whipping it around her head.


Yeah, I hate it when that happens.
Beanie
(the edge of reason)
Posted: Feb 15, 2005 - 10:50 

This song is ruined for me, ever since I was at a bar that was doing karaoke one night, and this incredibly drunk woman got up and did this song, finishing with ripiing off her shirt and whipping it around her head.
Johray63
(The Lowlands)
Posted: Feb 15, 2005 - 10:47 

robinesque wrote:
What a nice coincedence. When this song came on, I happend to be at johnnycash.com, signing up for the Johnny Cash fan club. (I've never joined a fan club before in my life...)


Must've been mr. Cash, looking down!
redeyespy
(SoFL)
Posted: Dec 18, 2004 - 10:33 

:nodhead:
Angloray
(Los Angeles)
Posted: Dec 03, 2004 - 16:44 

truk77 wrote:
Johnny Cash? Whoohoo! Johnny Cash is truly THE MAN in Black. I just love his style.


and his voice! He could sing me the phone book and it'd sound amazing and heartfelt
truk77
Posted: Oct 05, 2004 - 14:22 

Johnny Cash? Whoohoo! Johnny Cash is truly THE MAN in Black. I just love his style. God rest his soul.
MaK
(Wellesley, Ma)
Posted: Jun 14, 2004 - 08:59 

Enough w/ the Cash. He smells.

ZeNeece
(Port St. Lucie, FL)
Posted: May 18, 2004 - 21:38 

Perfect. Johnny Cash is KING. He's perfect for this song. Yee Haw!
Red_Dragon
(somewhere in the great midwest)
Posted: May 05, 2004 - 17:58 

I've heard many versions of this song by many folks over the years. While Riders in Sky's rendition comes close, I think this is the definitive one for me. Johnny was just GOOD.
toastee
(Erie Pa)
Posted: Apr 22, 2004 - 20:02 

always loved this song....vivid imagery....makes me want to be back in the old west roamin the prairie.
SpaceCowboy
Posted: Mar 04, 2004 - 06:27 

I mean, how much more cowboy can you get?

Cash is king!

When he passed away (RIP), Village Voice wrote this excellent obituary:

Along with Merle Haggard, George Jones, and Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, who died in Nashville Friday of complications from diabetes after a battle with autonomic neuropathy, was the most important country artist of the modern era. Yet oddly enough for someone working in a tradition-oriented genre, he sounded like no one else and left no sonic heirs. If country music means white music, then Cash was very white--unlike his great fellow Sun Records rockabillies, Elvis and Jerry Lee, he showed no Afro-American influence. But he also never leaned on instrumental signifiers of country like fiddle, pedal steel, or banjo, and he never displayed the cultural defensiveness of country. He operated from a position of confidence that left him open to other influences, particularly 1960s folk.

At the height of his popularity and power in the late '60s, he was playing the White House, San Quentin, the Newport Folk Festival, and Vietnam, socializing with Bob Dylan and Billy Graham, appealing to both sides of an ever wider social divide while remaining clearly identified as a country singer. On his only recently released live CD, Johnny Cash at Madison Square Garden from 1969, he follows up the patriotic tearjerker Remember the Alamo" with the anti-war tearjerker "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream." And it works. How did he pull it off?

If Cash personified country, the projection of that personification was the part he shared with rock and blues and at least the Dylan-Baez wing of folk. Cash represented a tradition, but not by placing himself inside that tradition. Instead, he placed the tradition inside his very large, believable, imposing, likable self. This was offset musically not by the full trappings of whatever was the current country sound, but by a minimal and slightly weird instrumentation, like the boom-ticka-boom of the original Tennessee Two.

He did not fare as well inside the layered country pop that took hold in the '70s, and he did not fit into the overproduced, watered-down country rock that followed. Yet he was the pioneer in communicating the modern country image, and in that way was truly the Elvis of country, the grandfather of all country videos.

Of course it all depended on the voice, an impossibly deep and wide, confidently masculine sound that communicated tenderness, sorrow, and suffering as well. And if at times it seemed to wander off pitch, that just came across as honesty. In fact, it's tempting to call his special gift recitation rather than singing, and reach outside of music to someone like John Wayne for comparison.

Except Cash encompassed much more than Wayne. He was the cowboy and the Indian, the sinner and the believer, the patriot and the protester. some of this was skill, and a lot of behind-the-scenes hard thinking. Some of it was faith. Cash was blessed with a public Christianity that complemented the sense of tradition and tolerance in his music while following for a grim yet hopeful perspective on the human condition--one with room for both hymns and murder ballads, paradise and fire-and-brimstone. Thus permitting an interesting spectrum of subject matter and variety of perspectives.

But maybe there's a less recognized source of inspiration as well. Like so many country singers, Cash grew up on the family farm. But his particular farm was part of an experimental community set up by the New Deal in Arkansas. And if you look at Cash's work, you see the New Deal all over it. There are all the country virtues of family and hard work and religion, and the post-war energies of upward mobility and modernization. But there's also the New Deal feeling for social justice, national unity, tolerance, and progress. And if you listen close enough you notice that evangelical Christian country boy Johnny Cash had a feel for the urban secular left.

So Cash wasn't just the country Elvis, or the musical John Wayne. He was culturally successful parallel to the failed Lyndon Johnson, a white Southerner trying to extend the New Deal while the Vietnam War on one side and the Civil Rights Act on the other were tearing its coalition apart.

The confident masculinity and confident whiteness with which Cash staked out his cultural position in the '60s no longer feel accessible as cultural options. White men are so angry they're getting ready to let Karl Rove revoke the New Deal, not just bring it to a halt. Cash was friends with Carter and Gore, less successful in Reagan-Bush America. Maybe no one could sound like him today.

In Johnny Cash's last decade, rap-metal producer Rick Rubin would revive both their careers by reconfiguring Cash with a bad-boy rock persona, folk tastefulness, and country authenticity. It didn't always work, but it did bring Cash back into the spotlight as an outsider. The opening cut on their fourth collaboration, The Man Comes Around, features a no longer full-voiced Cash reciting/singing his own Book of Revelation--inspired composition. It's scary because we hear him fading way and it's scary because by some trick of his art, he's more present than ever. Ominous and comforting, he was never as simple as he sounded--not at the beginning, and not at the end.

moon_shadow
(Saltspring Island, BC Canada)
Posted: Feb 21, 2004 - 18:41 

Thanks RP
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