John R. "Johnny" Cash[2]
(February 26, 1932 September 12,
2003), born J. R. Cash, was
an
American
singer-songwriter, actor,[3]
and author,[3]
who has been called one of the most
influential musicians of the 20th
century.[4]
Although he is primarily remembered
as a
country music
artist, his songs and sound spanned
many other
genres
including
rockabilly
and
rock and roll
especially early in his career as
well as
blues,
folk, and
gospel.
Late in his career, Cash
covered
songs by several
rock artists,
among them the
industrial
rock band
Nine Inch
Nails[5][6]
and the
synthpop band
Depeche Mode.[6][7][8]
Johnny Cash was known for his deep,
distinctive
bass-baritone
voice;[9][11]
for the "boom-chicka-boom"
freight train
sound of his
Tennessee Three backing band;
for his rebelliousness,[12][13]
coupled with an increasingly somber
and humble demeanor;[9]
for providing free concerts inside
prison walls;[14][15]
and for his dark performance
clothing, which earned him the
nickname "The Man in Black".[16]
He traditionally started his
concerts by saying, "Hello, I'm
Johnny Cash."[17][18]
and usually following it up with his
standard "Folsom
Prison Blues."
Much of Cash's music, especially
that of his later career, echoed
themes of sorrow, moral tribulation
and redemption.[9][19]
His signature songs include "I Walk the
Line", "Folsom
Prison Blues", "Ring of
Fire", "Get Rhythm"
and "Man in
Black". He also recorded
humorous numbers, such as "One
Piece at a Time" and "A Boy Named
Sue"; a duet with his future
wife,
June Carter,
called "Jackson";
as well as
railroad
songs including "Hey, Porter"
and "Rock
Island Line".[20]
Cash, a devout but troubled
Christian,[21][22]
has been characterized "as a lens
through which to view American
contradictions and challenges."[23][25]
A
Biblical
scholar,[3][26][27]
he penned a
Christian
novel entitled Man In White,[28][29]
and he made a
spoken word
recording of the entire
New
King James Version of the
New Testament.[30][31]
Even so, Cash declared that he was
"the biggest
sinner of them all",
and viewed himself overall as a
complicated and contradictory man.[32][33]
Accordingly,[34]
Cash is said to have "contained
multitudes", and has been deemed
"the
philosopher-prince
of American country music".[35][36]
Early career
In 1954, Cash and Vivian moved to
Memphis,
Tennessee, where he sold
appliances while studying to be a
radio announcer. At night he played
with guitarist
Luther
Perkins and bassist
Marshall
Grant. Perkins and Grant were
known as the
Tennessee Two.
Cash worked up the courage to visit
the
Sun Records
studio, hoping to get a recording
contract. After auditioning for
Sam Phillips,
singing mostly gospel songs,
Phillips told him that gospel was
unmarketable. It was once rumored
that Phillips told Cash to "go home
and sin, then come back with a song
I can sell," though Cash refuted
that Phillips made any such comment
in a 2002 interview.[56]
Cash eventually won over the
producer with new songs delivered in
his early frenetic style. His first
recordings at Sun, "Hey Porter"
and "Cry! Cry!
Cry!", were released in 1955 and
met with reasonable success on the
country
hit parade.
On December 4, 1956,
Elvis Presley
dropped in on studio owner Sam
Phillips to pay a social visit while
Carl Perkins
was in the studio cutting new
tracks, with
Jerry Lee
Lewis backing him on piano. Cash
was also in the studio and the four
started an
impromptu
jam session.
Phillips left the tapes running and
the recordings, almost half of which
were gospel songs, survived and have
since been released under the title
Million Dollar Quartet.
Cash's next record, "Folsom Prison
Blues", made the country Top 5, and
"I Walk the
Line" became No. 1 on the
country charts and entered the pop
charts Top 20. "Home of
the Blues" followed, recorded in
July 1957. That same year Cash
became the first Sun artist to
release a
long-playing
album. Although he was Sun's
most consistently best-selling and
prolific artist at that time, Cash
felt constrained by his contract
with the small label. Presley had
already left Sun, and Phillips was
focusing most of his attention and
promotion on Lewis. The following
year Cash left the label to sign a
lucrative offer with
Columbia
Records, where his single "Don't
Take Your Guns to Town" became
one of his biggest hits.
In the early 1960s, Cash toured with
the
Carter Family,
which by this time regularly
included
Mother
Maybelle's daughters,
Anita,
June
and
Helen.
