i am not really into country but johnny cash is one of those artists that just surpasses any genre-restrains if it comes to being appreciated. that man just had a way that went far above what country usually feels like to me.
Andre Martänz Oh okay, gotcha. Yeah haha absolutely! Marty Robbins is most known for his first album in 1959, with the songs El Paso and Big Iron. The whole album was just about western life, nothing complicated, but it sounds so great. Big Iron was used in Fallout: New Vegas's soundtrack, which is how most younger people know of him.
WhoaNellyJake ok after i checked the song on youtube i remember it from that game. But it defenitely is not my cup of tea. Not a bad song at all but I just soooo rarely really "feel" countrymusic. TBH the thing that really got me to Cash were the american albums (especially 4 and 5), then folsom and san diego and after that i checked out more and more stuff. Oh and of course everyone knows ring of fire
@WhoaNellyJake I agree, I dislike country music, but "At Folsom Prison" and "Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs" are albums that I actually love and enjoy.
@@Enzo-si1it I just meant that NYC and LA are so ingrained in our culture that it's not as special to hear it there. I hear Empire State of Mind here in NC getting radio play, shit was just a hit in general.
Honestly, I feel Johnny Cash perfected the live album with Live at Folsom Prison. You could tell he's actually human, he cares about what he's singing, even if, in this case, it's federal inmates that are his immediate audience, and he's not just some almost robotic voice belting the same songs over and over again for, well, cash. JR Cash gives a damn fine lineup with it, and I've always preferred this album to the studio versions of their respective songs, especially with Folsom Prison Blues, as not only do I feel Cash gave more umph and fire to this version of the song, the sounds of the crowds of inmates going wild just makes me feel like I'm actually in concert, I'm in Folsom watching this amazing, amazing man perform. I love this album to no end.
It is an amazing album. I used to listen to it almost every "night" while on deployment on a submarine. The album really helps to liven up any type of confinement.
I love this album to bits - it's so completely unlike any other live album out there. Apart from At San Quentin, of course, which for me is just as much a classic as At Folsom Prison. If suggestions are actually worth making, I'd say Reign In Blood or Paranoid, because they are quite simply the best metal albums of all time that completely engross me every single time I listen to them, and metal hasn't been covered in your classics yet. I'd also say Metal Box because there's so much fascinating experimentation and extremely intriguing and gripping lyrics, to the extent where I'd say that it's better than Never Mind The Bollocks: Here's The Sex Pistols, and is Johnny Rotten's true classic album.
Worth recognizing is the live version of The Legend of John Henry's Hammer, only on the CD version, which is a massive 7-minute-long folk tale and an amazing performance.
Alex F and if that was really a random audience suggestion, that performance is even more awesome since Johnny Cash and his band didn't practice it beforehand, yet it sounds really terrific.
GZA- Liquid Swords, The Fall of Troy - Doppleganger, Deltron 3030, Against Me! - Reinventing Axl Rose, At The Drive In - Relationship Of Command, The Format - Interventions and Lullabys, Sublime - 40oz to freedom, or Weezer - The Blue Album
Absolutely love this album. The attitude and atmosphere of this album make it feel like a folk-punk record. The album is a rollercoaster of emotion, from laughing to being stuck in deep sympathetic thought.
Johnny is by far my favourite artist but cmon he did some real shit songs just like every musician has. Understandable considering the amount of albums he recorded
My grandfather actually played Folsom Prison with Johnny Cash. When he talks about how he cant swear, and says, "How's that grab ya, Bob?" he's talking to my grampa :)
Oh and I love how the crowd gets so into the music. It's a small space and you can kinda get the feeling that you're there. As opposed to large concerts with yards and yards of ants screaming "Ahhhh AHHHH AHHHH BAND IS SO COOL!" I guess I like the idea that I too am there. No jail but.. at a concert, in jail.
Suggestions for hip hop classics: OB4CL, Illmatic (of course), Ready To Die, The Infamous, Bacdafucup, Death Certificate, ATLiens, We Can't Be Stopped, etc....
Like many here in these comments I'm not big into country but this album hits so hard. I love the flow, from the fun bangers at the beginning like Orange Blossom Special and Cocaine Blues and then at the end there are such emotionally touching tracks like Send my Love to Rose, Green Green Grass, and Greystone Chapel.
