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Hello im johnny cash
Those four words resonated throughout the world much as "In God We Trust" and other familiar phrases which have stood the test of time.
Yet the introduction was never any more necessary than telling someone the name of the Mona Lisa when viewing the painting. Johnny Cash has been a household name for more than most people can remember, and his career spanned nearly five decades.
Few artists in history ever enjoyed the successful career Cash did. Many people describe him as a mythical, larger than life figure. Others describe him as one of the greatest recording artists of all time.
Yet there is no one description which adequately fits The Man In Black. He was a complex, unpredictable, ball of talent and energy that no one has ever been able to pigeonhole or categorize.
Johnny Cash's legacy will live on forever. His music, integrity and deeds will survive time itself. His contributions to mankind are immeasurable. A man loved by millions the world over; he will be deeply missed by all.
He has recorded more than 1,500 songs and they can be found on about 500 albums, counting only American and European releases.
More of his albums (45) remain in print today than most artists ever make.
He is the youngest person ever chosen for the Country Music Hall of Fame and the only performer ever selected for the Country and Rock Music Hall of Fame, until 1998, when Elvis Presley was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
He has placed 48 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop charts, about the same number as the Rolling Stones and the Beach Boys.
He has tallied more Pop hit singles than Barbra Streisand, Michael Jackson (including his Jackson 5 hits), the Four Seasons, David Bowie, the Supremes, Elton John, Billy Joel, Kenny Rogers, the combined totals of Art Garfunkel, Paul Simon and Simon & Garfunkel, Martin Gaye, B.B. King, Roy Orbison, Kool & the Gang, Linda Ronstadt. Diana Ross, the combined total of all of the Osmond Family, Jerry Lee Lewis and the combined total of Lionel Richie and the Commodores.
He has won 11 Grammys, the most recent include the 1999 Lifetime Achievement Award and the 2002 shared Grammy for Best Country Album. Two of his Grammys came for writing liner notes, for his At Folsom Prison album and Bob Dylan's Nashville Skyline record.
Cash's 1987 Grammy came through his participation in The Class Of '55 recordings with the late Roy Orbison, Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis. The project represented a rebirth of "The Million Dollar Quartet" recordings featuring Cash, Perkins, Lewis and the late Elvis Presley and, interestingly enough, it predated Orbison's participation in The Traveling Wilburys.
He has had chart success as a solo artist, as part of a duet, as the leader of a trio, and as a part of the award-winning Highwayman quartet.
Long before the term "concept album" was coined, Cash created such thematically unified albums Ride This Train (1960), Blood, Sweat, & Tears (1963), Bitter Tears (1964). and Johnny Cash Sings Ballads Of The True West (1965).
People forget just how hot Johnny Cash was, when his sales career was at its zenith. In the fall of 1969, Johnny Cash was the hottest act in the world, selling around 250,000 albums per month of his Folsom Prison and San Quentin albums. At that time, he was even outselling the Beatles.
As Rich Kinezie observed in Country Music magazine 10 years ago, Cash "strengthened the bonds between folk and country music so that both sides saw their similarities as well as their differences. He helped to liberalize Nashville so that it could accept the unconventional and the controversial and he did as much as anyone to make the 'outlaw' phenomenon possible."
As host of The Johnny Cash Show on ABC-TV (1969-1971), he served up 60 hours of prime-time TV, which featured performers like Bob Dylan, Stevie Wonder, Linda Ronstadt, Ray Charles, Neil Young, James Taylor, Neil Diamond, Joni Mitchell, Gordon Lightfoot, Kenny Rogers, Roy Orbison, Hank Williams Jr., Dennis Hopper, Judy Collins, Charley Pride, the Oak Ridge Boys, Patti Page and Merle Haggard, most rarely seen on TV back then.
His 1975 autobiography Man in Black has so far sold around 1.5 million copies, about 300,000 in hardcover.
He is one of the very few people in the history of music to sell more than 50 million records.
He has placed at least two singles on the Country charts for 38 consecutive years, including an amazing 25 hits between 1958 and 1960.