June, whom Cash would eventually
marry, later recalled admiring him
from afar during these tours. In the
1960s he appeared on
Pete Seeger's
short lived Rainbow Quest.[57]
He also acted in a
1961 film
entitled
Five
Minutes to Live, later
re-released as Door-to-door
Maniac. He also wrote and sang
the opening theme.
Outlaw image
As his career was taking off in the
early 1960s, Cash started drinking
heavily and became addicted to
amphetamines
and
barbiturates.
For a brief time, he shared an
apartment in Nashville with
Waylon
Jennings, who was heavily
addicted to amphetamines. Cash used
the uppers to stay awake during
tours. Friends joked about his
"nervousness" and erratic behavior,
many ignoring the warning signs of
his worsening
drug addiction.
In a behind-the-scenes look at
The Johnny Cash Show, Cash
claims to have "tried every drug
there was to try."
Although in many ways spiraling out
of control, Cash's frenetic
creativity was still delivering
hits. His rendition of "Ring of
Fire" was a
crossover
hit, reaching No. 1 on the country
charts and entering the Top 20 on
the pop charts. The song was written
by June Carter and
Merle Kilgore.
The song was originally performed by
Carter's sister, but the signature
mariachi-style
horn arrangement was provided by
Cash, who said that it had come to
him in a dream.
In June 1965, his truck caught fire
due to an overheated wheel bearing,
triggering a forest fire that burned
several hundred acres in
Los Padres National Forest in
California.[58][59]
When the judge asked Cash why he did
it, Cash said, "I didn't do it, my
truck did, and it's dead, so you
can't question it."[47]
The fire destroyed 508 acres (2.06
km2), burning the foliage
off three mountains and killing 49
of the refuge's 53 endangered
condors.
Cash was unrepentant: "I don't care
about your damn yellow buzzards."
The federal government sued him and
was awarded $125,172 ($863,091 in
current dollar terms). Cash
eventually
settled the
case and paid $82,001.[60]
He said he was the only person ever
sued by the government for starting
a forest fire.[47]
Although Cash carefully cultivated a
romantic
outlaw image, he
never served a
prison sentence.
Despite landing in jail seven times
for
misdemeanors,
each stay lasted only a single
night. His most infamous run-in with
the law occurred while on tour in
1965, when he was arrested by a
narcotics squad
in
El Paso,
Texas. The officers suspected
that he was
smuggling
heroin from
Mexico, but it was prescription
narcotics and amphetamines that the
singer had hidden inside his guitar
case. Because they were prescription
drugs rather than illegal narcotics,
he received a
suspended
sentence.

Johnny Cash and his
second wife, June Carter
Cash was later arrested on May 11,
1965, in
Starkville, Mississippi, for
trespassing
late at night onto private property
to pick flowers. (This incident gave
the spark for the song "Starkville
City Jail", which he spoke about on
his live At San Quentin
prison album.)
In the mid 1960s, Cash released a
number of
concept albums,
including
Ballads Of the True West
(1965), an experimental double
record mixing authentic frontier
songs with Cash's spoken narration,
and
Bitter Tears
(1964), with songs highlighting the
plight of the
Native Americans. His drug
addiction was at its worst at this
point, and his destructive behavior
led to a divorce from his first wife
and canceled performances.
In 1967, Cash's duet with Carter, "Jackson",
won a
Grammy Award.
Johnny Cash's final arrest was in
Walker County,
GA where he was taken in after
being involved in a car accident
while carrying a bag of prescription
pills. Cash attempted to bribe a
local deputy, who turned the money
down, and then spent the night in a
LaFayette, GA
jail. The singer was released after
a long talk with Sheriff Ralph
Jones, who warned him of his
dangerous behavior and wasted
potential. Johnny credited that
experience for saving his life, and
he later came back to LaFayette to
play a benefit concert that
attracted 12,000 people (the city
population was less than 9,000 at
the time) and raised $75,000 for the
high school.[61]
Cash quit using drugs in 1968, after
a spiritual
epiphany in the
Nickajack
Cave, when he attempted to
commit suicide while under the heavy
influence of drugs. He descended
deeper into the cave, trying to lose
himself and "just die", when he
passed out on the floor. He reported
to be exhausted and feeling at the
end of his rope when he felt God's
presence in his heart and managed to
struggle out of the cave (despite
the exhaustion) by following a faint
light and slight breeze. To him, it
was his own rebirth. June,
Maybelle,
and Ezra Carter moved into Cash's
mansion for a month to help him
conquer his addiction. Cash proposed
onstage to June at a concert at the
London Gardens
in
London,
Ontario, Canada on February 22,
1968; the couple married a week
later (on March 1) in
Franklin,
Kentucky. June had agreed to
marry Cash after he had 'cleaned
up'.[62]
He rediscovered his Christian faith,
taking an "altar call"
in Evangel Temple, a small church in
the Nashville area, pastored by Rev.
