OPINION

Johnny Cash: Johnny, I Hardly Knew You

Written by Richard Marcus
Published March 16, 2006

He'd always been there: a brooding presence emanating from radios and televisions that bore witness to all the evil that people could do to each other. Even when he was a younger man, you swore he'd lived hundreds of years already. The black hair couldn't belie the creases and lines on the face or the voice scraped raw from screaming in the night.

Yet, I look at pictures of him in the last years of his life; the hair had gone white, his hands were gnarled and twisted by age as if he'd become a grand old oak tree that weathered many a storm, and the years had been stripped away. If some of us are born young to age and gradually be beaten down by the world, he was born old to learn innocence and to find his way home.

"He's a walking contradiction, partly truth and partly fiction/Taking every wrong direction on his lonely way back home." Kris Kristofferson The Pilgrim (Chapter 33), 1970

In the long list of people who Kris claimed to have written the song for, his old mentor's name is listed as one amongst many, but I've always felt the rest were there as camouflage disguising the song's sole subject, and his isolation. In one of those great ironies that life plays, the cultivated image of the lone gunslinger dressed in black only served to hide the true nature of his lonely walk.

Johnny Cash's black clad figure has been as much a symbol of rugged American individualism as any other man in the last hundred years. Unlike other figures that have let their image be co-opted for various political movements or philosophies, he was never brought into any fold.

The music establishment in Nashville wanted nothing to do with him, but couldn't ignore the fact that he appealed to more people around the world than any of their other acts combined. They would try to claim him as one of their own, but it's hard to do that when you stretch out one hand in welcome and are using the other to try and shove somebody under the carpet.

I have often wondered what they used to say behind June Carter's back (Johnny's soul mate, and on again off again wife) about her relationship with Johnny. I doubt if anybody would have dared say anything to her face, but I'm sure there were things said along the lines of "How could a girl from such a good family..." or "He's only with her because of who she is."

June was the hand that reached out and brought Johnny back to safety when he was drowning in a sea of drugs and fame. But even she wasn't enough to keep all his demons at bay. Finding solace in drugs isn't a solution to anything, but when you feel like you have nothing else, it's an easy out.

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Johnny Cash: Johnny, I Hardly Knew You
Published: March 16, 2006
Type: Opinion
Section: Music
Filed Under: Culture: Arts, Music: Adult Alternative, Music: Country and Americana, Video: Drama
Writer: Richard Marcus
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Comments

#1 — March 16, 2006 @ 18:35PM — Scott Butki

Wonderful piece, Gypsyman. I too wish I learned about Cash earlier in life.
I only gained appreciation for him in recent years.
I recently watched a bunch of his concerts and reviewed them here.

#2 — March 16, 2006 @ 18:44PM — Al Barger [URL]

Outstanding work, G-man. But don't forget June. A lot of her classic vintage stuff was out of print, but since the release of the Sunny Side collection last year I've been listening to more June than Johnny. She's something of an undiscovered continent.

#3 — March 16, 2006 @ 22:44PM — Jeff

I was country before country was ever cool.

Your riding the wave. FO

#4 — March 17, 2006 @ 02:17AM — gypsyman [URL]

Why Thanks Al and Scott, and no I havn't forgotten June, but she would be a separate chapter onto herself. The family, the history, everything about her, an amazing woman. Did you ever see the movie The Apostle with Robert Duval, where she played his mother? She was wonderful.

Jeff I don't know what your problem is, I just feel sorry for you. The great think about Country music is it's never been cool and never will be. It's real, which was the point of the whole piece.

gypsyman

#5 — March 17, 2006 @ 02:20AM — El Bicho [URL]

There can never be enough promotion about the The Man in Black. It's too bad he didn't receive all the attention he was due while he was alive, and I don't mean that as a slight against this author.

I too am not a Chrisitian, but am able to understand and appreciate Cash's relationship with the Lord through his songs. It brought him solace and joy and no one can quibble with that.

One question, why do you call June his "on again off again wife"? Not to say it's inaccurate, but I thought they had a stable relationship.

