Great idea but . . .
The Delite Rancher | Phoenix, Arizona | 05/18/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Long before The Pine Valley Cosmonauts Saluted the Majesty of Bob Wills (1998), they ran through the Johnny Cash song book. The music here is somewhere between rock and folk-rock, adorned with Jon Langford's distinctively British vocals. To appreciate this disc, the listener will have to move beyond the idea that Johnny Cash's music only works when rendered as Americana. This is the Man in Black's music as one would expect it to be played in a rowdy English punk bar. Traditionalists may be turned off by such an interpretation, but the more daring may find this refreshing. Indeed, this Pine Valley Cosmonauts tribute may appeal those who've always enjoyed Johnny's songs but disliked the twang.
This out-of-print recording is almost impossible to find. I contacted Bloodshot Records and not only do they no longer have the masters (no re-issue), nobody at headquarters even owns a personal copy. Being a devotee of Johnny Cash and Jon Langford, I sought this recording for years as a holy grail CD. After finally locating a copy, I have to admit that the music is lukewarm. Some of the songs work better than others. It's a good disc but one that doesn't beckon to be played often. While "Misery Loves Company: The Dark and Lonely World of Johnny Cash" deserves to be in-print, it also isn't worth $80.00 (the asking price for the least expensive used copy at the time of review). Thus for the potential listener, this purchase is in purgatory: there isn't enough interest for it to go back in-print and it's not worth the out-of-print price. "Misery Loves Company" is worth listening to but only if you can trade/download/torrent a copy or buy it from somebody who doesn't know what it's really worth."