He produced and co-scripted a movie about the life of Jesus, Gospel Road, and filmed it in Israel. The film was distributed by Billy Graham's organization and is still in great demand today.
He has starred in four additional theatrical films including one of the last great westerns, A Gunfight, with Kirk Douglas. In addition, he has been a featured star in seven TV movies including The Pride Of Jessee Hallam, a hard-hitting, poignant story of one man's struggle against illiteracy. The show has proven to be a valuable tool in the battle against illiteracy.
He has posted over 130 hits on the Billboard Country singles chart, more than anyone in history, except George Jones. (Discounting duets by both men, Cash's total exceeds Jones.)
He has won over two dozen songwriting awards from BMI; two of his songs, Folsom Prison Blues and I Walk The Line have earned million-performance citations from BMI.
Over a hundred acts have recorded Cash's I Walk The Line.
He has toured extensively for 38 years on a scope far beyond the normal tour bus routine of U.S. honky-tonks, state fairs, and showrooms. Hundreds of thousands of fans in Japan, Australia, New Zealand and throughout Europe have seen The Johnny Cash Show. He has toured in Vietnam and throughout the U.S. State Department, he has appeared in concert in many Eastern European nations such as Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia.
He has fathered four daughters (Rosanne, Tara, Cindy and Kathy) and a son (John Carter), all of whom have performed with him at one time or another. In addition, Rosanne has become one of our country music's top singer-songwriters.
Cash's influence on younger musicians in the Rock/Pop field is as strong a it was in the 60's: A group of European musicians last year released Til Things Get Brighter, an album 100% composed of Johnny Cash covers by such acts as Michelle Shocked and Marc Almond. In addition, fresh recordings of Cash classics like I Still Miss Someone and Big River have recently been made by Stevie Nicks and the Beat Farmers. He is a featured guest soloist on U-2's album ZOOROPA.
His last three albums earned him Grammy Awards: American Recordings Best Folk Album 1994 Unchained - Best Country Album 1998 and Solitary Man - Best Country Male Vocal Performance 2000. Cash received the most coveted of Grammy award for Lifetime Achievement in 1999.
Cash was honored with a Kennedy Center Award in December of 1996.
Despite country music stations refusing to play his newer music, Cash and American Recordings were honored with Country Music Television-Europe's ..7 Video of the Year for Rusty Cage, and Playboy Magazine honored Cash with the 1998 Music Poll Winner "Hall of Fame" Award.
January 31, 2005
'HURT' VOTED BEST VIDEO OF ALL TIME
(from the UK Guardian)
Enough Britney and Jacko - the cream of the pop industry says the greatest music video of all time was made by a septuagenarian country singer facing his own mortality.
The video for 'Hurt', Johnny Cash's valedictory single recorded just six months before his death, shows a frail and ailing Cash at home, dressed in his usual black outfit, playing guitar and piano, interwoven with past footage of the 'Man in Black' in his heyday.
It proved a poignant elegy for the country music icon, who fought illness for the last decade of his life. He died from complications linked to diabetes in 2003, aged 71.
His posthumous triumph over the teen idols of the MTV generation comes in a poll of 31 pop stars, video directors, agents and journalists commissioned by mobile phone operator 3. The panel included Natasha Bedingfield, Björk, Tim Burgess of the Charlatans, Norman 'Fatboy Slim' Cook, Jamie Cullum, Tom Fletcher of McFly, Avril Lavigne, Mike 'the Streets' Skinner and Amy Winehouse.
The runner-up is the 14-minute horror film-style 1983 video for Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' with pioneering special effects. Third is another chiller, Aphex Twin's 1997 'Come to Daddy', which features a goblin screaming at a pensioner and a gang of children smashing up a London council estate.
Jackson is the only artist with two videos in the top 20, with the clip for 'Billie Jean' - also from Thriller - at number five.
The video for Fatboy Slim's 'Praise You', which topped a survey of MTV's British viewers in 2001, ranks 19th according to the industry panel. The oldest entry, at number 18, is Queen's 1975 hit 'Bohemian Rhapsody', credited by many with establishing the pop video as a major art form.
