Under Rubin's supervision, Cash recorded most of the album in his own Tennessee cabin or Rubin's home in Los Angeles, accompanied only by his guitar. This was a return to Cash's earliest recording style. His first producer,
Sam Phillips, had determined in the 1950s that Cash's voice was best suited to a stripped-down style and a three or four-piece ensemble. These groups were called the
Tennessee Two or Tennessee Three, depending on their personnel: Cash on vocals and guitar, backed with another guitarist and upright bass, and sometimes drums. Subsequent producers deviated from this style with more ornate backing; Cash disagreed with
Jack Clement in the 1960s when the producer tried to give Cash's songs a fashionable "twangy" feel and to add frills like orchestral
string sections and
barbershop quartet-style backup singers. In his autobiography, Cash wrote about his frustration with
Columbia Records in the 1970s and 1980s, due in part to creative disagreements, such as recording his vocals separately from the backing musicians. "Tennessee Stud" and "The Man Who Couldn't Cry" were recorded live at the
Viper Room, a
Sunset Strip,
Los Angeles nightclub owned at the time by
Johnny Depp. "
The Beast in Me" was written and originally recorded by Cash's former stepson-in-law
Nick Lowe. Rubin commissioned new songs from several musicians, two of which ended up on
American Recordings. "Down There By The Train" was a spiritual or gospel style song of redemption by
Tom Waits. "Thirteen" was a more ominous composition by
Glenn Danzig, whose heavy metal band had earlier worked with Rubin; Danzig wrote the song specifically for Cash in less than twenty minutes. Two songs on the album had been recorded by Cash previously: "Delia's Gone", for the 1962 album
The Sound of Johnny Cash and "Oh, Bury Me Not", for 1965's
Johnny Cash Sings the Ballads of the True West. The album cover was photographed while Cash was visiting Australia, at
Werribee near
Melbourne. ==Critical reception==