Absolutely one of my favorite albums of all time. Coca in blues and the emotional connection you can hear between Cash and the audience make this album a classic great.
Great album! You've mentioned this LP in the past, which turned me on to it, and it blew my mind like none of Johnny's work had previously. A truly fascinating cultural event caught on tape.
This album was even greater when it first came out in 1968. Really top at it's time. Only competition he had at that time was Creedence Clearwater Revival With the album Green River.
Thanks for these classic reviews! Some reviews that would be cool to see are.. Sgt. Peppers, Trout Mask Replica, Meddle, Animals,Remain in Light,The Stone Roses, illmatic, Let it be(Replacements), Moon and Antarctica, OK Computer
I've listened to Johnny Cash extensively, so that, of course, includes this. Many of my friends are the people who say that "all country music is bad because all songs are about stupid shit like tractors and beer." Frankly, I agree. I think that country has become more of a mix of rock and pop, than actually taking from its roots. However, whenever they say something like that, I can't help but contradict them and say something along the lines of "not all country." For me, one of the biggest examples is "Green, Green Grass of Home." If you're familiar with the song, you know why. It's from this album, and I never heard it mentioned, so I thought I would. It's about a newly-released man who finally has a chance to go home. When he gets there, he's reminded of all the good memories from before his stay in prison. The thing is... he was only dreaming. All of it was a trick of the brain, just a ruse. He's still in prison, still in a damned cell. The worst part is that he's awoken on the day of his execution. He won't touch the green grass of home. He'll be under it. So when you say "All country is stupid," I strongly disagree with you.
Hello again. I really enjoyed the album for all the reasons you mentioned, Anthony. The psychology questions this album piques is one of the more entertaining qualities to me. On that note, I thought the influence of the record producer on the inmates may have detracted from the rawness of the album.
Dark as a dungeon off of "At Folsom Prison" is probably one of the most powerful songs that Johnny Cash has ever performed. I get goosebumps every time he crescendo's toward the chorus.
That song is probably my favourite of his, and that performance too... phew. Plus it's a lot of fun to sing, makes you realise how big of a vocal range johnny has.
Not so fun fact: The cheers of the crowd were added in post-production. At the actual show, the crowd was asked to make as little noise as possible. Kinda ruins the magic.
Sweet review Fantano! I'd like to see your opinion on other old school country albums like The Ozark Mountain Daredevils, Marshall Tucker Band, and The Outlaws. I loathe when I ask what music people like and they say the tired old answer of "Everything but country." Most modern country seems not as good but if someone has a modern country or rockabilly band they like lemme know!
I point At Folsom Prison out to anyone who says that hip-hop glorifies crime. I know tons of country fans who love Cash but think rap is morally bankrupt. We've always had more gritty and dark music, especially in outlaw country. Love this album.
I've been mixing cocktails all night to bring in the new year. You've just served my elixir of the night. Great review. Oh, and, Turn On the Bright Lights.
Thanks for this, I don't care for country but have always respected Johnny Cash and enjoyed his music, and hearing an actual great album of his is so much better than just "the hits," and the chemistry on this is fantastic.
i wish next year you will review "Music Has The Right To Children", although campfire headphase is the best BoC album, just review one of them damn it.
Couple suggestions: Blade Runner Soundtrack Time to Burn - Is.Land (2007; Post-Hardcore/Metal) Sleep Party People - Sleep Party People (2010; Experimental/Ambient) Moby - Destroyed (2010; Electronica) Apollo Brown & OC - Trophies (2012; Hip Hop) Interpol - Turn On the Bright Lights (2002; Post-Punk Revival) As always, thanks for the great review !
I inherited a copy of this record from my dad and it's easily one of my favorite records that I own (not exactly my go-to when I'm not sure what I'm in the mood for, but I would call myself a proud owner). Specifically, I like that there's nothing about it that I can specifically quantify as superior to anything else he's made, but somehow despite that it comes together as a beautiful composition. I mean, he certainly had more on-point performances in his career with more professionalism and a better mix. Better performances of some of those songs have been played by people I know, just sitting around a campfire at a music festival. That said, all of the little hiccups and odd moments during the concert come together with the relatively low-fidelity sound and kind-of muffled mix almost like the brushstrokes on an impressionist painting, and when you stand back and let it all wash together, it's perfect. As long as you're going back in time, have you reviewed Tom Waits' Closing Time?
