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WSWS : Arts
Review : Obituary
Johnny Cash: a timeless voice of country music
By Richard Phillips
2 October 2003
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The death of singer/songwriter Johnny Cash aged 71 on September
12 marks the passing of a significant figure in post-World War
II American country music. Cash was a complex man and there was
something quintessential about his music and how it reflected
the times in which he lived.
While Johnny Cash was not a great musical technician, his sound
was unforgettableunmistakable bass-baritone voice, a flexible
blend of country, rock n roll and folk music, and
a willingness to explore themes that many other popular musicians
of his generation were not prepared to touch.
Cash was deeply religious and remained close friends with figures
like firebrand preacher Reverend Billy Graham for much of his
life. Not a few US presidents, including Richard Nixon, claimed
him as their own. At the same time Cash unapologetically identified
with the most downtrodden and oppressed, expressing his opposition
to US prison policies and the plight of Native Americans, and
constantly searching musically for ways to give voice to their
hopes and concerns.
While television and much of Hollywood were presenting their
sanitised versions of family life and the American dream during
the late 1950s and 60s, Cash was exploring divorce, murder and
other real-life issues regarded as taboo by official
opinion makers.
John R. Cash was born the fourth of five children
in Kingsland, Arkansas on February 26, 1932. His father Ray was
a World War I veteran who worked in the cotton mills and on the
railroad during the Great Depression, before moving with his wife
Carrie and family to Dyess, a New Deal cotton-farming project
in the Mississippi delta. In 1937 the young family had to temporarily
abandon their property when major flooding devastated the area.
Cash, who began writing songs at the age of 12, often talked
about how these difficult years influenced and shaped his musical
approach and social outlookin particular, the old folk songs
and religious tunes sung by his mother, his older brothers
band, the Dixie Rhythm Ramblers, and country music from local
radio stations.
On graduating from high school in 1950, John R. Cash, like
hundreds of young men from Americas southern states, headed
north in search of a job and a better future. He worked in a Michigan
auto plant for a short period before deciding to enlist in the
US air force. After a four-year stint in Germany, during which
he bought his first guitar and began writing songs, Cash returned
to the US and left the military. He moved to Memphis, birthplace
of rockabilly, an earthy blend of country music, bluegrass, blues,
gospel and swing jazz, hoping to break into the local music scene.
Cash took a job as an electrical goods salesman and enrolled
in a radio announcers course. He met guitarist Luther Perkins
and bass player Marshall Grant (later known as the Tennessee Two)
and the three began performing gospel music and other songs on
the radio and in local bars.
Cash contacted Sam Phillips, the owner and artistic driving
force of Sun Records in Memphis, and secured an audition. Sun
Records was a musical melting pot. Its rockabilly sound was characterised
by simple hard-driving rhythms and no-holds-barred emotional performances
from singers. Although production techniques were minimalist,
Phillips used tape-delay echo to give depth and drama to his recordings.
Phillips, who had just discovered Elvis Presley and produced
his groundbreaking Thats Alright Mama, was not
impressed with Cashs gospel singing efforts. But after hearing
the 23-year-olds Hey Porter, a rocking song
about a young worker travelling by train back home to the South,
he offered Cash a contract. The song was released in June 1955
as the B-side to Cry, Cry, Cry and John R. Cash, renamed
Johnny Cash by Phillips, began his extraordinary 48-year recording
career. Cashs sound in these years is infused with the confidence
of a booming post-WWII America and the emergence of a young and
restless working class.
Cash toured as an opening act for Presley during 1955 and performed
on the Louisiana Hayride radio show. Over the next 18 months he
released a string of hit records, including Folsom Prison
Blues, I Walk the Line, Get Rhythm
and Big River. He appeared at the Grand Ol Opry and
participated in the Million Dollar Quartet recording session with
Carl Perkins, Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis.
Cash wanted to follow his first LPJohnny Cash With
His Hot & Blue Guitarwith a gospel album. But Phillips
disagreed and the two clashed over finance. The young performer
moved on to Columbia Records where he recorded numerous top-selling
singles, including Dont Take Your Guns to Town
and Ring of Fire, written by June Carter and Merle
Kilgore. With the growing popularity of the American folk music
scene, Cash recorded a number of concept albumsRide
this Train (1960) on the railroads; Blood Sweat and Tears
(1963) about American workers; Bitter Tears: Ballads of the
American Indians (1964); and Ballads of the True West
(1965).
The eight-song Bitter Tears album exposed the plight
of Native Americans and included five compositions by Indian singer/songwriter
Peter Lafarge, including The Ballad of Ira Hayes.
