Blood, Sweat & Tears

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (17 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 29:33

Write a Review2 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

One of his quintessential Columbia albums

KET

If I were to make a Top 5 list of Johnny Cash's most-enduring album releases, this record would make the cut easily. From the choice of material, the generally tasteful production, and Cash's excellent readings of working man classics like "Busted", "Chain Gang", and "Nine Pound Hammer" are very engaging. And I love the way he hits the low notes on "Roughneck". Classic!

user avatar

Good !

fortyfives

Not one of his strongest albums, but still good. One of the early concept albums

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

Icon: Johnny Cash

By John Morthland

Johnny Cash has the simplest and most recognizable sound imaginable - and yet the Man in Black managed to create one of the most diverse, surprising catalogs in American music. From 1955, when he first signed with Sun Records, until 1994, when he made his first album with producer Rick Rubin, the trademark Cash boom-chicka sound of acoustic and electric guitar, electric bass and his own rich baritone voice - occasionally augmented by strings and… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Where Ride This Train was about railroads and how they shaped America, Blood, Sweat and Tears is not only about the folklore of trains, it’s about the fables of the American working man. That means there are classic ballads like “Casey Jones” and “The Legend of John Henry’s Hammer,” but also relatively recent blues like “Busted,” the field song “Pick a Bale of Cotton,” and the worker’s lament “Tell Him I’m Gone.” The delivery is plain, simple, and never overly sentimental, but the thing that makes the record really work is the fact that the album consists almost entirely of first-rate material, without much of the unintentionally corny history lessons that weigh down most of Johnny Cash’s Americana records. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »