R.I.P. - Johnny Cash Dies at 71

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Johnny Cash, ''The Man in Black'' who became a towering figure in American music with such hits as ''Folsom Prison Blues,'' ''I Walk the Line,'' and ''A Boy Named Sue,'' died Friday. He was 71.

''Johnny died due to complications from diabetes, which resulted in respiratory failure,'' Cash's manager, Lou Robin, said in a statement issued by Baptist Hospital in Nashville.

He said Cash died at the hospital at 1 a.m. EDT.

''I hope that friends and fans of Johnny will pray for the Cash family to find comfort during this very difficult time,'' Robin said.

Cash had been released from the hospital Wednesday after a two-week stay for treatment of an unspecified stomach ailment. The illness caused him to miss last month's MTV Music awards, where he had been nominated in seven categories.

Cash had battled a disease of the nervous system, autonomic neuropathy, and pneumonia in recent years.

Dozens of hit records like ''Folsom Prison Blues,'' ''I Walk the Line,'' and ''Sunday Morning Coming Down'' defined Cash's persona: a haunted, dignified, resilient spokesman for the working man and downtrodden.

Cash's deeply lined face fit well with his unsteady voice, which was limited in range but used to great effect to sing about prisoners, heartaches, and tales of everyday life. He wrote much of his own material, and was among the first to record the songs of Bob Dylan and Kris Kristofferson.

''One Piece at a Time'' was about an assembly line worker who built a car out of parts stolen from his factory. ''A Boy Named Sue'' was a comical story of a father who gives his son a girl's name to make him tough. ''The Ballad of Ira Hayes'' told of the drunken death of an American Indian soldier who helped raise the American flag at Iwo Jima during World War II, but returned to harsh racism in America.

Cash said in his 1997 autobiography ''Cash'' that he tried to speak for ''voices that were ignored or even suppressed in the entertainment media, not to mention the political and educational establishments.''

Cash's career spanned generations, with each finding something of value in his simple records, many of which used his trademark rockabilly rhythm.

Cash was a peer of Elvis Presley when rock 'n' roll was born in Memphis in the 1950s, and he scored hits like ''Cry! Cry! Cry!'' during that era. He had a longtime friendship and recorded with Dylan, who has cited Cash as a major influence.

He won 11 Grammys - most recently in 2003, when ''Give My Love To Rose'' earned him honors as best male country vocal performance - and numerous Country Music Association awards. He was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1980 and inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.

His second wife, June Carter Cash, and daughter Roseanne Cash also were successful singers. June Carter Cash, who co-wrote Cash's hit ''Ring of Fire'' and partnered with her husband in hits such as ''Jackson,'' died in May.

The late 1960s and '70s were Cash's peak commercial years, and he was host of his own ABC variety show from 1969-71. In later years, he was part of the Highwayman supergroup with Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Kristofferson.

In the 1990s, he found a new artistic life recording with rap and hard rock producer Rick Rubin on the label American Recordings. And he was back on the charts with the 2002 album ''American IV: The Man Comes Around.''

Most recently, Cash was recognized for his cover of the Nine Inch Nails song ''Hurt'' with seven nominations at last month's MTV Video Music Awards. He had hoped to attend the event but couldn't because of his hospital stay. The video won for best cinematography.

He also wrote books including two autobiographies, and acted in films and television shows.

In his 1971 hit ''Man in Black,'' Cash said his black clothing symbolized the downtrodden people in the world. Cash had been ''The Man in Black'' since he joined the Grand Ole Opry at age 25.

''Everybody was wearing rhinestones, all those sparkle clothes and cowboy boots,'' he said in 1986. ''I decided to wear a black shirt and pants and see if I could get by with it. I did and I've worn black clothes ever since.''

John R. Cash was born Feb. 26, 1932, in Kingsland, Ark., one of seven children. When he was 12, his 14-year-old brother and hero, Jack, died after an accident while sawing oak trees into fence posts. The tragedy had a lasting impact on Cash, and he later pointed to it as a possible reason his music was frequently melancholy.

He worked as a custodian and enlisted in the Air Force, learning guitar while stationed in Germany, before launching his music career after his 1954 discharge.

''All through the Air Force, I was so lonely for those three years,'' Cash told The Associated Press during a 1996 interview. ''If I couldn't have sung all those old country songs, I don't think I could have made it.''

Cash launched his career in Memphis, performing on radio station KWEM. He auditioned with Sun Records, ultimately recording the single ''Hey Porter,'' which became a hit.

Sun Records also launched the careers of Presley, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis and others.

''Folsom Prison Blues,'' went to No. 4 on the country charts in 1956, and featured Cash's most famous couplet: ''I shot a man in Reno/ just to watch him die.''

Cash recorded theme albums celebrating the railroads and the Old West, and decrying the mistreatment of American Indians. Two of his most popular albums were recorded live at prisons. Along the way he notched 14 No. 1 country music hits.

Because of Cash's frequent performances in prisons and his rowdy lifestyle early in his career, many people wrongly thought he had served prison time. He never did, though he battled addictions to pills on and off throughout his life.