I heard that the cheer after "I show man in Reno" line was actually added after the fact and not something that actually happened during the performance.
kaisamsa You're entitled to your opinion; You commented a Kanye West song as one of the best this year, seems like something a little bitch boy would do, just my opinion though.
i am not really into country but johnny cash is one of those artists that just surpasses any genre-restrains if it comes to being appreciated. that man just had a way that went far above what country usually feels like to me.
Andre Martänz Johnny Cash is true country for me. Him and Marty Robbins are the few artists that are considered 'country' that I like.
Andre Martänz Oh okay, gotcha. Yeah haha absolutely! Marty Robbins is most known for his first album in 1959, with the songs El Paso and Big Iron. The whole album was just about western life, nothing complicated, but it sounds so great. Big Iron was used in Fallout: New Vegas's soundtrack, which is how most younger people know of him.
WhoaNellyJake ok after i checked the song on youtube i remember it from that game. But it defenitely is not my cup of tea. Not a bad song at all but I just soooo rarely really "feel" countrymusic. TBH the thing that really got me to Cash were the american albums (especially 4 and 5), then folsom and san diego and after that i checked out more and more stuff. Oh and of course everyone knows ring of fire
@MrBrenman21 I agree, its so overshadowed with trash like trap is right now.
@WhoaNellyJake
I agree, I dislike country music, but "At Folsom Prison" and "Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs" are albums that I actually love and enjoy.
"It also happens to be the most badass live album ever laid to tape." +1
Actually living in Folsom... You hear Folsom Prison Blues every time a mediocre cover band plays somewhere around here.
Damn it's probably like that for any town whose name is in the title of a major song(barring LA and NYC)
@@btonyh5878 not true, that Alicia keys Jay z song Is still being played in NY to this day
@@Enzo-si1it I just meant that NYC and LA are so ingrained in our culture that it's not as special to hear it there. I hear Empire State of Mind here in NC getting radio play, shit was just a hit in general.
greatest live album of all-time in my opinion
agreed
Vinylman95 Productions this or John Mayer’s live album. Or Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock!
Live at the Fillmore East by the Allman Brothers too bruh
Jackson Muralt they don’t compare to cash
I think Genesis-Seconds Out is, best live album of all time
I just listened to the album for the first time. You can officially call me a country fan.
+john gleason I'm the farthest thing from a country fan, but I sure as hell am a Johnny fucking Cash fan.
+Mantis Toboggan Try Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, and Hank Williams. These guys kick so much ass, unlike most newer country artists.
willr455 I just don't want to hear goofy guitar picking and lyrics about how much people love their tractors.
+Mantis Toboggan lmao
+john gleason I'd like to imagine you made that expression on your profile picture when you finished listening to the album.
Honestly, I feel Johnny Cash perfected the live album with Live at Folsom Prison. You could tell he's actually human, he cares about what he's singing, even if, in this case, it's federal inmates that are his immediate audience, and he's not just some almost robotic voice belting the same songs over and over again for, well, cash. JR Cash gives a damn fine lineup with it, and I've always preferred this album to the studio versions of their respective songs, especially with Folsom Prison Blues, as not only do I feel Cash gave more umph and fire to this version of the song, the sounds of the crowds of inmates going wild just makes me feel like I'm actually in concert, I'm in Folsom watching this amazing, amazing man perform. I love this album to no end.
I don't really like country, but even I have to admit this album's fucking awesome.
even tho Johnny is from my state (Arkansas) I wouldn’t really class him as country
@@sambt123 He is absolutely country, what?
Please do a ten hour review of The White Album.
What.
DO IT YOU FUCKING MELON
STUPID FUCKING MELON
BITCH
I’m gonna assume you predicted the weezer album from about three years out and are asking him to review it 3 years in advance
@@legochickenguy4938 Weezer? More like Carl Wheezer
CommanderX3001 I think he means the Beatles album
Was I the only one who thought "I couldn't pick one, jesus!" was a real johnny cash track? lmao.
Sounds like something he’d name a song lol
Aquemini - Outkast
Johnny Cash - At Folsom Prison ALBUM REVIEW
How about Definitely Maybe by Oasis? [:
Acquiex How about no?
Kandice McBane No?
Is This It-The Strokes.