Jimmy Rodgers Snow, son of country
music legend
Hank Snow.
Cash chose this church over many
larger celebrity churches in the
Nashville area because he said that
there he was treated like just
another parishioner and not a
celebrity[citation
needed].
Folsom
Prison Blues
Cash felt great compassion for
prisoners. He began performing
concerts at various prisons starting
in the late 1950s.His first ever
prison concert was held on January
1, 1958 at San Quentin State Prison.[63]
These performances led to a pair of
highly successful live albums,
Johnny Cash
at Folsom Prison (1968) and
Johnny Cash
at San Quentin (1969).
The
Folsom
Prison record was introduced by
a rendition of his classic "Folsom
Prison Blues", while the
San Quentin
record included the crossover hit
single "A Boy Named
Sue", a
Shel
Silverstein-penned novelty song
that reached No. 1 on the country
charts and No. 2 on the U.S.
Top Ten pop
charts. The AM versions of the
latter contained a couple of
profanities which were edited out.
The modern CD versions are unedited
and uncensored and thus also longer
than the original vinyl albums,
though they still retain the
audience reaction overdubs of the
originals.
In addition to his performances at
U.S. prisons, Cash also performed at
the
ster ker
Prison in Sweden in 1972. The
live album
P ster ker
("At ster ker") was released in
1973. Between the songs, Cash can be
heard speaking Swedish, which was
greatly appreciated by the
inmates."The Man
in Black"
From 1969 to 1971, Cash starred in
his own television show,
The Johnny Cash Show, on the
ABC network.
The
Statler Brothers opened up for
him in every episode; the Carter
Family and rockabilly legend
Carl Perkins
were also part of the regular show
entourage. However, Cash also
enjoyed booking more contemporary
performers as guests; such notables
included
Neil Young,
Louis
Armstrong,
Kenny Rogers and
The First Edition (who appeared
a record four times on his show),
James Taylor,
Ray Charles,
Eric Clapton
(then leading
Derek
and the Dominos), and
Bob Dylan.
Cash had met with Dylan in the mid
1960s and became closer friends when
they were neighbors in the late
1960s in
Woodstock, New York. Cash was
enthusiastic about reintroducing the
reclusive Dylan to his audience.
Cash sang a duet with Dylan on
Dylan's country album
Nashville
Skyline and also wrote the
album's
Grammy-winning
liner notes.
Another artist who received a major
career boost from The Johnny Cash
Show was songwriter
Kris
Kristofferson, who was beginning
to make a name for himself as a
singer/songwriter. During a live
performance of Kristofferson's "Sunday
Mornin' Comin' Down", Cash
refused to change the lyrics to suit
network executives, singing the song
with its references to
marijuana
intact: "On a Sunday morning
sidewalk / I'm wishin', Lord, that I
was stoned."[64]
By the early 1970s, he had
crystallized his public image as
"The Man in Black". He regularly
performed dressed all in black,
wearing a long black knee-length
coat. This outfit stood in contrast
to the costumes worn by most of the
major country acts in his day:
rhinestone
suit and
cowboy boots.
In 1971, Cash wrote the song "Man in
Black", to help explain his
dress code: "We're doing mighty fine
I do suppose / In our streak of
lightning cars and fancy clothes /
But just so we're reminded of the
ones who are held back / Up front
there ought to be a man in black."
He wore black on behalf of the
poor and
hungry, on behalf
of "the prisoner who has long paid
for his crime",[65]
and on behalf of those who have been
betrayed by age or drugs.[65]
"And," Cash added, "with the
Vietnam War
as painful in my mind as it was in
most other Americans', I wore it 'in
mournin' for the lives that could
have been.' ... Apart from the
Vietnam War being over, I don't see
much reason to change my position
... The old are still neglected, the
poor are still poor, the young are
still dying before their time, and
we're not making many moves to make
things right. There's still plenty
of darkness to carry off."[65]
He and his band had initially worn
black shirts because that was the
only matching color they had among
their various outfits.[47]
He wore other colors on stage early
in his career, but he claimed to
like wearing black both on and off
stage. He stated that, political
reasons aside, he simply liked black
as his on-stage color.[47]
To this day, the
United
States Navy's
winter blue service uniform is
referred to by sailors as "Johnny
Cashes", as the uniform's shirt,
tie, and trousers are solid black.[66]
In the mid 1970s, Cash's popularity
and number of hit songs began to
decline, but his autobiography (the
first of two), titled Man in
Black, was published in 1975 and
sold 1.3 million copies. A second,
Cash: The Autobiography,
appeared in 1997. His friendship
with
Billy Graham
led to the production of a film
about the life of
Jesus,
The Gospel
Road, which Cash co-wrote
and narrated.
