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Legendary
Country Music Singer
Johnny Cash
February 26, 1932 - September 12,
2003
Johnny
Cash was one of the most imposing and influential figures
in post-World War II country music. With his deep, resonant
baritone and spare, percussive guitar, he had a basic,
distinctive sound. Cash didn't sound like Nashville, nor
did he sound like honky tonk or rock & roll. He created
his own subgenre, falling halfway between the blunt emotional
honesty of folk, the rebelliousness of rock & roll,
and the worldweariness of country. Cash's career coincided
with the birth of rock & roll, and his rebellious
attitude and simple, direct musical attack shared a lot
of similarities with rock. However, there was a deep sense
of history -- as he would later illustrate with his series
of historical albums -- that kept him forever tied with
country. And he was one of country music's biggest stars
of the '50s and '60s, scoring well over 100 hit singles.
Johnny
Cash was born and raised in Arkansas, moving to Dyess
when he was three. By the time he was 12 years old, Cash
had begun writing his own songs. Johnny was inspired by
the country songs he had heard on the radio. While he
was in high school, he sang on the Arkansas radio station
KLCN. Johnny Cash graduated from college in 1950, moving
to Detroit to work in an auto factory for a brief while.
With the outbreak of the Korean War, he enlisted in the
Air Force. While he was in the Air Force, Cash bought
his first guitar and taught himself to play. He began
writing songs in earnest, including "Folsom Prison
Blues." Cash left the Air Force in 1954, married
a Texas woman named Vivian Leberto, and moved to Memphis,
where he took a radio announcing course at a broadcasting
school on the GI Bill. During the evenings, he played
country music in a trio that also consisted of guitarist
Luther Perkins and bassist Marshall Grant. The trio occasionally
played for free on a local radio station, KWEM, and tried
to secure gigs and an audition at Sun Records.
Cash
finally landed an audition with Sun Records and its founder,
Sam Phillips, in 1955. Initially, Cash presented himself
as a gospel singer, but Phillips turned him down. Phillips
asked him to come back with something more commercial.
Cash returned with "Hey Porter," which immediately
caught Phillips's ear. Soon, Cash released "Cry Cry
Cry" / "Hey Porter" as his debut single
for Sun. On the single, Phillips billed Cash as "Johnny"
which upset the singer, because he felt it sounded too
young; the record producer also dubbed Perkins and Grant
the Tennessee Two. "Cry Cry Cry" became a success
upon its release in 1955, entering the country charts
at number 14 and leading to a spot on the Louisiana Hayride,
where he stayed for nearly a year. A second single, "Folsom
Prison Blues," reached the country Top Five in early
1956 and its follow-up, "I Walk the Line," was
number one for six weeks and crossed over into the pop
Top 20.
Johnny
Cash had an equally successful year in 1957, scoring several
Top Ten country hits including the Top 15 "Give My
Love to Rose." Cash also made his Grand Ole Opry
debut that year, appearing all in black where the other
performers were decked out in flamboyant, rhinestone-studded
outfits. Eventually, he earned the nickname of "The
Man in Black." Cash became the first Sun artist to
release a long-playing album in November of 1957, when
Johnny Cash with His Hot and Blue Guitar hit the stores.
Cash's success continued to roll throughout 1958, as he
earned his biggest hit, "Ballad of a Teenage Queen"
(number one for ten weeks), as well another number one
single, "Guess Things Happen That Way." For
most of 1958, Cash attempted to record a gospel album,
but Sun refused to allow him to record one. Sun also was
unwilling to increase Cash's record royalities. Both of
these were deciding factors in the vocalist's decision
to sign with Columbia Records in 1958. By the end of the
year, he had released his first single for the label,
"All Over Again," which became another Top Five
success. Sun continued to release singles and albums of
unissued Cash material into the '60s.
"Don't
Take Your Guns to Town," Cash's second single for
Columbia, was one of his biggest hits, reaching thee top
of the country charts and crossing over into the pop charts
in the beginning of 1959. Throughout that year, Columbia
and Sun singles vied for the top of the charts. Generally,
the Columbia releases -- "Frankie's Man Johnny,"
"I Got Stripes," and "Five Feet High and
Rising" --fared better than the Sun singles, but
"Luther Played the Boogie" did climb into the
Top Ten. That same year, Cash had the chance to make his
gospel record -- Hymns by Johnny Cash -- which kicked
off a series of thematic albums that ran into the '70s.
The
Tennessee Two became the Tennessee Three in 1960 with
the addition of drummer W.S. Holland. Though he was continuing
to have hits, the relentless pace of his career was beginning
to take toll on Cash. In 1959, he had begun taking amphetamines
to help him get through his schedule of nearly 300 shows
a year. By 1961, his drug intake had increased dramatically
and his work was affected, which is reflected by a declining
number of hit singles and albums. By 1963, he had moved
to New York, leaving his family behind. He was running
into trouble with the law, most notably for starting a
forest fire out West.
