Statler Family Obituaries

Cash, J. "Johnny" R.

Johnny Cash, Country Music Bedrock, Dies at 71

By STEPHEN HOLDEN

Johnny Cash, whose gravelly bass-baritone was the vocal bedrock of American country music for more than four decades, died yesterday in Nashville. He was 71 and lived nearby in Hendersonville, Tenn.

The cause was complications of diabetes, said Lou Robin, Mr. Cash's manager.

Known as the Man in Black, both for his voice, which projected the fateful gravity of a country patriarch, and for his signature look, which suggested a cowboy undertaker, Mr. Cash was one of the few performers who outlasted trends to become a mythical figure rediscovered by each new generation.

Beginning in the mid-1950's, when he made his first records for the Sun label, Mr. Cash forged a lean, hard-bitten country-folk music that at its most powerful seemed to erase the lines between singing, storytelling and grueling life experience. Born in poverty in Arkansas at the height of the Depression, he was country music's foremost poet of the working poor. His stripped-down songs described the lives of coal miners and sharecroppers, convicts and cowboys, railroad workers and laborers.

His influence extended far beyond the sphere of country music; along with Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins, his peers on Sun Records in the mid-1950's, he is considered a pioneer of rock 'n' roll. In 1992, 12 years after his election to the Country Music Hall of Fame, he was elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and he remains the only performer besides Presley to have been inducted into both.

Rockers embraced him after he and Bob Dylan recorded a duet, ''Girl From the North Country,'' on Mr. Dylan's ''Nashville Skyline'' album. Recently, Mr. Cash's version of the Nine Inch Nails song ''Hurt'' won six nominations at the MTV Video Music Awards. (The video won for best cinematography.) Only his hospitalization for a stomach ailment prevented him from attending the awards ceremony.

In May, his wife, June Carter Cash, whom he married in 1968 and whom he credited with helping him stay off drugs, died. The marriage established them as the unofficial First Family of country music.

Mr. Cash won 11 Grammys in all, including a lifetime achievement award in 1999. The most recent was this year, for best country male vocal performance for the song ''Give My Love to Rose.''

Mr. Cash exerted an incalculable influence on music. As Rich Kienzle observed in Country Music magazine, he ''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,'' Mr. Kienzle wrote, ''so that it could accept the unconventional and the controversial, and he did as much as anyone to make the 'outlaw' phenomenon possible.''

Long before the term ''concept album'' was coined, Mr. Cash created thematic albums like ''Ride This Train'' (1960), ''Blood, Sweat and Tears'' (1963), ''Bitter Tears'' (1964) and ''Johnny Cash Sings Ballads of the True West'' (1965).

Rock's Primal Beginnings

The sound of the slapped bass on his first major hit, ''I Walk the Line,'' and the hard-edged boom-chigga beat of the early hits he recorded with his trio, the Tennessee Three, were primal rock 'n' roll sounds. And his deep vocals, with their crags and quavers, demonstrated that a voice need not be pretty to be eloquent.

Unable to read music, Mr. Cash would compose a song in his head and play it over and over until he was satisfied enough to put it on tape. He would often write lyrics while traveling from one engagement to another.

Recent tributes to him by younger musicians include a multiartist anthology of Cash songs, ''Till Things Get Brighter,'' and recordings of his songs by Stevie Nicks and the Beat Farmers. He was a guest soloist on U2's 1993 album, ''Zooropa.''

Mr. Cash's 1954 song about violent outcasts, ''Folsom Prison Blues,'' has even been described as a forerunner of gangsta rap. The song, which he wrote shortly after he left the Air Force, captured an essential ingredient of his mystique, the image of the reformed outlaw:

I hear that train a-comin'
Comin' round the bend.
I ain't seen the sunshine
Since I don't know when.
Well, I'm stuck in Folsom Prison
And time keeps draggin' on.

With its bare-bones realism, the song distilled the sepulchral grimness that often seemed to engulf Mr. Cash, who fought a long battle against addiction to drugs, particularly amphetamines. But he spent only one day in jail, in El Paso, for possession of pills that would have been legal with a prescription.

''There is that beast there in me,'' he said in an interview with Neil Strauss in The New York Times in 1994. ''And I got to keep him caged, or he'll eat me alive.'' But as Mr. Strauss observed, the sinners that Mr. Cash sang about, unlike those in most gangsta raps, were usually plagued by guilt and seeking God's forgiveness. His tales may have been grim, but they were not nihilistic.

Mr. Cash's appeal transcended boundaries of class, generation and geography. Describing a characteristic performance, Paul Hemphill, a country music historian, once wrote: ''Cash, wearing all black, Cash with human suffering in his deep eyes and on his tortured face, Cash, insolent and lashing out from the stage, Cash, in a black swallowtail coat and striped morning pants like an elegant undertaker, Cash swinging his guitar around, pointing it at his listeners as though it were a tommy gun, all of these things captured the whole world.''