He blamed fame for his vulnerability to drug addiction.

''When I was a kid, I always knew I'd sing on the radio someday. I never thought about fame until it started happening to me,'' he said in 1988. ''Then it was hard to handle. That's why I turned to pills.''

He credited June Carter Cash, whom he married in 1968, with helping him stay off drugs, though he had several relapses over the years and was treated at the Betty Ford Center in California in 1984.

June Carter Cash was the daughter of country music great Mother Maybelle Carter, and the mother of singer Carlene Carter, whose father was country singer Carl Smith. Together, June Carter and Cash had one child, John Carter Cash. He is a musician and producer.

Singer Rosanne Cash is Johnny Cash's daughter from his first marriage, to Vivian Liberto. Their other three children were Kathleen, Cindy and Tara. They divorced in 1966.

In March 1998, Cash made headlines when his California-based record company, American Recordings, took out an advertisement in the music trade magazine Billboard. The full-page ad celebrated Cash's 1998 Grammy award for best country album for ''Unchained.'' The ad showed an enraged-looking Cash in his younger years making an obscene gesture to sarcastically illustrate his thanks to country radio stations and ''the country music establishment in Nashville,'' which he felt had unfairly cast him aside.

Jennings, a close friend, once said of Cash: ''He's been like a brother to me. He's one of the greatest people in the world.''

Cash once credited his mother, Carrie Rivers Cash, with encouraging him to pursue a singing career.

''My mother told me to keep on singing, and that kept me working through the cotton fields. She said God has his hand on you. You'll be singing for the world someday.''

Cash lived in Hendersonville, Tenn., just outside of Nashville. He also had a home in Jamaica.



I am having a nervous breakdance
I was going to start a thread about Cash's death, but I see I don't need to. Great post, Jrs.

Johnny Cash is one of the finest artists of our time, all categories considered. I like his music very very much and I think he did some really amazing things with other artist's songs on his last cd:s. The Johnny Cash Live at San Quentin is one of my absolute favourite albums and one of the best live albums ever made.

The band I played with some years ago made an album (believe it or not) and we did a really cool cover of Cash's I Still Miss Someone so that song is really special to me. But there are a lot of others that he did that are awesome too. I really like his spiritual songs... A lot of devotion in those songs, you don't have to be religious to appreciate them.

I can't say that hearing about Johnny Cash's death today came as a surprise, he's been aging fast during recent years. But it is still really sad of course and me and my roomie (another fan) will pay tribute to him tonight and listen to the music of The Man in Black.

R.I.P., Johnny. You made a difference.
__________________
The novelist does not long to see the lion eat grass. He realizes that one and the same God created the wolf and the lamb, then smiled, "seeing that his work was good".

--------

They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but
now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.



Like Peter, I wasn't surprised to hear the news, but it still hit me hard. And it's fitting that "Hurt" was his final video--a tribute to a man who lived his life and played his music exactly as he wanted it, although not without regrets.

The world is all the more rich for having had Johnny Cash and his music in it, and to my mind there is no higher achievement.

We'll miss you, Johnny.

Drive on
It don't mean nothing
My children love me but they don't understand
And I've got a woman who knows her man
Drive on
It don't mean nothing
It don't mean nothing
Drive on
__________________
You were a demon and a lawyer? Wow. Insert joke here."



I'm not old, you're just 12.
Yeah, I heard this on my way to work this morning. Can this month get any worse? I just had a death in my family, so I'm pretty numb, and I've been listening to Johnny Cash cd's for comfort, (I think his absolute belief in his faith has helped me deal, Ya know? Bridge over Troubled Waters off of The Man Comes Around is a current favorite..) and now HE'S dead....

Favorite Johnny Cash songs:

I walk the Line
Ring of Fire
The Ballad of John Henry's Hammer
Sunday Morning Coming Down
Understand Your Man
Folsom Prison blues
Bridge Over Troubled Water
Personal Jesus
__________________
"You, me, everyone...we are all made of star stuff." - Neil Degrasse Tyson

https://shawnsmovienight.blogspot.com/



An artist's death that truly affected me. I saw it coming, but I was hoping he would pull through a few more years, like I did with Warren Zevon. How about John Ritter? 3 major artists, one week. Sad stuff.
__________________
You're not hopeless...



Originally Posted by Monkeypunch
John Ritter? Three's Company John Ritter?
Yep. That was the most surprising.



A great man, and a great musician...he will be truly missed
__________________
The world is spinning, but no one feels it move...you look up to the sky..and one day a spark...and the whole sky is on fire -Leonardo Dicaprio (Gangs of New York)

We're no longer called Sonic Death Monkey. We're on the verge of becoming Kathleen Turner Overdrive, but just for tonight, we are Barry Jive and his Uptown Five. -Jack Black (High Fidelity)



Shake well before opening.
i dont know if this means anything to anyone but i was recently at an eve 6 concert (my girlfriend took me ok?) and though i dont like them too much they played ring of fire as tribute to the man in black. Everyone went silent and took out their lighters. R.I.P. Johnny......