He also continued to appear on
television, hosting an annual
Christmas
special on
CBS throughout the
1970s. Later television appearances
included a role in an episode of
Columbo
(Swan Song). He also appeared with
his wife on an episode of
Little House on the Prairie
entitled "The Collection" and gave a
performance as
John Brown in the 1985
American
Civil War television mini-series
North and South. He had a
returning role as Kid Cole on the
CBS series Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman
in the mid-1990s.
He was friendly with every United
States President starting with
Richard Nixon.
He was closest with
Jimmy Carter,
who became a very close friend.[47]
He stated that he found all of them
personally charming, noting that
this was probably essential to
getting oneself elected.[47]
When invited to perform at the
White House
for the first time in 1972, Richard
Nixon's office requested that he
play "Okie
from Muskogee" (a satirical
Merle Haggard
song about people who despised
youthful drug users and war
protesters) and "Welfare Cadillac"
(a Guy Drake song which denies the
integrity of
welfare
recipients). Cash declined to play
either and instead selected other
songs, including "The Ballad of
Ira Hayes"
(about a brave Native-American
World War II
veteran who was mistreated upon his
return to
Arizona), and
his own compositions, "What is
Truth?" and "Man in Black". Cash
wrote that the reasons for denying
Nixon's song choices were not
knowing them and having fairly short
notice to rehearse them, rather than
any political reason.[47]
However, Cash added, even if Nixon's
office had given Cash enough time to
learn and rehearse the songs, their
choice of pieces that conveyed "antihippie and
antiblack"
sentiments might have backfired.[67]
Highwaymen
In 1980, Cash became the
Country Music
Hall of Fame's youngest living
inductee at age forty-eight, but
during the 1980s his records failed
to make a major impact on the
country charts, although he
continued to tour successfully. In
the mid 1980s, he recorded and
toured with
Waylon
Jennings,
Willie Nelson,
and
Kris
Kristofferson as
The Highwaymen, making two hit
albums.
During this period, Cash appeared in
a number of television films. In
1981, he starred in
The Pride of Jesse Hallam,
winning fine reviews for a film that
called attention to adult
illiteracy.
In the same year, Cash appeared as a
"very special guest star" in an
episode of the
Muppet Show.
In 1983, he appeared as a heroic
sheriff in
Murder in Coweta County,
based on a real-life Georgia murder
case, which co-starred
Andy Griffith
as his nemesis. Cash had tried for
years to make the film, for which he
won acclaim.
Cash relapsed into addiction after
being administered painkillers for a
serious abdominal injury in 1983
caused by an unusual incident in
which he was kicked and wounded by
an ostrich he kept on his farm.[68]
At a hospital visit in 1988, this
time to watch over Waylon Jennings
(who was recovering from a
heart
attack), Jennings suggested that
Cash have himself checked into the
hospital for his own heart
condition. Doctors recommended
preventive heart surgery, and Cash
underwent
double bypass surgery in the
same hospital. Both recovered,
although Cash refused to use any
prescription painkillers, fearing a
relapse into dependency. Cash later
claimed that during his operation,
he had what is called a "near
death experience". He said he
had visions of
Heaven that were
so beautiful that he was angry when
he woke up alive.
Cash's recording career and his
general relationship with the
Nashville establishment were at an
all-time low in the 1980s. He
realized that his record label of
nearly 30 years, Columbia, was
growing indifferent to him and
wasn't properly marketing him (he
was "invisible" during that time, as
he said in his autobiography). Cash
recorded an intentionally awful song
to protest, a self-parody. "Chicken
in Black" was about Cash's brain
being transplanted into a chicken.
Ironically, the song turned out to
be a larger commercial success than
any of his other recent material.
Nevertheless, he was hoping to kill
the relationship with the label
before they did, and it was not long
after "Chicken in Black" that
Columbia and Cash parted ways.