June
Carter -- who was the wife of one of Cash's drinking buddies,
Carl Smith -- would provide Cash with his return to the
top of the charts with "Ring of Fire," which
she co-wrote with Merle Kilgore. "Ring of Fire"
spent seven weeks on the top of the charts and was a Top
20 pop hit. Cash continued his success in 1964, as "Understand
Your Man" became a number one hit. However, Cash's
comeback was shortlived, as he sank further into addiction
and his hit singles arrived sporadically. Cash was arrested
in El Paso for attempting to smuggle amphetamines into
the country through his guitar case in 1965. That same
year, the Grand Ole Opry refused to have him perform and
he wrecked the establishment's footlights. In 1966, his
wife Vivian filed for divorce. After the divorce, Cash
moved to Nashville. At first, he was as destructive as
he ever had been, but he became close friends with June
Carter, who had divorced Carl Smith. With Carter's help,
he was able to shake his addictions; she also converted
Cash to fundamentalist Christianity. His career began
to bounce back as "Jackson" and "Rosanna's
Going Wild" became Top Three hits. Early in 1968,
Cash proposed marriage to Carter during a concert; the
pair were married in the spring of 1968.
In
1968, Johnny Cash recorded and released his most popular
album, Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison. Recorded during a
prison concert, the album spawned the number one country
hit "Folsom Prison Blues," which also crossed
over into the pop charts. By the end of the year, the
record had gone gold. The following year, he released
a sequel, Johnny Cash at San Quentin, which had his only
Top Ten pop single, "A Boy Named Sue," which
peaked at number three; it also hit number one on the
country charts. Johnny Cash guested on Bob Dylan's 1969
country-rock album, Nashville Skyline. Dylan returned
the favor by appearing on the first episode of The Johnny
Cash Show, the singer's television program for ABC. The
Johnny Cash Show ran for two years, between 1969 and 1971.
Johnny
Cash was reaching a second peak of popularity in 1970.
In addition to his television show, he performed for President
Richard Nixon at the White House, acted with Kirk Douglas
in The Gunfight, sang with John Willams and the Boston
Pops Orchestra, and he was the subject of a documentary
film. His record sales were equally healthy, as "Sunday
Morning Coming Down" and "Flesh and Blood"
were number one hits. Throughout 1971, Cash continued
to have hits, including the Top Three "Man in Black."
Both Cash and Carter became more socially active in the
early '70s, campaigning for the civic rights of Native
Americans and prisoners, as well as frequently working
with Billy Graham.
In
the mid-'70s, Cash's presence on the country charts began
to decline, but he continued to have a series of minor
hits and the occasional chart topper like 1976's "One
Piece at a Time," or Top Ten hits like the Waylon
Jennings duet "There Ain't No Good Chain Gang"
and "(Ghost) Riders in the Sky." Man in Black,
Johnny Cash's autobiography, was published in 1975. In
1980, Johnny Cash became the youngest inductee to the
Country Music Hall of Fame. However, the '80s were a rough
time for Cash, as his record sales continued to decline
and he ran into trouble with Columbia. Cash, Carl Perkins,
and Jerry Lee Lewis teamed up to record The Survivors
in 1982, which was a mild success. The Highwaymen -- a
band featuring Cash, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and
Kris Kristofferson -- released their first album in 1985,
which was also moderately successful. The following year,
Cash and Columbia Records ended their relationship and
he signed with Mercury Nashville. The new label didn't
prove to be a success, as the company and the singer fought
over stylistic direction. Furthermore, country radio had
begun to favor more contemporary artists, and Cash soon
found himself shut out of the charts. Nevertheless, he
continued to be a popular concert performer.
The
Highwaymen recorded a second album in 1992 and it was
more commercially successful than any of Cash's Mercury
records. Around that time, his contract with Mercury ended.
In 1993, he signed a contract with American Records. His
first album for the label, American Recordings, was produced
by the label's founder, Rick Rubin, and was a stark, acoustic
collection of songs. American Recordings, while not a
blockbuster success, revived his career critically and
brought him in touch with a younger, rock-oriented audience.
In 1995, the Highwaymen released their third album, The
Road Goes on Forever. The following year, Johnny Cash
released his second album for American Records, Unchained,
which featured support from Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers.
His VH-1 Storytellers outing was released in 1998, and
in the spring of 2000 Cash compiled Love, God, Murder,
a three-disc retrospective focusing on the major songwriting
themes dominant throughout his career. The new studio
album American III: Solitary Man appeared later that year.
-- Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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