Man a perfect album.
I think you should review an R.E.M. album. Possibly Life's Rich Pageant.
It is an amazing album. I used to listen to it almost every "night" while on deployment on a submarine. The album really helps to liven up any type of confinement.
John Coltrane - A Love Supreme?
Jimi Hendrix - Electric ladyland
Johnny Cash is one of the greatest legends ever, period!
Found an original pressing complete with dust jacket and album cover for 7$. Worth every penny.
***** Well that's basically what it sold for when it came out, back when records were the only way to listen to music.
Mister Bearpunch I found one for one dollar. Best dollar spent
one of your most slept on reviews tbh. it doesn't go super DEEP but it touches on basically everything that makes this an all time classic.
I love this album to bits - it's so completely unlike any other live album out there. Apart from At San Quentin, of course, which for me is just as much a classic as At Folsom Prison.
If suggestions are actually worth making, I'd say Reign In Blood or Paranoid, because they are quite simply the best metal albums of all time that completely engross me every single time I listen to them, and metal hasn't been covered in your classics yet.
I'd also say Metal Box because there's so much fascinating experimentation and extremely intriguing and gripping lyrics, to the extent where I'd say that it's better than Never Mind The Bollocks: Here's The Sex Pistols, and is Johnny Rotten's true classic album.
Worth recognizing is the live version of The Legend of John Henry's Hammer, only on the CD version, which is a massive 7-minute-long folk tale and an amazing performance.
Alex F and if that was really a random audience suggestion, that performance is even more awesome since Johnny Cash and his band didn't practice it beforehand, yet it sounds really terrific.
Alex F hear that cold steel ring!
Tearyatobitz lord what a swinger!
GZA- Liquid Swords
Charlie Marion 👎
I really am not a fan of country at all, or at least mainstream country today, but DANG THIS ALBUM IS SICK!
Outkast- ATLiens
Possible Classic Reviews!!
Arcade Fire - Funeral
The Strokes - Is this it
A Radiohead album
a modest mouse album
THE AVALANCHES - SINCE IVE LEFT YOU
GZA- Liquid Swords, The Fall of Troy - Doppleganger, Deltron 3030, Against Me! - Reinventing Axl Rose, At The Drive In - Relationship Of Command, The Format - Interventions and Lullabys, Sublime - 40oz to freedom, or Weezer - The Blue Album
got this at a thrift store for 3 dollars
iammyownghost lucky😓
Record shop cheap bin for 71 cents 😎
what about something like The Shape of Punk to Come? maybe not old enough to be a classic, but then again maybe it is
That album deserves the title. Years don't mean shit.
Absolutely love this album. The attitude and atmosphere of this album make it feel like a folk-punk record. The album is a rollercoaster of emotion, from laughing to being stuck in deep sympathetic thought.
cal needs to tune his guitar
Never tell cal what to do
Cal needs to take the capo off his headstock
@@legochickenguy4938 Never tell cal what to do
i love all Johnny Cash songs. every single one.
Same here, man. Same here.
Johnny is by far my favourite artist but cmon he did some real shit songs just like every musician has. Understandable considering the amount of albums he recorded
REVIEW PAUL MCCARTNEY RAM OR ANYTHING PAUL MCCARTNEY
My grandfather actually played Folsom Prison with Johnny Cash. When he talks about how he cant swear, and says, "How's that grab ya, Bob?" he's talking to my grampa :)
Unlikely considering Bob Johnston was the producer of the record, not a musician.
Hm. I did not know that. I've just taken his and my grammas word for it.
Brad Schmidt Was there any chance that your grandfather was the producer?
there might, but i highly doubt it considering he has pictures of playing with Johnny on stage.
Brad Schmidt Bob Wootton played electric guitar for Johnny Cash from 1968 til like 1997 after Luther Perkins died, if that's who you're talking about
Oh and I love how the crowd gets so into the music. It's a small space and you can kinda get the feeling that you're there. As opposed to large concerts with yards and yards of ants screaming "Ahhhh AHHHH AHHHH BAND IS SO COOL!" I guess I like the idea that I too am there. No jail but.. at a concert, in jail.
Suggestions for hip hop classics: OB4CL, Illmatic (of course), Ready To Die, The Infamous, Bacdafucup, Death Certificate, ATLiens, We Can't Be Stopped, etc....