In 1986, Cash returned to Sun
Studios in Memphis to team up with
Roy Orbison,
Jerry Lee
Lewis, and
Carl Perkins
to create the album
Class of '55.
Also in 1986, Cash published his
only novel, Man in White, a
book about
Saul and
his conversion to become the Apostle
Paul. He also recorded Johnny
Cash Reads The Complete
New Testament
in 1990.
American
Recordings

Johnny Cash sings a duet
with a Navy lieutenant
c.1987.
After
Columbia
Records dropped Cash from his
recording contract, he had a short
and unsuccessful stint with
Mercury
Records from 1987 to 1991 (see
Johnny Cash discography).
In 1991, Cash sang lead vocals on a
cover version of "Man in Black" for
the
Christian
punk band
One Bad Pig's
album I Scream Sunday.
His career was rejuvenated in the
1990s, leading to popularity among a
younger audience not traditionally
interested in country music. In
1993, he sang the vocal on
U2's "The
Wanderer" for their album
Zooropa.
Although he was no longer sought
after by major labels, Cash was
approached by producer
Rick Rubin
and offered a contract with Rubin's
American
Recordings label, better known
for
rap and
hard rock.
Under Rubin's supervision, he
recorded the album
American Recordings (1994)
in his living room, accompanied only
by his guitar. That guitar was a
Martin dreadnought guitar one of
many Cash played throughout his
career.[69]
The album featured several covers of
contemporary artists selected by
Rubin and had much critical and
commercial success, winning a Grammy
for
Best
Contemporary Folk Album. Cash
wrote that his reception at the 1994
Glastonbury Festival was one of
the highlights of his career. This
was the beginning of a decade of
music industry accolades and
surprising commercial success.
Cash and his wife appeared on a
number of episodes of the popular
television series
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman
starring
Jane
Seymour. The actress thought so
highly of Cash that she later named
one of her twin sons after him. He
lent his voice for a cartoon
cameo in
an episode of
The Simpsons,
with his voice as that of a
coyote that
guides
Homer on a
spiritual quest. In 1996, Cash
enlisted the accompaniment of
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
and released a sequel to American
Recordings,
Unchained,
which won a Grammy for
Best Country
Album. Cash, believing he did
not explain enough of himself in his
1975 autobiography Man in Black,
wrote another autobiography in 1997
entitled Cash: The Autobiography.
[edit]
Last years
and death
In 1997, Cash was diagnosed with the
neurodegenerative disease
Shy-Drager
syndrome, a form of
Parkinson's disease. The
diagnosis was later altered to
autonomic
neuropathy associated with
diabetes.
This illness forced Cash to curtail
his touring. He was hospitalized in
1998 with severe
pneumonia,
which damaged his
lungs. The albums
American III: Solitary Man
(2000) and
American IV: The Man Comes Around
(2002) contained Cash's response to
his illness in the form of songs of
a slightly more somber tone than the
first two American albums. The video
that was released for "Hurt",
a cover of the song by
Nine Inch
Nails, fits Cash's view of his
past and feelings of regret. The
video for the song, from American
IV, is now generally recognized
as "his
epitaph,"[70]
and received particular critical and
popular acclaim.
Keith Keith
Coleman is one of the
best Johnny Cash
impersonators. Tribute to
Johnny Cash, Johnny Cash
Tribute Artist, Johnny Cash
and June Carter, June Carter
impersonator.
June Carter
Cash died on May 15, 2003, at
the age of 73. June had told Cash to
keep working, so he continued to
record and even performed a couple
of surprise shows at the
Carter
Family Fold outside
Bristol,
Virginia. At the July 5, 2003
concert (his last public
performance), before singing "Ring of
Fire", Cash read a statement
about his late wife that he had
written shortly before taking the
stage:
|
The spirit
of June Carter overshadows
me tonight with the love she
had for me and the love I
have for her. We connect
somewhere between here and
heaven. She came down for a
short visit, I guess, from
heaven to visit with me
tonight to give me courage
and inspiration like she
always has. |
|
Cash died of complications from
diabetes less than four months after
his wife, at 2:00 a.m. CT on
September 12, 2003, while
hospitalized at Baptist Hospital in
Nashville. He was buried next to his
wife in
Hendersonville Memory Gardens
near his home in
Hendersonville, Tennessee.
His stepdaughter, Rosie (Nix) Adams
and another passenger were found
dead on a bus in Montgomery County,
Tennessee, on October 24, 2003. It
was speculated that the deaths may
have been caused by carbon monoxide
from the lanterns in the bus. Adams
was 45 when she died. She was buried
in the Hendersonville Memory
Gardens, near her mother and
stepfather.