Cash recorded 1,500 songs on 45 solo albums and had 14 number one country hits over 50 years. The video for 'Hurt', a cover of a Nine Inch Nails song, forgoes the visual pyrotechnics of its rivals for the simplicity of moody lighting, Christian imagery and shots of the derelict House of Cash Museum. It also features his wife, June Carter Cash, who was to die a few months before her husband.
The director of the top video, Mark Romanek, who also directed the film One Hour Photo , said: 'Johnny's music has always been candid. I didn't want to make a phony video - I wanted to tell the truth.'
REM singer-songwriter Michael Stipe, who was a member of the judging panel, said it was 'just heartbreaking. Kudos to Mark Romanek for having the audacity and courage to do a video like that. The moment I saw it I thought, "Please don't let this be the last thing we know Johnny Cash for". Yet he made the song his own and the video is just devastating. And beautiful. It touched me in a really big way.'
Johnny Cash transcends all musical boundaries, and is one of the original outlaws.
Willie Nelson
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Johnny Cash has always been larger than life. A dark powerful spirit full of danger and excitement and wild, creative energy, who grew into one of the world's most beloved humans. Not just because he has stood up for the underdog and Native Americans, but because, like Muhammad Ali, his connection with people everywhere is a real two-way love story. It's a wonderful thing to see. William Blake said the proper worship of God was honoring his gifts in men. Johnny Cash is one of those rare, special humans in whose life and work we can glimpse the potential for beauty and grace within the human spirit.
I love you John, In the cold and holy darkness You were always shining brighter than a star God bless you, John For the love and joy you've given And the living inspiration that you are. (from "Good Morning John" by K. Kristofferson)
Kris Kristofferson
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I was in the prison band in San Quentin, when I first saw Johnny Cash. I was impressed with his ability to take five thousand convicts and steal the show away from a bunch of strippers. That's pretty hard to do. And he didn't even have his voice that day. Just lost his voice on New Year's Eve, and he came over and he played New Year's Day at San Quentin, 1959. He came out on stage and he didn't have on anything that you could call a uniform or anything. He had on a gray shirt, sleeves rolled up, and [his guitarist] Luther Perkins had on one of them pinstripe ties like Johnny Carson used to wear. I wasn't particularly a Johnny Cash fan and didn't particularly care about his records up until that time. I knew "I Walk The Line" but I just took it in stride and didn't give him any more credit than I would have anybody else. I was sitting there watching this whole tremendous show that went on, and I was looking forward to seeing Johnny Cash perform but he comes out and he's got no voice. And so he said 'I want to do the best I can,' but he can just barely whisper. But man, he turned it on, and he did the right moves, and the band backed him up, and maybe the Lord helped him. Prison is a good place to find out the truth, because them convicts won't lie, they ain't got no reason to give you any clout that you don't deserve. And we saw the truth that day.
Merle Haggard
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I am honored to say Johnny Cash is one of my best friends. He has always been there for me when I needed him in good times and in bad. Not only do I love his work I love the man. It is hard to believe Johnny Cash and I have reached 70! When I think of all the miles and roads we traveled I would never have imagined forty years ago we would still be around and doing what we love best; singing Country Music. Our friendship has weathered many storms and so have we. Love you Big Buddy!
From Little Pal,
George Jones
P.S. We don't need no rockin' chair!!!
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Dad, your childlike spirit and humor are what I love most about you. You have an unusual innocence for a man of seventy, as well as a severely wicked streak of the practical joker. You are a Baptist with the soul of a mystic, a farm boy with the heart of a great artist. You have been all things to me at some times, and one thing at all times: Father. Happy Birthday, Congratulations on a long and completely original career, and I love you.