In a career in which he recorded more than 1,500 songs, Mr. Cash applied his gritty voice to almost every kind of material. Blues, hymns, cowboy songs, American Indian ballads, railroad songs, children's songs, spoken narratives, patriotic songs, love songs and novelties were all delivered in a near-monotone that was the vocal equivalent of a monument hammered out of stone.

In the repertory of songs he wrote and sang, ''characters face unforgiving elements and indifferent fate; their faith and virtue will not necessarily be rewarded in this world,'' Jon Pareles, chief pop music critic for The Times, wrote in 1994. ''Even love songs, like 'I Walk the Line' and 'Ring of Fire,' are about the dangers of temptation and the singer's stubborn resolve in fighting it off.''

Mr. Cash's stoical singing about loneliness and death, love and humble Christian faith reflected the barren terrain of his upbringing. He was born in a shack on Feb. 26, 1932, in Kingsland, Ark., to Ray Cash and Carrie Rivers Cash, cotton farmers whose livelihood was destroyed by the Depression. They named him J. R; it is not clear how John evolved, and the R is a mystery. But it was the legendary record producer Sam Phillips of Sun Records who later gave him the name Johnny.

The Depression forced Ray Cash to become a hobo laborer, picking cotton, chopping wood and doing railroad chores until he was able to take advantage of a New Deal resettlement program for impoverished farmers. When J. R. was 3, the family moved to 20 acres and a five-room house in Dyess Colony, in northeastern Arkansas. There he spent the next 15 years, working in the fields and learning the plain-spoken stories of the sharecroppers. He was close to his three brothers and two sisters -- Roy, Jack, Tommy, Reba and Joann -- and was deeply influenced by his mother's devotion to the Pentecostal Church of God.

From Air Force to Star

Drawn to country music on the radio, the young J. R. Cash listened to the Grand Ole Opry and particularly admired the music of Ernest Tubb, Roy Acuff, Hank Williams and the Carter Family. He began writing songs, poems and stories and sang on local radio in Arkansas. When he was 12, his faith deepened after his older brother Jack, a preacher, was killed in an accident.

Following his high school graduation, he headed north and took a job at an auto body plant in Pontiac, Mich. The job lasted less than a month, and he enlisted in the Air Force in 1950. He was sent to Landsberg, Germany, where he served as a radio operator and was promoted to staff sergeant.

While overseas, Mr. Cash began writing songs, including ''Hey Porter,'' which would later be one side of his first single. Returning to the United States in 1954, he married Vivian Liberto, whom he had met while in basic training in Texas, and they moved to Memphis. There he became a door-to-door appliance salesman and for a while enrolled in a course in radio announcing. He was determined to have a career in music.

Through his brother Ray, who worked in a garage, he met a pair of guitar-playing auto mechanics, Monroe Perkins and Marshall Grant, who with the steel guitarist A. W. Kernodle became the members of his first band, which performed at church socials and country fairs.

In late 1954, the band, minus Mr. Kernodle, who had left, auditioned for Mr. Phillips, and the following spring the group, the Tennessee Three, recorded five songs for Sun. One was Mr. Cash's ballad ''Cry, Cry, Cry,'' which became the first country hit for the fledgling label. Released in 1955, it was reported to have sold more than 100,000 copies in the South alone.

Mr. Cash was signed to a contract by Sun and began to tour the United States and Canada and appear on radio and television. His next successful disc, which Mr. Phillips had wanted to give to Tennessee Ernie Ford as a follow-up to Ford's hit recording of ''The Ballad of Davy Crockett,'' was ''Folsom Prison Blues.'' With ''So Doggone Lonesome,'' equally popular at the time, Mr. Cash had a two-sided hit, selling more than a million copies and remaining on the top of the charts for nearly a year in the South.

In May 1956, Sun released Mr. Cash's biggest hit and signature song, ''I Walk the Line,'' a stern avowal of sexual fidelity that eventually sold more than two million copies. His next single, ''There You Go,'' also reached No. 1 on the country charts, and in July he was invited to join the Grand Ole Opry. By the summer of 1958, he had written more than 50 songs, and he had sold more than six million records for Sun. But when the label balked at letting Mr. Cash record gospel music, he moved to Columbia Records, where he would remain for the next 28 years.

In short order, Columbia released several successful albums and a single, ''Don't Take Your Guns to Town,'' that sold half a million copies. Mr. Cash began appearing on television variety shows and acting in film and television westerns. Touring, he discovered that he was as popular in Europe, Asia and Australia as he was in the United States.

Unlike other country singers, Mr. Cash did not remain silent on social or political issues. He recorded several protest songs, including ''The Ballad of Ira Hayes,'' about an American Indian who was one of the marines who raised the American flag at Iwo Jima but descended into alcoholism after experiencing discrimination after the war.

The rigors of touring and Mr. Cash's own tendency toward depression contributed to a dependency on amphetamines and barbiturates, which began in the early 1960's and steadily worsened. He began missing engagements and went on wild binges. His wife sued for divorce.

