2018 studio album by Rosanne Cash
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On this week's episode of You Are What You Read, we are joined by singing/songwriting duo and dear friends, Rosanne Cash and John Leventhal. Together, Rosanne and John have made seven albums including the three-time Grammy winning The River & the Thread, Black Cadillac, The List, 10 Song Demo, Rules of Travel and She Remembers Everything, alongside dozens of projects and thousands of live performances. John was the composer on the Big Stone Gap movie soundtrack, which includes signature hits from Rosanne. This year, you can join Rosanne and John on tour. Follow the link for upcoming tour dates in a city near you: https://www.rumblestriprecords.net/ Thanks to our wonderful sponsors! This episode of You Are What You Read is sponsored by BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/WHATYOUREAD today to get 10% off your first month. Get it off your chest, with BetterHelp. We'd also like to thank Book of the Month. Head over to bookofthemonth.com and use Promo Code ADRI to get your first book for just $9.99. Thank you for listening, and thank you for reading. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For Grammy Award–winning singer and songwriter Rosanne Cash, processing the past is a constant, endless journey. She’d been thinking about race and reparations long before the Movement for Black Lives gained momentum last year, as both racism and African-American ancestry exist in her family history rooted in the American South, where she was born to country music legend Johnny Cash and his first wife, Vivian Liberto, in 1955. Cash channeled her anguish into “The Killing Fields,” a haunting single that reckons with the United States’s legacy of lynchings, and “Crawl into the Promised Land,” a blistering yet optimistic response to the tumultuous events of 2020. Last month, she released both tracks on a seven-inch limited-edition vinyl, the sales from which will benefit the Arkansas Peace and Justice Memorial Movement, a nonprofit that raises awareness about the state’s history of racial injustice. Over the last four decades, Cash, who now lives in New York, has established herself as one of the rare voices in popular music who sings from the uncut perspective of a grown woman, fraught with opinions, mixed emotions, and battle scars. With each album she releases (there are 14 to date), she seems to gain a deeper understanding of herself. After earning 11 number one hits on Billboard’s country music chart during the 1980s, Cash released Interiors (1990), a dark, reflective album that marked a departure from her commercial work. While country radio stations and her label all but ignored the record, she’s embraced the honest, deeply personal approach used to make it as her modus operandi ever since. Her recent work is increasingly intimate: Cash confronts her Southern roots and grapples with her life as a wife, mother, and former country star in the 2014 album The River and The Thread; her 2018 album She Remembers Everything—released against the backdrop of Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearings and during the rise of the #MeToo movement—tackles the plight of women in America with songs about divorce, ingrained social hierarchies, and death, including a track about a boy killed by gun violence told from the viewpoint of his mother. She has also written articles for The Atlantic, The Nation, and The New York Times about subjects that matter to her, such as the need for country music artists to speak out in support of gun control. Eschewing any self-righteousness, these efforts, whether singing, songwriting, or prose, are her way of working through the complexities of life. “I have to keep showing up for the things I believe in,” she says, noting that she often feels like a fraud. “That’s part of being an artist. You come up against that, and you still show up, because you have to. The world needs it.” On this episode, Cash discusses what it means to reckon with history, talking with Andrew about her long-standing work as an activist, the healing power of music, and continually revisiting the past as a means for personal and artistic evolution.
Rosanne Cash & Graham Nash. Rosanne Cash returned to the show to talk about her role in the Ken Burns documentary and her latest album, She Remembers Everything. Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Graham Nash discusses his music and the role of an artist to speak out against injustice.
Enjoy this rerun of Episode 64, featuring our conversation with the great Rosanne Cash. Tour dates and more are available at rosannecash.com, and her latest album She Remembers Everything is available wherever you get music.
Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash discusses the writing of her stunning record She Remembers Everything and songs from her catalogue including 'Seven Year Ache', 'Seventh Avenue' and 'When The Master Calls The Roll'. In this inspiring conversation, Rosanne describes her relationship to prose writing, her collaborations with her husband John Leventhal, and encouragement she received from her father, the late, great, Johnny Cash.
Rosanne Cash and Dan Epstein join us this week. Rosanne discusses her terrific new album, “She Remembers Everything” and Dan looks back on the film, “North Dallas Forty”
Het Album van de Week Album van de Week is "She Remembers Everything" van Rosanne Cash. In deze aflevering veel American Soul van o.a. Sam Cooke, Bobby Marchan en Lee Dorsey.
Het Album van de Week Album van de Week is "She Remembers Everything" van Rosanne Cash. In deze aflevering veel American Soul van o.a. Sam Cooke, Bobby Marchan en Lee Dorsey.
Het Album van de Week Album van de Week is "She Remembers Everything" van Rosanne Cash. In deze aflevering veel American Soul van o.a. Sam Cooke, Bobby Marchan en Lee Dorsey.
Le temps qui passe, un amour tenace, une vie sur la route et une mortalité inévitable imprègnent l’album ‘’She Remembers Everything’’, le nouvel album de Rosanne Cash, sorti le 2 Novembre 2018 sous le label ‘’Blue Note Records/Universal Music’’. La chanson éponyme de l’album a été écrite par Rosanne et le compositeur-interprète basé en Californie, Sam Phillips, qui prête sa voix aux harmonies. Utilisant souvent des images bibliques et des métaphores lyriques, Rosanne Cash crée par cet album un espace de Paix. A 63 ans la voix de l’artiste trouve son équilibre dans ces émotions mélangées. Cela semble transparent, toujours naturel et confiant, jamais forcé. Rosanne porte les mélodies, par une approche pensive et déterminée. Elle cherche à comprendre - non seulement elle-même, mais ses proches - et à faire de son mieux pour instaurer la paix en dépit du tumulte dominant.
“She Remembers Everything” is the name of the latest Rosanne Cash album, the 14th of her amazing career. Rosanne and her husband and musical collaborator, John Leventhal, sit down with Broken Record’s Bruce Headlam to play songs from the album, talk about songwriting, her musical family and how “She Remembers Everything” grew out of today’s politics. They also perform cover versions of two American classics, “Long Black Veil” and “Farewell Angelina.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Show #432 Carson McHone - Sad (Carousel) Whitey Morgan and the 78's - Carryin' On (Hard Times and White Lines) The Hens - What She Sees In Him (Chicon) Adam Hood - She Don't Love Me (Somewhere in Between) (mic break) Lauren Morrow - I Don't Think About You at All (Lauren Morrow) The Gibson Brothers - Travelin' Day (Mockingbird) The Mulligan Brothers - Possession In G Minor (Songs For The Living And Otherwise) Carson McHone - Good Time Daddy Blues (Carousel) Whitey Morgan - What Am I Supposed to Do (Hard Times and White Lines) (mic break) Jonathan Byrd - Pickup Cowboy (Jonathan Byrd & the Pickup Cowboy) Edward David Anderson - Harmony (Chasing Butterflies) Blackberry Smoke - Seems So Far (Find A Light) Rosanne Cash - 8 Gods Of Harlem (She Remembers Everything) (mic break) Whitey Morgan - Fiddler’s Inn (Hard Times and White Lines) Carson McHone - Spider Song (Carousel)