Rosanne Cash
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When Rosanne and I first started living together we got an invitation to Jamaica where John has a house. So we flew from Los Angeles to Jamaica. I had a few drinks on the plane to screw up my courage because I was nervous since Rosanne and I decided we were going to sleep together in his house. We got there late in the day, and having shored up my bravado, I figured I better case out my territory from the start and told him our intentions to stay together. He just looked at me, fixed me with a stare and said, "Son, I don't know you well enough to miss you if you were gone." It just sobered me right up. And I thought, "What kind of arrogant fool am I," and decided to file that line away and use it one day. Cut right down, I asked " Where are you going to have me stay?"
Rodney Crowell
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I've been proud to know Johnny as a friend since The Sixties, and through the years I've been privileged to spend many happy hours with him and his wonderful family. His vocal style has always been one of the most distinctive and his songs and recordings are amongst some of the most memorable ever. Lots of love,
Paul McCartney
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Locusts and honey not since John The Baptist has there been a voice like that crying in the wilderness. The most male voice in Christendom. Every man knows he is a sissy compared to Johnny Cash. What most do not know is that this most mighty of men was once nearly slain by an emu. Fact. I know this because Johnny told me on a tour of his private zoo next to his property in Nashville. He wasn't joking, and neither am I when I tell you that I felt a lot better about myself as a man on hearing this. Pass it on.
Bono (U2)
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I'm proud to say that I worked with Johnny Cash, and when he came through the studio door for the first time it was like Moses himself had arrived. He is a character of truly biblical proportions, with a voice, all wailing freight trains and thundering prairies, like the landscape of his beloved America. Before I got to see it with my own eyes I had a picture of it through Johnny Cash's singing.
He has a soul as big as a continent, full of righteous anger mixed with human compassion. A true individual in a land founded on individuality. There will never be another like him, and he could have come from nowhere else.
The Edge (U2)
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Johnny Cash has been speaking to me for a long, long time. It's one of the sweetest voices in my mind. Even after the song is done you hear him, you see him standing up for what we need and love. He's always there, the tallest figure in the circle of integrity, the deepest voice when night comes down, and the bravest take on sanity in the midst of wild confusion. Thank you, sir. The generations will be listening.
Leonard Cohen
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In his music and his courtly manner, John Cash has always conveyed a feeling of family and community, and the people who have enjoyed his music have always instinctively felt those things about him.
To be a fan of John Cash is to have abiding faith in the power of an honest heart and artistically based on the ability to create one's own job. John Cash is an American original, uncompromised in his craft and incomparable in its execution. He makes you feel that he is playing solely to reach the best part of your spirit. In other words, he makes you feel the truth about him, about you and about us.
John Mellencamp
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When you see Johnny Cash, he's just larger than life. He's just an amazing man. You know, I can't say enough about him. To me, he just looks like he belongs on Mount Rushmore or something. It's like staring at Abraham Lincoln or something. It's just a real life legend in front of you, and a living legend. Johnny Cash is the Mount Rushmore of music.
Raul Malo
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When I was young, the album that first I remember of his is At Folsom Prison. My Dad loved that album so much, and we listened to that a lot when I was growing up. When I was a kid, it made me think of Cash as both a really tough guy, like a superhero, but also a very kind man. And the fact that my Dad liked him made it altogether cool.
Obviously, everyone knows about Johnny Cash's struggles and excesses. He's worked and played hard, and he's believed in things, and stood by them. I find that people who are flawed but humble, and care a great deal are somehow more admirable than a lot of the people that we tend to admire in our society--people who because of their personalities are vulnerable to the venom of self-righteous people. Johnny Cash is an example of that. He lives hard, and he's not hiding, or trying to show his shinier side.
Dave Matthews
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When Johnny Cash comes on the radio, no one changes the station. It's a voice, a name with a soul that cuts across all boundaries and it's a voice we all believe. Yours is a voice that speaks for the saints and the sinners--its like branch water for the soul. Long may you sing out Loud.
"I Don't Know Where I'm Bound" on Live At San Quentin will always touch me and the fact that a prisoner wrote the poem and you put it to music for him that night on stage for the first time...It was a real moment. for him and for us.
Tom Waits
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Dear Johnny, Thank you for your beautiful voice, songs, good looks and inspiration.