After a serious drug binge in 1967, he was found, close to death, by a policeman in a tiny Georgia village. June Carter, the daughter of Mother Maybelle Carter of the Carter Family, persuaded him to undergo treatment for his drug dependency and helped him to rediscover his Christian faith. After marrying in 1968, they toured together in a family show that often included Ms. Carter's sisters, Anita and Helen, as well as Mother Maybelle, Carl Perkins and the Statler Brothers.

Mr. Cash's drug problems recurred off and on. He entered the Betty Ford Center for treatment in 1985, and became addicted and was treated again after his release.

His career took a sharp upswing in the late 1960's. He released two hugely successful albums, ''At Folsom Prison'' and ''At San Quentin.'' His association with Mr. Dylan, whom he had befriended at the Newport Folk Festival in 1964, helped to bring his music to a young rock audience. In 1968 he filled Carnegie Hall and broke the Beatles' attendance record at the Palladium in London.

By 1969, Mr. Cash was the host of his own network television show, appearing over the next two years with stars like Mr. Dylan, Glen Campbell, Ray Charles and the Carter Family. Also in 1969, his novelty song ''A Boy Named Sue,'' written by Shel Silverstein, became his biggest pop hit.

Following ''I Walk the Line'' and ''There You Go,'' Mr. Cash scored several more No. 1 country hits: ''Ballad of a Teenage Queen,'' ''I Guess Things Happen That Way,'' ''Don't Take Your Guns to Town,'' ''Ring of Fire,'' ''Understand Your Man,'' a new version of ''Folsom Prison Blues,'' ''Daddy Sang Bass,'' ''Sunday Morning Coming Down,'' ''Flesh and Blood'' and ''One Piece at a Time.''

He recorded a number of religious albums, and in 1971 he and his wife traveled to Israel to work on a film, ''The Gospel Road,'' which dealt with Christianity and contemporary life in the Holy Land. Originally distributed by 20th Century Fox, it was later acquired by the Rev. Billy Graham's film company.

Over the years, Mr. Cash also appeared in Hollywood films, including ''Five Minutes to Live,'' ''The Night Rider,'' ''Hootenanny Hoot'' and ''A Gunfight,'' which co-starred Kirk Douglas. He also appeared in seven made-for-television films and in the mini-series ''North and South.''

By the 1980's, Mr. Cash and his family constituted one of the nation's most respected musical dynasties. Rosanne Cash, a daughter from his first marriage, and her husband at the time, the singer and songwriter Rodney Crowell, were leaders among the younger generation of country musicians who rejected the country-pop formulas of Nashville to blend elements of Southern California folk-rock with a more austere, new traditionalist country aesthetic. Carlene Carter, the daughter of the country singer Carl Smith and June Carter Cash, also had some success as a neo-rockabilly singer.

Mr. Cash, like many other older stars who had achieved an almost statesmanlike status in the country music firmament, experienced some decline in record sales in the 1980's and 90's. After leaving Columbia, he signed in 1986 with Mercury, where he had limited success. But if his career flagged, his legend flourished.

He and his fellow country music performers Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson toured and recorded as the Highwaymen. He received a Grammy Legend Award in 1990 and two years later was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Four years after that, he was a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors.

A 90's Comeback

His musical career took an unusual turn in 1994 when he was signed by Rick Rubin, a producer of heavy metal and rap acts, to Mr. Rubin's label, American Records. ''American Recordings,'' his first album for the label, was a bare-bones country-folk album in which he applied his fatalistic stamp to songs by Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen, Loudon Wainwright III and other folk-pop songwriters. The album sold only a little more than 100,000 copies, but it won him his sixth Grammy Award, in the best contemporary folk album category. His resurgence continued with ''Unchained,'' which was nominated for two Grammys.

Mr. Cash is survived by four daughters, Rosanne, Tara, Cinda and Kathy, and a son, John Carter, who all performed with him at one time or another.

For all the grimness of his Man in Black persona, Mr. Cash insisted that he was not a morbid person. ''I am not obsessed with death -- I'm obsessed with living,'' he said in 1994, six years after recovering from heart surgery. ''The battle against the dark one and the clinging to the right one is what my life is about.''

In ''Cash,'' his second autobiography, written with Patrick Carr and published in 1997, he fantasized about the final word on Johnny Cash, when ''halfway through 'Ring of Fire' or 'I Still Miss Someone' or 'Sunday Morning Coming Down,' I'll just keel over and die on the stage, under the lights, with my band and my family around me. That's every performer's dream, you know.''

Correction: September 19, 2003, Friday An obituary of Johnny Cash on Saturday misstated the number of performers who have been inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Country Music Hall of Fame. Besides Mr. Cash and Elvis Presley, Brenda Lee and the Everly Brothers have been inducted into both halls as performers. Other people are in both halls, but some performers in the Rock and Roll hall were inducted under other categories, like ''early influences'' or ''sidemen.''

The obituary also misspelled the name of one of Mr. Cash's brothers at one point. He was Roy, not Ray.

 

Obituary printed in the September 13, 2003 edition of the New York Times newspaper.

Return to Obituary Index


©2008 by David Statler of StatlerWeb
Last Updated: November 08, 2010