#6 — March 17, 2006 @ 03:03AM — gypsyman [URL]

El Bicho, I've always been under the impression there were times in their relationship when they were separated. For some reason I had even got it into my head that at one time they had divorced and gotten remarried, but that's wrong. I kow they loved each other dearly, but there are time when that won't be enough to keep you together.

I could be thinking of times before they were married, so if anyone is able to clear that up for me and El Bicho that would be great. I figured Al would have jumped on it if it were wrong.

gypsyman

#7 — March 17, 2006 @ 12:49PM — Vern Halen

What's this country is/isn't cool stuff? Are you referring to the current blues/pop with fiddles that passes for country on the video channels? Or that which has recent been labelled "old time music" or "alt country?" All of which have their share of briliance & dreck, just like all the other genres of music out there.

The great thing about Johnny Cash is that he was a songwriter, and knew that when you choose to do a cover, you have to make it your own. His interpretation of the Trent Reznor song is the most obvious example, but JC has been interpreting chioce covers for years. For instance, his version of Springsteen's Highway Patrolman gives a whole different spin on the tale of brotherhood, love, justice, and making the hard choices.

As to being country before it was cool? I'll beat that - country was already in me before I even knew it was. Cool.

#8 — March 17, 2006 @ 15:44PM — Molly

I have heard that in New York, they don't have a country music station.

#9 — March 17, 2006 @ 16:52PM — cgirl

You're so wrong about "on again, off again wife". June Carter was John Cash's soulmate; he was true to her and she to him. They were each other's greatest admirer. Please get this right as no one meant as much to him as June, with the exception of his children.

#10 — March 17, 2006 @ 18:38PM — gypsyman [URL]

cgirl,

Are you a 100% on that? I don't mean to be doubting, and I don't deny that they were soulmates, I did say so in the article, but I could have sworn that they had periods of separation in their relationship, when Johnny had backslid and starting using drugs again after their marriage, and she refused to live with him. Like I said this piece was just based on my impressions and limited knowledge of the man, which is why I asked for corrections.

So thank you, if anyone else knows anything, or would even like to add their impressions of the man, I'd really like to hear from you in this comments section.

I know the time for memorials is long gone, but with the movie and all, I'd like to know as much as possible about the man behind the myth. My wife and I just watched the video for "Hurt" for the first time last night, scary and painful stuff. So very real as well, no tough guy cowboy or any of that macho stuff.

Brilliant!

gypsyman

#11 — March 17, 2006 @ 19:44PM — Willbert

Who's Johnny Cash?

#12 — March 17, 2006 @ 21:03PM — Scott Butki

Wikipedia has a good bio of him but it doesn'tdirectly answer your question about June.
One interesting factoid from it:
"As his career was taking off in the early 1960s, Cash began drinking heavily and became addicted to amphetamines and barbiturates. Friends joked about his "nervousness" and erratic behavior, many ignoring the signs of his worsening drug addiction. For a brief time, Cash shared an apartment in Nashville with Waylon Jennings, who was also heavily addicted to amphetamines (speed). Although in many ways spiraling out of control, his frenetic creativity was still delivering hits. His song "Ring of Fire" was a major crossover hit, reaching No. 1 on the country charts and entering the Top 20 on the pop charts. The song was co-written by June Carter and Merle Kilgore and originally performed by Carter's sister, but the signature mariachi-style horn arrangement was conceived by Cash, who claimed to have heard it in a dream. The song, written about Cash, describes the personal hell Carter went through as she wrestled with her forbidden love for Cash (they were both married to other people at the time) and as she dealt with Cash's personal "ring of fire" (drug dependency and alcoholism.)"

#13 — March 18, 2006 @ 09:12AM — Jeff

You don't have to feel sorry for me Gypsymon.

But Cash was just about as old as dirt, came up with Jones, Jennings, Haggard, Owens and all those folks. Why does it take Hollywood and a media blitz to suddenly without warning grab reinvent and morph someone with Cash's reputation and turn in into a piece of haute culture?