With love,
Chrissie Hynde
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I probably first heard one of his records around 1957, or somewhere around there. Lonesome Whistle Blow I think it was, a Hank Williams song. From where I was at my age, Johnny Cash was just great, so original. He had real, real stuff. He reminded me of Jimmy Reed; his music had that same stark reality about it. What he had going on in the early days was what other guys like Muddy Waters were doing. It was really roots music, but they conveyed it through electricity, and the judicial use of it. The music was so true to the roots and at the same time so modern. Another attraction for me was the way he slung his guitar so very low.
Keith Richards
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We've been friends a long time, going back to the early '80s. He's kind of both bigger than life, and a normal guy. He's so smart, and he really has looked at things and weighed them from many, many sides, and knows what he's talking about. He has such a vast amount of knowledge, especially of Native American culture and politics. The thing that I think shines through the strongest with John is that he's just so honest, and a great guy. His ability to take a song and make it his own is just uncanny. I heard him sing my song I Won't Back Down, and I just thought, God, he must have written that, because it never rang so true to me as when I heard him sing it.
Tom Petty
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My personal experience with John Cash centers around the late '70s/early '80s. At the time June's daughter, Carlene, was married to Nick Lowe. That's when I got to meet him.
Then when I recorded in Nashville in '81 with the Attractions, we were invited up to John and June's house, so we put on hour best clothes. We must've looked pretty rugged--or ragged. They didn't pass any comment on it. Just incredibly courteous and made us feel at home. They were so generous; they threw a huge southern banquet for us as friends of the family.
As a songwriter, even his recent records have a tremendous connection to his past. He reclaimed the sound of his earliest records, and even if he wasn't always writing them himself, he finds his own personality in other people's songs. There's nobody remotely like him. There's nobody that has a voice like him; there's nobody that can sing the things he does.
Elvis Costello
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When I heard "Ballad Of A Teenage Queen" and "How High's The Water" playing on the radio in North London when I was a kid, it proved that country music was for all people and not just exclusive to Tennessee. Happy birthday to Johnny Cash from a grateful Muswell Hillbilly.
Ray Davies
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"God is not making anymore"
Nick Lowe
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I'd like to wish Johnny Cash the warmest regards for his 70th. "I Walk The Line" is one of my favorite all time records. He's been quite awesome down through the years, in the old meaning of the word.
Sam Shepard
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One thing that happens when you bring up the name Johnny Cash is that you talk about his legendary presence, and this sort of Paul Bunyan type of quality. What I think gets lost in all of that is his song writing and singing. He is truly one of the best. Aside from being a great songwriter, he knows which songs are special when they're not his; he knows which ones to record. He knows exactly who he is and he has never tried to go outside of that.
Billy Bob Thornton
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Johnny Cash is an icon and his work is a timeless celebration. Without artists having his bravery and perseverance, the world would be a much duller and unchallenged place. Thanks for the inspiration.
Matt "sPaG" McDonough (Mudvayne)
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I had the honor of seeing Johnny play at the Des Moines Civic Center when I was in grade school. I was so inspired by his song writing and his words. I was driven by all of that, and the whole idea of him being The Man in Black. I mean, here was brilliance walking out on the stage; decades of experience, heartache, and real life experiences.
I absolutely learned a lot from Johnny Cash. I'm a big fan. And you know, he's forever, and he has made a difference. And if he doesn't know, whatever he may have set out to do spiritually he did, because he's touched a lot of lives, including mine.
Shawn Crahan "Number Six" (Slipknot)
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Well, he was the first inkling that I ever got that country music could be cool. When I was growing up, it was all the heavy music, and I was really interested in the dark aspects of it. And I thought there was no way that country music could have a dark side to it. And then I started listening to Johnny Cash and George Jones, and I found out that there are some people out there with some fucking issues, man. That's what drew me to Johnny Cash immediately. I mean, I shot a man in Reno just to watch him die. That is genius. He's just a great songwriter.
He puts everything he's got into everything he does, and I really, really respect that. I hope he lives another fucking 70 years.
