Product Details
Keep On The Sunny Side Her Li

Keep On The Sunny Side Her Li
June Carter Cash

List Price: CDN$ 32.99
Price: CDN$ 28.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

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Average customer review:
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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Keep On The Sunny Side
  2. Oh! Susannah
  3. Root, Hog Or Die
  4. Baby, It's Cold Outside
  5. Country Girl
  6. Foggy Mountain Top
  7. Fair And Tender Ladies
  8. He's Solid Gone
  9. Juke Box Blues
  10. No Swallerin' Place
  11. Love Oh Crazy Love
  12. He Went Slippin' Around
  13. Well I Guess I Told You
  14. Strange Woman
  15. The Heel
  16. How Did You Get Away From Me
  17. Tall Loverman
  18. Without A Love To Call My Own
  19. Ring Of Fire
  20. Keep On The Sunny Side

Disc 2:

  1. Jackson
  2. If I Were A Carpenter
  3. The Loving Gift
  4. A Good Man
  5. Ole Slewfoot
  6. Losin' You
  7. The Shadow Of A Lady
  8. Gatsby's Restaurant
  9. Once Before I Die
  10. The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore
  11. East Virginia Blues
  12. Gone
  13. Appalachian Pride
  14. I Love You Sweethart
  15. Another Broken Hearted Girl
  16. Song To John
  17. Far Side Banks Of Jordan
  18. Diamonds In The Rough
  19. Will The Circle Be Unbroken
  20. Keep On The Sunny Side

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #67309 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-02-04
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Best of
  • Dimensions: .30 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
After marrying him in 1968, June Carter was usually perceived as an adjunct to Johnny Cash. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. June was an all-stops-out entertainer: a goofy comedienne, a big-hearted actress who studied under Lee Strasberg, and a dynamic singer unequivocally rooted in tradition as the youngest member of the pioneering Carter family, but just as steadfastly living in the here and now. Finally, there's an album to prove it (two discs, actually, covering the years 1939-2003). To begin to perceive all she was capable of, check out the eternal sorrow of "Without a Love," the pop-folkish "He's Solid Gone," the hillbilly luncacy of "No Swallerin' Place," the rambunctious "Juke Box Blues," the bizarre exotica of "The Heel," the agility and effortless flow of "Tall Loverman," the anxious fessing-up of her own "Ring of Fire," her no-nonsense "Jackson" duet with Cash, and her strength of conviction in "Appalachian Pride"--as well as her way with traditional material from the Carters and others. June had pizzaz, mountain style. --John Morthland