When radio stations refused to broadcast Ira Hayes,
which was released as a single, Cash took out a full-page ad in
Billboard demanding disk jockeys play the record. The song
tells the tragic story of a proud Native American who enlists
in the US military and is decorated for heroism during WWII. Returning
to the US, Hayes war medals count for little in the face
of anti-Indian racism and he dies a poverty-stricken alcoholic.
From his time at Sun Records to the years spent with Columbia
(1958 to 1983), Cash maintained a gruelling work schedule and
toured most of the year. This took a heavy personal and psychological
toll. He became dependent on amphetamines in the early 60s, was
briefly jailed for transporting drugs across the US border from
Mexico in October 1965 and a year later his first wife Vivian
filed for divorce. However, with the assistance of June Carter,
Cash eventually overcame the addiction. He married June in 1968,
establishing a direct personal and musical link to the famous
Carter family, who, together with Jimmie Rodgers, were Americas
first country music stars.
Prison concerts
The height of Cashs fame occurred in the late 1960s,
particularly after the release of At Folsom Prison (1968)
and At San Quentin (1969). These legendary live recordings
sold millions in the US and internationally.
Cash performed in many prison concertshis first was in
1957 at Huntsville Texas State Prison and he appeared on four
separate occasions at Folsom. But it took him six years before
he was able to persuade Columbia to record a live album. The results
were astonishing.
Cash has an extraordinary rapport with the 2,000-strong audience
and the concert is intense, rebellious and infused with dark gritty
humour. The sound is unmistakable: Cashs booming voice,
backed by a simple melody line, and the ubiquitous boom-chicka-boom
rail engine rhythm. Folsom Prison Blues, which was
released as a single, remained at the top of the country and pop
charts for weeks, as did A Boy Named Sue, which was
taken from the San Quentin album.
These concerts were held against the background of the Civil
Rights movement, mass anti-Vietnam War protests and growing calls
for social reform. While Cash makes no references to these issues,
the albums give a flavour of the rebellious social climate.
Cash broadened the base of American country music internationally
and his concerts drew capacity audiences. In May 1969, for example,
over 26,000 attended a Cash performance in Detroit, at that point
the largest-ever number for a country music concert. He hosted
his own show on ABC-TV from 1969 to 1971 and had small parts in
four feature films and seven television dramas. His television
program introduced a wide range of young musicians, including
Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Stevie Wonder, Linda Ronstadt
and numerous others outside the traditional country music scene.
Cash maintained a close relationship with Dylan and appeared on
his Nashville Skyline (1968), writing the albums
liner notes.
It was at this time that Cash decided to visit Vietnam and
entertain the US troops. Within days of his arrival in Saigon,
he began to realise the horrors and injustices being perpetrated
in the small country. On return, he spoke out against the war
and wrote and recorded Singing in Vietnam Talking Blues,
which recounts his experiences in the war-ravaged country and
the quagmire facing US forces.
As far as the war in Vietnam is concerned, he later
commented, that war just made me sick. Im not supporting
that war or any other war... Maybe Vietnam has taught us a hard
lesson to not be involved in foreign wars. Maybe thats the
lesson weve learned. I hope we have.
Cash recorded countless gospel songs and hymns during his long
career. These, however, failed to match the emotional intensity
of his dark and often sardonic tales of crime and passion. Much
of it was dull, forgettable or worse. Cash produced The Holy
Land in 1969, a collection of religious tunes, following a
trip to Israel, and two years later produced and financed a film,
The Gospel Road, about the life of Christ. He often lapsed
into revivalist mode and his Man in Black album even included
a cameo appearance from Reverend Billy Graham.
Record sales for Cash declined during the late 1970s and for
most of the next decade. The political radicalisation that formed
the backdrop to his success during the 1960s had waned and a new
climate emerged. Disco music dominated the airwaves and Nashville
developed its bland country-pop or crossover sound.
Few of the executives running the industry were interested in
Cashs blunt and often dark ballads.
Attempts to gloss up his work with string accompaniments and
other techniques were disastrous. Cash, who was writing less,
went along with much of this, but was far from happy. If
I hear the word demographics one more time, Ill puke,
he told the media.
Cash toured with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson
in the mid-1980s. Known as The Highwaymen, they recorded a commercially
successful but unexciting album in 1985 and another in 1992. Cash
left Columbia records in 1983 and moved to Mercury, but clashed
with producers over the musical direction they wanted him to take.
