"HURT" JOHNNY CASH (2002)

Each day in December, I’ll be reflecting back on a song from the 2000’s. The decade saw the return of post-punk and the popularization of folk music, all while some of music’s biggest acts gained their indie footing. Thankfully, it’s a period that I can look back at fondly without cringing. #31DaysOf2000sSongs

This is already the third time I’m featuring “Hurt” on Mental Jukebox. It’s one of my all-time favorite cover songs. When I think of all the great cover songs from the last 25 years, some of the best ones are adored and revered by the original writers and recording artists. Johnny Cash’s rendition of Nine Inch Nail’s “Hurt” is one of those songs. Of Cash’s rendition, NIN frontman Trent Reznor famously said, “That song isn’t mine anymore.” The crazy thing is it’s true.

Cash elevated “Hurt” into the stratosphere. Powerful. Gripping. Even more haunting than the original, which seems like an impossible task, as Nine Inch Nails already created a masterpiece with the original. Recorded the year before he died, this was like Cash’s swan song. There’s even a faint percussion element in the background of the recording that sounds like a clock ticking. Time was literally passing by. The days were numbered for Cash. The most impressive thing about the cover is that he took emotions and thoughts so deeply personal to Reznor and made them his own. Toward the end of his life, this recording represents one of Johnny Cash’s crowning achievements.

“What have I become? My sweetest friend, everyone I know goes away in the end.”