Not that I’m into velvet rope culture, but I was lucky enough to stroll the black carpet at the Beacon Theater premiere of the Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line last November. The stars arrived and the girls dialed girlfriends to deliver reports on celebrity style. I left the theater that night admiring the acting’s obvious superiority over a somewhat mediocre script, but I still couldn’t shake the notion that nobody could truly nail the Man in Black.

I was a bit of a Cash late-bloomer. Sure, I’d always known the hits, but not until the summer in the year of our lord 2000 did Johnny ever provide the musical backdrop for such a protracted period of time for me. All summer long Cash’s ruggedly pained vocals serenaded our perpetual season of darts. He’d shout “Hey, Porter” when I’d hit double 20 or lament the time he took a shot of cocaine and shot his woman down after a just-missed-19 single three.

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But the first time I heard his live performance at San Quentin, I got pretty geeked up. Part of me wanted to take a double shot of the manliest, dirtiest whiskey in the bar, smash a glass bottle on the table and stab the guy yappin’ at my lady right in the groin. Then I remembered I was a sheltered weakling from Lawn Gisland and my sudden confidence turned to envy of this man’s complete coolness.

I mention all this nonsense as a quasi-preface to this particular bit of town crying: A new, remastered two-CD, one-DVD Johnny Cash: At San Quentin set will be released to the masses later this month, and we’re offering a free copy to one lucky reader of this post. That’s right, one of youse can win the three-disc package as part of our first ever Everybody Wins When I Plug Something And In Return They Offer Me Free Shit To Give Away contest.

Some blogs pick winners at random and some like to throw out trivia, but I’d like to subjectively choose a commenter that deserves it based on their response to this question: If you were locked away in a pound-me-in-the-ass state prison for the rest of your living days, what individual musician or band would you least want swinging by the clink to provide a glimmer of hope to you and your fellow inmates? And like we’re back in grade school, explain your reasoning and show your work.

Respond early, respond often — the contest ends at midnight next Sunday evening, and a winner will be announced Monday, November 13th at a signing ceremony in the White House Roosevelt Room with oversized balloons and a bunch of fancy pens. Remember to leave an e-mail address at the bottom of your comment, and make sure to check back and see if you win the fuckin’ thing.

Read on after the jump for some samples from the release and a full track and band listing from this legendary follow-up to At Folsom Prison

Stream the title track and one of Johnny’s classics:

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JOHNNY CASH – AT SAN QUENTIN: LEGACY EDITION
(recorded Feb. 24, 1969; originally issued June 1969)

Disc One:

Carl Perkins

1. * Blue Suede Shoes

The Statler Brothers

2. * Flowers On The Wall

The Carter Family

3. * The Last Thing On My Mind

June Carter Cash

4. * June Carter Cash talks to the audience
5. * Wildwood Flower

Johnny Cash

6. # Big River
7. # I Still Miss Someone
8. Wreck Of The Old 97
9. I Walk The Line
10. * Medley: The Long Black Veil/Give My Love To Rose
11. Folsom Prison Blues
12. * Orange Blossom Special

Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash

13. * Jackson
14. Darlin’ Companion

The Carter Family

15. * Break My Mind

Johnny Cash

16. # I Don’t Know Where I’m Bound
17. Starkville City Jail

Disc Two:

Johnny Cash

1. San Quentin
2. San Quentin
3. Wanted Man

Carl Perkins

4. * Restless

Johnny Cash

5. A Boy Named Sue
6. * Blistered
7. (There’ll Be) Peace In The Valley

Carl Perkins

8. * The Outside Looking In

The Statler Brothers

9. * Less Of Me

Johnny Cash with the Carter Family

10. # Ring Of Fire

Johnny Cash with the Carter Family, the Statler Brothers, and Carl Perkins

11. # He Turned The Water Into Wine
12. # Daddy Sang Bass
13. # The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago
14. # Closing medley: Folsom Prison Blues/I Walk The Line/Ring of Fire/The Rebel-Johnny Yuma

# indicates track restored on 2000 expanded edition.
* indicates previously unissued track.

Disc Three (DVD): Johnny Cash – In San Quentin

  • Original 1969 documentary produced by Granada TV in the U.K. Running time: approx. 60 minutes. Produced for reissue by Michael B. Borofsky.

Musicians:

Johnny Cash – vocal, guitar
June Carter Cash – vocal
Marshall Grant – bass
W.S. Holland – drums
Carl Perkins – electric guitar, vocal
Bob Wootton – electric guitar
The Carter Family (Mother Maybelle, Helen and Anita) – vocals, guitars
The Statler Brothers (Harold Reid, Don Reed, Phil Balsley, Lew Dewitt) – vocals

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