While Cashs musical influences lay deep within the roots
of American country music, he was always open to new musical trends.
In the mid-1980s he began to take an interest in heavy metal music,
attending concerts by Metallica, Iron Maiden and Ozzy Osbourne,
and spoke out against various attempts to censor rock music lyrics.
In 1987 he declared that it was presumptuous that
people his age thought they could do something toward raisin
their kids right by censoring three minutes of what they heard
in a days dialogue. If a parent hasnt
been close enough to his kids to let them make their own decisions,
he continued, then its too late by the time theyre
ready to rock n roll.
Rediscovered
In the early 90s Cash was discovered by a new generation
of musicians and fans, who admired his defiant early work and
iconic image. While his trademark black attire infatuated some,
Cashs clothing was neither a fashion statement nor a marketing
gimmick, but an expression of his genuine identification with
the poor and those on the wrong side of the law. As his Man
in Black song explained:
I wear black for the poor and the beaten down
Living in the hopeless, hungry side of town
I wear it for the prisoner who has long paid for his crime...
Id love to wear a rainbow every day
And tell the world that everythings OK
But Ill try to carry off a little darkness on my back
Till things are brighter, Im the Man In Black.
In 1993 Cash joined Rick Rubins American Records and
began the last phase of his career. Rubin, who founded the Def
Jam label (later known as American Records) and had made his name
producing punk rock, rap and hip-hop groups, gave Cash the artistic
freedom and assistance he needed.
This partnership gave rise to four interesting albums: American
Recordings; Unchained; American III: Solitary Man;
and American IV: The Man Comes Around. These contain a
diverse and intelligent range of songstraditional and contemporary
folk, ballads, religious tunes, pop songs, rock, alternative metal
and some of Cashs early classics. The sparse instrumentation,
in most cases just Cash and a guitar, is effective and on occasions
profoundly moving. His versions of Nine Inch Nails Hurt,
about drug addiction, and Depeche Modes Personal Jesus
on American IV are particularly memorable.
The commercial and artistic success of these albums, however,
failed to generate any interest from mainstream country radio
in the US. Disk jockeys in these outlets studiously ignored Cash,
refusing to play his new material.
While Cashs health began to seriously declinehe
suffered from diabetes, Parkinsons disease and various respiratory
ailmentshe continued to work until the end, collecting music
awards and even MTV video prizes. The death of June Carter after
heart surgery in May this year hit him hard. But Cash sought solace
in the studio, recording scores of songs in the months before
his death.
Politically Cash was a contradictory figurean unabashed
patriot, who recorded numerous songs in this vein, but who was
acutely sensitive to social inequality. As he admitted to one
interviewer in 1969: I dont know how patriotic Id
be if I was poor and hungry.
While Cash was hailed by various politiciansRepublican
and Democrat alikehe never forgot his rural working class
origins and refused to pull a punch on any social issue close
to his heart. Earlier this year, in the lead up to the US-led
war against Iraq, he told his singer/songwriter daughter Rosanne
to convey his opposition to the impending invasion to audiences
at her concerts.
At Cashs funeral, longtime friend Kris Kristofferson
described him as a holy terror... a dark and dangerous force
of nature that also stood for mercy and justice for his fellow
human beings.
In his 1971 song Pilgrim: Chapter 33, partly inspired
by Cash, Kristofferson wrote: Hes a poet, hes
a picker... a pilgrim and a preacher, and a problem when hes
stoned. Hes a walkin contradiction, partly truth and
partly fiction, takin evry wrong direction on his
lonely way back home.
* * *
Cash sold more than 50 million records and recorded over 45
albums during his career. For those not familiar with his work,
the following list is an introduction to his best recordings.
Johnny Cash: The Sun Years, Rhino Records
Man in Black: Greatest Hits, Columbia
At Folsom Prison, Columbia
At San Quentin Columbia
American Recordings, Sony
American Recordings IV: The Man Comes Around, Sony
See Also:
Dave Van Ronk, folk
and blues artist, dead at 65
[14 February 2002]
Country music singer
Hank Snow dead at 85
[31 December 1999]
The heart
and soul of country music is the experiences of ordinary people
An interview with Dale Watson
[16 December 1999]
Iris DeMent:
Songwriter steeped in the heritage of American country and traditional
music
[18 April 1998]
"The
poor are treated like enemies"
An interview with Iris DeMent
[18 April 1998]
The country boogie-woogie of Sleepy LaBeef
[16 December 1996]
Music should not be a selfish thing
An interview with Sleepy LaBeef
[16 December 1996]
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