Like many here in these comments I'm not big into country but this album hits so hard. I love the flow, from the fun bangers at the beginning like Orange Blossom Special and Cocaine Blues and then at the end there are such emotionally touching tracks like Send my Love to Rose, Green Green Grass, and Greystone Chapel.
This might be my favorite album of all time, thank you for reviewing it, Anthony!
raekwon-Only built 4 cuban linx
Most gangsta country album, facts.
I'm not a country fan, but this is easily one of the best live albums I've ever heard. Really on point review.
Spiderland
One of your best and most in-depth reviews ever
Thank you needledrop for making the world a better place through music exploration. Music has gotten me through some tough times.
If the only remnants left of Johnny Cash's legacy were the American Recordings albums he'd be a legend on those alone
Absolutely one of my favorite albums of all time. Coca in blues and the emotional connection you can hear between Cash and the audience make this album a classic great.
That duet with Cal was beautiful.
Great album! You've mentioned this LP in the past, which turned me on to it, and it blew my mind like none of Johnny's work had previously. A truly fascinating cultural event caught on tape.
have listened to this record so many times all the way through
This album was even greater when it first came out in 1968. Really top at it's time. Only competition he had at that time was Creedence Clearwater Revival With the album Green River.
God , I'm excited for whatever he's reviewing next, maybe some Tribe or OutKast
I would LOVE to hear you review Donuts by J Dilla... that would be interesting aha
He's already done that
Review Soundtracks for the Blind
Thanks for these classic reviews! Some reviews that would be cool to see are..
Sgt. Peppers, Trout Mask Replica, Meddle, Animals,Remain in Light,The Stone Roses, illmatic, Let it be(Replacements), Moon and Antarctica, OK Computer
Gorillaz-Demon Days
It'll probably be classic when Anthony is 70.
great work, these reflections on classic albums really give a new found appreciation for works that I already appreciate
YO, you should do a Beatles review, maybe of Revolver or around that period :)
James Roberts He should do a best to worst really.
You and Cal definitely need to do a country album together!
Aquemini or The Low End Theory
theneedledrop I recommend you watch the movie Walk The Line. It is a movie about the life of Johnny Cash. He is played by Joaquin Phoenix. GREAT movie
Dumbass
Jeff Buckley - Grace?
I've listened to Johnny Cash extensively, so that, of course, includes this.
Many of my friends are the people who say that "all country music is bad because all songs are about stupid shit like tractors and beer." Frankly, I agree. I think that country has become more of a mix of rock and pop, than actually taking from its roots.
However, whenever they say something like that, I can't help but contradict them and say something along the lines of "not all country."
For me, one of the biggest examples is "Green, Green Grass of Home." If you're familiar with the song, you know why. It's from this album, and I never heard it mentioned, so I thought I would. It's about a newly-released man who finally has a chance to go home. When he gets there, he's reminded of all the good memories from before his stay in prison.
The thing is... he was only dreaming. All of it was a trick of the brain, just a ruse. He's still in prison, still in a damned cell. The worst part is that he's awoken on the day of his execution. He won't touch the green grass of home. He'll be under it.
So when you say "All country is stupid," I strongly disagree with you.
"05 FUCK EM" BASED ANTHONY!
I would love an outkast album review!
You have to do Black Sabbath or Master of Reality. I'd love to hear your thoughts on one of those albums.
Best album ever.
Hello again. I really enjoyed the album for all the reasons you mentioned, Anthony. The psychology questions this album piques is one of the more entertaining qualities to me. On that note, I thought the influence of the record producer on the inmates may have detracted from the rawness of the album.
Dark as a dungeon off of "At Folsom Prison" is probably one of the most powerful songs that Johnny Cash has ever performed. I get goosebumps every time he crescendo's toward the chorus.
+Reece Decker I hear you man.
That song is probably my favourite of his, and that performance too... phew. Plus it's a lot of fun to sing, makes you realise how big of a vocal range johnny has.
Not so fun fact: The cheers of the crowd were added in post-production. At the actual show, the crowd was asked to make as little noise as possible. Kinda ruins the magic.
That was only one cheer during the song Folsom prison blues. The rest of the cheers and crowd noise on the album are actually real.
Please review "Is This It" by The Strokes!
