from the album Johnny Cash with His Hot and Blue Guitar!
B-side
"So Doggone Lonesome"
Released
December 15, 1955
Recorded
July 30, 1955
Studio
Sun (Memphis, Tennessee)
Genre
Country
rockabilly
rock and roll
Length
2:50
Label
Sun
Songwriter(s)
Johnny Cash
Producer(s)
Sam Phillips
Johnny Cash singles chronology
"Hey, Porter" (1955)
"Folsom Prison Blues" (1955)
"I Walk the Line" (1956)
"Folsom Prison Blues" is a song by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash. Written in 1953,[1] it was first recorded and released as a single in 1955, and later included on his debut studio album Johnny Cash with His Hot and Blue Guitar! (1957), as the album's eleventh track. Borrowing liberally from Gordon Jenkins' 1953 song, "Crescent City Blues", the song combines elements from two popular folk styles, the train song and the prison song, both of which Cash continued to use for the rest of his career. It was one of Cash's signature songs. Additionally, this recording was included on the compilation album All Aboard the Blue Train (1962). In June 2014, Rolling Stone ranked it No. 51 on its list of the 100 greatest country songs of all time.[2]
Cash performed the song live to a crowd of inmates at Folsom State Prison in 1968 for his live album At Folsom Prison (1968), released through Columbia Records. This version became a No. 1 hit on the country music charts and reached No. 32 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the same year. This version also won the Grammy Award for Best Country Vocal Performance, Male, at the 11th Annual Grammy Awards in 1969.
^"The Real Story Behind Johnny Cash & Folsom Prison Blues". folsomcasharttrail.com. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
^"100 Greatest Country Songs of All Time". Rolling Stone. June 2014. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
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