THE JOHNNY CASH ROCK HALL BIO
Ref: Rock
Hall
To millions of fans,
Johnny Cash is “the Man in Black,” a country-music legend who sings in
an authoritative baritone about the travails of working men and the downtrodden
in this country. Lesser known is the fact that Johnny Cash was present
at the birth of rock and roll by virtue of being one of the earliest signees
to Sam Phillips' Sun Records
back in 1955. Cash was part of an elite club of rock and roll pioneers
at Sun that included Elvis Presley,
Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis. The four were collectively referred to
as “the Million Dollar
Quartet” after an impromptu gathering and jam session at the Sun recording
studio on December 4, 1956. What Cash and his group, the Tennessee Two,
brought to the “Sun Sound” was a spartan mix of guitar, standup bass and
vocals that served as an early example of rockabilly. Cash recorded a string
of rockabilly hits for Sun that included “Cry, Cry, Cry,” “Folsom Prison
Blues” and “I Walk the Line.” The latter was first of more than a dozen
Number One country hits for Cash and also marked his first appearance on
the national pop singles charts.
Straddling the country, folk and rockabilly idioms, Johnny Cash has
crafted more than 400 plainspoken story-songs that describe and address
the lives of coal miners, sharecroppers, Native Americans, prisoners, cowboys,
renegades and family men. Cash came by his common touch honestly, having
been born in Kingsland, Arkansas, during the Great Depression on February
26, 1932. At age three, he moved with his family to Dyess, Arkansas, where
he worked the cotton fields. Cash’s roaming days included laboring at an
auto plant in Michigan, serving in the Air Force in Germany and working
as an appliance salesman in Memphis. Cash became a full-time musician after
his two-sided hit—“So Doggone Lonesome"/"Folsom Prison Blues”—shot to Number
Four on the Billboard country chart in 1956. From Sun, he jumped to Columbia
Records in 1958, where he recorded such favorites as “Ring of Fire,” “Understand
Your Man,” “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town” and “Tennessee Flat-Top Box.”
But Cash never forgot his roots, nor did he leave hard times behind. A
prototype for the black-clad rebel rocker, Cash cultivated a serious drug
problem in the Sixties, which ended when he met his second wife, June Carter,
whom he married in 1968.
Some of Cash’s best work includes live albums recorded, quite literally,
for captive audiences at Folsom and San Quentin prisons. Johnny Cash at
San Quentin included the 1969 hit “A Boy Named Sue,” which went to Number
Two. In 1969, Cash cut a duet with Bob Dylan for the latter’s Nashville
Skyline, and Dylan returned the favor by appearing on The Johnny Cash Show,
a successful TV variety hour that premiered in 1969. All the while, the
rugged simplicity and uncut honesty of Cash’s approach was steadily seeping
into rock and roll by way of the burgeoning country-rock scene.
Cash remained a stalwart figure and working musician through the Nineties.
His career received a shot in the arm in the mid-Nineties, when he released
what many consider to be one of his finest albums, a stark study for guitar
and voice entitled American Recordings. In 1999, Cash received a Grammy
Lifetime Achievement Award.
Johnny Cash died of complications from diabetes on September 12, 2003.
Two posthumously released albums, both produced by Rick Rubin, received
critical acclaim: 2006’s American V: A Hundred Highways and 2010’s American
VI: Ain’t No Grave. A feature-film biopic, Walk the Line, came out in 2005,
and the following year a jukebox musical called Ring of Fire opened on
Broadway.