You're riding the wave... with the movie and the slick PR you wouldn't even be writing this piece, probably wouldn't even hum a Cash tune as you milked your cows. The opportunity presented itself and your juices flowed.

While I appreciate the [Deleted] attempt to degrade my point of view, it has no effect.

#14 — March 18, 2006 @ 10:57AM — Aaron, Duke De Mondo [URL]

Jeff, i can understand where you're coming from, but in this case it's far from justified. Gypsyman, this was a brilliant piece. "he was born old to learn innocence and to find his way home." that's stunning, right there.

As far as political shenanigans, i don't think it's totally accurate to say he wasn't involved. His conscious-raising efforts regarding Native Americans, in particular, springs to mind. Bitter Tears is nothing if not a political record, and a brilliant, angry one at that.

it is all too true that myth swallows the far more compelling truth of the case. The Outlaw, it's fun, as you say. Like with Waylon Jennings, we buy into this notion at the expense of what's really goin' on behind that sneer. With some folks there's NOTHIN goin' on, but with Johnny Cash, the Man In Black was a fairly shallow veil (a long black number, perhaps) over a beautiful, sincere individual.

Again, great piece. Loads to think about, with regards your words up yonder.

#15 — March 18, 2006 @ 11:59AM — Scott Butki

Heck, listen to the song where he explains why he is the man in black - it's sort of like Tom Joad,
as long as there is suffering he'll wear black.
That in itself is a cool political statement.

There were many fans of Cash who loved him way before the movie and his covers of artists came along and I'm one of them.

I was late to country - maybe 10 years ago- but one guy I always really liked and even bought his autobiography was Johnny Cash.

And it's funny- when I talk to people and they ask
if I like country I'll say not really except
for like Johnny Cash and Steve Earle.
And the people will amend their "I don't like country" comments to include those two exceptions.

#16 — March 18, 2006 @ 13:23PM — Scott Butki

I'm linking to your piece for a music list I'm making. I'll also elaborate in it about the "man in black" comment I made above.

#17 — March 18, 2006 @ 15:03PM — gypsyman [URL]

Duke and Scott, thank you for filling in more holes for me about Johnny. I'd forgotten that quote about wearing black,Scott and you're right that is a political statement if I've ever heard one.

Duke, I'll have to find Bitter Tears, I don't know it and that sounds like a big hole right there..

I get where Jeff is coming from too, but he's misfired here. I may not be a big country fan, at least if you define it by the anti-Hank in the guise of a musician that is Garth Brooks, but I've been listening to Hank,Willie, Kris, Waylon, Johnny, George Jones, and others for more of my 45 years than any other music.

Hell I even shot a movie with Kris, it was a piece of shit starring him and Cheryl Ladd called Millenium, which probably ended up straight to video, and me on the cutting room floor. Never had the courage to see it.

gypsyman

#18 — March 28, 2006 @ 16:36PM — Scott Butki

Shot a movie with Kris? Are you an actor? Porn star?

#19 — March 28, 2006 @ 17:49PM — Richard Marcus [URL]

Nah I stoped acting about sixteen years agos. It only took me ten years to figure out I wasn't ever going to do more than scrape by, getting bit parts in bad movies, and starving doing stage work. Ironic thing was that I moved away from Toronto in 1990 just as the film boom was starting to take off and before the explosion really hit.

If I had hung on for a couple more years...? ah well such is the stuff of life...

Oh Scott I've been looking for that music list, has it been posted at B.C. I was just thinking I can link to it from my site's version of this post.

Richard Marcus

#20 — May 21, 2006 @ 15:27PM — mATT cONLEY [URL]

YOU HIT THE MARK. GREAT PIECE.
I MET HIM.HE STUCK OUT HIS HAND AN SAID ,
"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash."
He performed on a TV SDpecial I did. He had presence and great kindness to all. and when he sang the worl stopped for awhile.
"Johnny, we knew ya"

#21 — June 27, 2006 @ 12:59PM — Scott Butki

Matt, I'm jealous.
Richard, it's this piece here

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