Sweet review Fantano! I'd like to see your opinion on other old school country albums like The Ozark Mountain Daredevils, Marshall Tucker Band, and The Outlaws. I loathe when I ask what music people like and they say the tired old answer of "Everything but country." Most modern country seems not as good but if someone has a modern country or rockabilly band they like lemme know!
A live album I really like is "Jeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group". Really sweet sounds throughout that show.
This was my shit growing up. Dad always had it playing in the car. I love this album.
I point At Folsom Prison out to anyone who says that hip-hop glorifies crime. I know tons of country fans who love Cash but think rap is morally bankrupt. We've always had more gritty and dark music, especially in outlaw country. Love this album.
I've been mixing cocktails all night to bring in the new year. You've just served my elixir of the night. Great review. Oh, and, Turn On the Bright Lights.
Hi, I'm Johnny Cash :D
+ProsecutorGodot hello*
ProsecutorGodot hello walls
The woop that comes after he says he shot a man in reno is actually added in post. Pretty much the only thing edited in the album
Thanks for this, I don't care for country but have always respected Johnny Cash and enjoyed his music, and hearing an actual great album of his is so much better than just "the hits," and the chemistry on this is fantastic.
You serve everything in tin cups?
i wish next year you will review "Music Has The Right To Children", although campfire headphase is the best BoC album, just review one of them damn it.
Couple suggestions:
Blade Runner Soundtrack
Time to Burn - Is.Land (2007; Post-Hardcore/Metal)
Sleep Party People - Sleep Party People (2010; Experimental/Ambient)
Moby - Destroyed (2010; Electronica)
Apollo Brown & OC - Trophies (2012; Hip Hop)
Interpol - Turn On the Bright Lights (2002; Post-Punk Revival)
As always, thanks for the great review !
The song that opened up JC to me was "A Boy Named Sue" on the At San Quentin album.
Oh my God, I was listening to the album when I saw this video in my feed and jumped a bit.
Willie Nelson - Phases and Stages. Please review that sometime.
Also do one on David Allan Coe's Greatest Hits
Hard pass
Been listening to this album a lot. Surprised to see Plantano do a review on it. Good one.
I inherited a copy of this record from my dad and it's easily one of my favorite records that I own (not exactly my go-to when I'm not sure what I'm in the mood for, but I would call myself a proud owner).
Specifically, I like that there's nothing about it that I can specifically quantify as superior to anything else he's made, but somehow despite that it comes together as a beautiful composition. I mean, he certainly had more on-point performances in his career with more professionalism and a better mix. Better performances of some of those songs have been played by people I know, just sitting around a campfire at a music festival. That said, all of the little hiccups and odd moments during the concert come together with the relatively low-fidelity sound and kind-of muffled mix almost like the brushstrokes on an impressionist painting, and when you stand back and let it all wash together, it's perfect.
As long as you're going back in time, have you reviewed Tom Waits' Closing Time?
Agreed! Best live album ever made!
OUTLAW COUNTRYYYYY!!!!!!!
Any chance of seeing Love's Forever Changes. It's a total classic, and it's my favorite album. I'd love to see you review it, Anthony.
Review Hell Hath No Fury by Clipse
PLEASE
theneedledrop
I think this is the first time that I wholeheartedly 100% agree with everything you said in a review.
Glad you reviewed it.
can we get a best of cal 2013???
Dammit I can never get through your classics videos, you get me too excited and I just go listen to them.
I heard that the cheer after "I show man in Reno" line was actually added after the fact and not something that actually happened during the performance.
Johnny might have played country music, but he was one of the most bonafide rock stars to ever walk the planet.
Yes! Love this album; a classic indeed. I agree that what makes this album extra special is the added banter in between tracks.
You always review albums perfectly!
ANTHONY you should consider Pale Machine by Bo En. I feel like you'd dig it.
Dark Side of the Moon album request.
That album is shit.
kaisamsa go home, /mu/.
what's /mu/? TDSOTM is the worst album i've ever heard in my life.
kaisamsa
You're entitled to your opinion; You commented a Kanye West song as one of the best this year, seems like something a little bitch boy would do, just my opinion though.
buddhabassist Hahahha, i'm pretty sure that Pearl Jam album was the best of 2013, man, no need to cry about kanye.
That drawing of Cal is just.... It's the best.
Johnny cash is some of the only country music i like, and i like him a lot tbh