On May 24, 2005, Vivian Liberto,
Cash's first wife and the mother of
Rosanne Cash and three other
daughters, died from surgery to
remove lung cancer at the age of 71.
It was her daughter Rosanne's 50th
birthday.[71]
In June 2005, his lakeside home on
Caudill Drive in Hendersonville was
put up for sale by his estate. In
January 2006, the house was sold to
Bee Gees
vocalist
Barry Gibb
and wife Linda and titled in their
Florida limited liability company
for $2.3 million. The listing agent
was Cash's younger brother,
Tommy Cash.
The home was destroyed by fire on
April 10, 2007.[72]
One of Cash's final collaborations
with producer
Rick Rubin,
entitled
American V: A Hundred Highways,
was released posthumously on July 4,
2006. The album debuted in the #1
position on the Billboard Top
200 album chart for the week ending
July 22, 2006.
On February 26, 2010, what would
have been Cash's 78th birthday, the
Cash Family,
Rick Rubin,
and Lost Highway Records released
his second posthumous record,
entitled
American VI: Ain't No Grave.
[edit]
Legacy
From his early days as a pioneer of
rockabilly
and
rock and roll
in the 1950s, to his decades as an
international representative of
country music, to his resurgence to
fame in the 1990s as a living legend
and an
alternative country icon, Cash
influenced countless artists and
left a large body of work. Upon his
death, Cash was revered by the
greatest popular musicians of his
time. His rebellious image and often
anti-authoritarian stance influenced
the
punk rock
movement.[73][74]
Among Cash's children, his daughter
Rosanne Cash
(by first wife
Vivian
Liberto) and his son
John Carter
Cash (by
June Carter
Cash) are notable country-music
musicians in their own right.
Cash nurtured and defended artists
on the fringes of what was
acceptable in country music even
while serving as the country music
establishment's most visible symbol.
At an all-star TNT concert in 1999,
a diverse group of artists paid him
tribute, including
Bob Dylan,
Chris Isaak,
Wyclef Jean,
Norah Jones,
Kris
Kristofferson,
Willie Nelson,
Dom DeLuise
and
U2. Cash himself
appeared at the end and performed
for the first time in more than a
year. Two tribute albums were
released shortly before his death;
Kindred Spirits contains
works from established artists,
while
Dressed in Black contains
works from many lesser-known
artists.
In total, he wrote over 1,000 songs
and released dozens of albums. A
box set titled
Unearthed
was issued posthumously. It included
four CDs of unreleased material
recorded with Rubin as well as a
Best of Cash on American
retrospective CD.
In recognition of his lifelong
support of
SOS
Children's Villages, his family
invited friends and fans to donate
to that charity in his memory. He
had a personal link with the SOS
village in
Diessen,
at the
Ammersee Lake
in
Southern
Germany, near where he was
stationed as a
GI, and
also with the SOS village in Barrett
Town, by
Montego Bay,
near his holiday home in
Jamaica.[75]
The Johnny Cash Memorial Fund was
founded.[76]
In 1999, Cash received the
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
In 2004,
Rolling Stone
Magazine ranked Cash[77]
#31 on their list of the 100
Greatest Artists of All Time.[78]
In a tribute to Cash after his
death, country music singer
Gary Allan
included the song "Nickajack Cave
(Johnny Cash's Redemption)" on his
2005 album entitled
Tough All
Over. The song chronicles
Cash hitting rock bottom and
subsequently resurrecting his life
and career.
The main street in
Hendersonville, Tennessee,
Highway 31E, is known as "Johnny
Cash Parkway".
The Johnny Cash Museum is located in
Hendersonville, Tennessee.
On November 2 4, 2007, the Johnny
Cash Flower Pickin' Festival was
held in
Starkville, Mississippi.
Starkville, where Cash was arrested
over 40 years earlier and held
overnight at the city jail on May
11, 1965, inspired Cash to write the
song "Starkville City Jail". The
festival, where he was offered a
symbolic posthumous pardon, honored
Cash's life and music, and was
expected to become an annual event.[79]
JC Unit One, Johnny Cash's private
tour bus from 1980 until 2003, was
put on exhibit at the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame +
Museum in 2007. The Cleveland, Ohio
museum offers public tours of the
bus on a seasonal basis (it is
stored during the winter months and
not exhibited during those times).