Cory Taylor "Number Eight" (Slipknot)
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I first heard Mr. Cash when I was six years old, and I can vividly remember thinking that the person singing this song must be a giant because his voice sounds so huge !!! Well, that sense of hugeness has never really left me and whenever I hear a Johnny Cash song I still think of him as a giant, as well as a source of inspiration. His is a voice filled with pathos and irony. His music is important because it speaks the truth. May his range and influence continue to grow.
Kirk Hammett (Metallica)
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I was lucky enough to see the show Johnny Cash did at the Viper Room in Los Angeles that was recorded for the Rick Rubin produced American Recordings album. That night he played a cover of the Roy Orbison song "Ooby Dooby" with a great Elvis imitation thrown in and at the end of the song, Barbara Orbison came out of the audience and hugged him. One of those great nights when you know you're lucky on the right place right time end of things. I was a fan already but after that night, I was in for life. Months later, I saw him perform at the Pantages Theater in Los Angeles and he was great again. There's nothing like the sound of his voice. When it comes through a live sound system and you realize you're in a building with one of THOSE guys, it's a moment you don't forget. The fact that he can still sing that well is a testament to his for-real talent. In an age of pro-tooled music and pitch-corrected vocals, he is the genuine article. I met the man and he was gracious and polite,--a class act all the way. His music transcends category, trend and generation. He stands alone. If you can't get to Johnny Cash, well, you better check that out.
Henry Rollins
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If you know Rock 'n' Roll, If you know Country, If you're about to go on-stage And all you have to wear is a black shirt and pants. If your name comes to the minds of people and personifies, classifies and glorifies what real music is. If you ever swaggered down an empty hallway backstage and knew somehow you mattered. If you wrote "Folsom Prison Blues," You are the mightiest of them all. You are Johnny Cash.
Shelby Lynne
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Tipper and I love you and the deep integrity you have woven into your life and your work. Thank you for your loyal friendship.
Al Gore
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I was about nine years old and I was watching the TV with my mother and father. This was in the town that I grew up in Victoria, Australia. Anyway, The Johnny Cash Show came on...the first time on Australian television. At this time I had no real concept of what music was about, or even that it particularly interested me. The show started off with Johnny Cash's back to you, silhouetted, and then he'd swing around, look into the camera, and say, "Hello, I'm Johnny Cash," and then off he goes, you know, the man in black. I remember that very, very clearly, because it was the first time that I saw, what was to be the forbidden side of rock and roll. It was my first taste of the outlaw in rock music, and I suddenly took an interest in rock and roll music. Before that I was listening to the Tijuana Brass, you know, "Spanish Flea", stuff like that. I still had a child's view of music. So I guess you could say that Johnny Cash broke my cherry. What I thought at the time, as a kid in short trousers, was that I saw something evil in music, and that had a huge effect on me. So all through my life - all through my growing up, through my teens, through punk music, through the music I make now, Johnny cash has always been there.
Nick Cave
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For me, Johnny Cash will always represent class. He will always have a special place in my heart, not only because I admire his passion for music but because I will never forget the compassion and kindness he showed to me when I first started out ten years ago.
I am proud to know you, Mr. Cash.
With love and respect,
Trisha Yearwood
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Growing up in Texas in the sixties you would hear the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Buck Owens and Johnny Cash on the same radio station. I remember seeing him singing "Ring of Fire" on Hootenanny with a whole circle of college students. He was probably the only country artist that I continued to listen to consistently as I started listening to more rock 'n' roll and folk music. I remember thinking he's cool the same way Elvis is and then the Beatles came along and Johnny still seemed relevant to me musically. John also had all those story songs and that fascinated me.
Steve Earle
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Johnny Cash is fierce. He has walked as a prisoner and as a poet, a heart as large as large, a giver, a forgiver a lamb who lies with his lion. I am so lucky to know you.
Tim Robbins
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"Rock "n" roll trivia.....
Thre first time Johnny Cash performed "a boy named Sue" he performed it reading the lyrics from a sheet of paper on the floor, it was his wife who had heard the song and had it played to Johhny the night before in a jam session at their home..
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