Cash initially shelved the album in 1993, but now his son, John Carter Cash, has spearheaded a project to revamp and release the recordings, with the help of Marty Stuart, Dan Auerbach, Vince Gill, and other notables. Read on to get the details and see a gallery of vintage instruments and other artifacts from the Cash Cabin studio.
āThe Man Comes Aroundā is a much-played song from the final album Johnny Cash recorded before his death in 2003, American IV: The Man Comes Around. Now, the Man in Black himself has come around again, as the voice and soul of a just-released album he initially cut in 1993, titled Songwriter.
For fans who know Cash only through his much-loved American Recordings series, this is a very different artistāhealthy, vital, his signature baritone booming, his acoustic playing lively, percussive, and focused. This is the muscular Johnny Cash heard on his career-defining recordings, from his early Sun Records sides like āCry! Cry! Cry!ā and āFolsom Prison Bluesā to āRing of Fireā and āSunday Morninā Cominā Downā to later, less familiar hits like āThe Baronā and āThat Old Wheel.ā In short, classic Cashāthe performer who became an international icon and remains one 21 years after his death.
In addition to theSongwriter album, itās also worth noting that there is a new documentary, June, that puts June Carter Cashās life and under-sung cultural legacy in perspective. Johnny wasnāt the only giant in this family. Just the biggest one.
āI think itās important to support my fatherās legacy in the world in which we live,ā says John Carter Cash, who, in addition to his own work as an artist, is the primary caretaker of his familyās estimable body of work.
I recently visited the Cash Cabināa log cabin recording studio on the Cash family property in Hendersonville, Tennessee, that was originally built as a sanctuary where Johnny wrote songs and poetryāwith PGās video team of Chris Kies and Perry Beanāto talk about Songwriter with John Carter Cash, the son of Johnny and June Carter Cash. [Go to premierguitar.com for the full video.] In this shrine of American music, Johnny Cash recorded most of the American Recordings series, and many others, from Loretta Lynn to Jamey Johnson, have tracked here. Itās also where John Carter Cash and co-producer David āFergieā Ferguson took apart the original Songwriter sessions and put them back together, stronger, with musical contributions by Marty Stuart, Dan Auerbach, Vince Gill, a blue-ribbon rhythm team of the late bassist Dave Roe and drummer Pete Abbott, backing vocalists Ana Christina Cash and Harry Stinson, percussionist Sam Bacco, guitarists Russ Pahl, Kerry Marx, and Wesley Orbison, keyboardist Mike Rojas, and John Carter himself. Johnnyās vocals and acoustic rhythm guitar, and guest vocals by Waylon Jennings on two songs, are all that was saved from the 1993 sessions, cut at LSI Studios in Nashville.
In addition to getting the lowdown on Songwriter from John Carter Cash, he showed us some of the iconic guitarsāincluding original Johnny Cash lead guitarist Luther Perkinsā 1953 Fender Esquire and a Martin that was favored by the Man himselfāthat dwell at the busy private studio. [Go to the video at premierguitar.com for an eyeful.]
Only 44 of these Rosanne Cash signature model OM-28s were made by Martin. John Carter Cash says itās his favorite guitar to play, and he and house engineer Trey Call attest that itās probably the most frequently chosen instrument by guests recording in the studio.
Photos by Perry Bean
Only Johnny Cashās original vocal and guitar tracks, and Waylon Jenningsā performances, were kept from the 1993 sessions. Marty Stuart, Vince Gill, Dave Roe, Dan Auerbach, and others contributed new tracks.
Speaking about Songwriter, John explains, āIn some ways, these recordings fell through the cracks. I was in some of the sessions and can hear my guitar on some of the original recordings.ā Dave Roe was also on those initial sessions, but heād just started to play upright bass and didnāt have the finesse he lends to the revamped album.
The idea with Songwriter, John Carter relates, wasnāt to do anything more with the music than make it stronger. His dad was initially unhappy with the overall playing on the LCI recordings. āWe didnāt add elements to make it about the ānowā or more āAmericanaā or whatever,ā he says.
The amp room at the Cash Cabin studio has some small but potent combo treasures.
Photos by Perry Bean
Nonetheless, Songwriter does take the Cash legacy to some new places, including the realm of psychedelia. Although the song āDrive On,ā about a trucker who survived the Vietnam war with internal and exterior scars, was written for the 1993 sessions, it debuted in 1994 as part of the American Recordings album. The Songwriter treatment is radically different, from the panned amp, beating with tremolo, that opens the song to the concluding lysergic odyssey of 6-string provided by John Carter and Roy Orbisonās son, Wesley. It might well appeal to Johnny, who was a musical maverickāinsisting that then-controversial figures like Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger, as well as a just-emerging Joni Mitchell and Linda Ronstadt, appear on the ABC networkās The Johnny Cash Show, which aired from 1969 through 1971.
This is June Carter Cashās pianoāan antique Steinway upright that still earns its keep as one of the studioās active instruments. Nothing in the Cabin is a museum piece.
Photos by Perry Bean
John Carter, who is a singer-songwriter and producer, and is currently at work on his own fourth solo album, notes that the sonically spacious Songwriter opener āHello Out Thereā resonates with him most, emotionally, as its lyrics balance the possible end of humanity with a message of hope. But every song on the album brims with empathy and kindness in strong measure. āLike a Soldier,ā which blends Johnnyās patented guitar thrum with an introspective story about his battles with addiction, and āShe Sang Sweet Baby James,ā about a struggling single mother singing the James Taylor song to comfort her infant, are two more examples. And the guitars are always prominent, whether theyāre Russ Pahlās steel providing ambient textures or Marty Stuartās hard-charging country licks, which breathe fire into the album.
A stained-glass portrait of Mother Maybelle Carter with her autoharp. Mother Maybelle invented a style of guitar playing, where melody was executed on the bass strings and rhythm on the high strings, that influenced Chet Atkins, Merle Travis, and a host of other famed pickers.
Photos by Perry Bean
For Stuart, who toured with Johnny Cash for six years and played on many of the Man in Blackās recordings, the experience of working on the retooled Songwriter, as well as his time with the senior Cash, was āmysticalāeverything about him was mystical. Even after I left his band, anytime the chief called, I was available. To the day he passed away, he was the boss. So when John Carter called and said he needed guitar on some of his dadās tracks, I went over there. Itās so natural to hear that voice in the headphones. What I always loved about playing against him is that his voice is like an oak tree. You can put anything you want next to it, and it still stands out.ā
From father to son: On his 10th birthday, Johnny Cash drew John Carter Cash this chord diagram for āI Walk the Line.ā
Photos by Perry Bean
The exterior of the Cash Cabināone of the sacred places of American music and still a busy working studio.
Photos by Perry Bean
This 1953 Fender Esquire belonged to Luther Perkins, who was a member of Cashās first recording bands and played on all of the Man in Blackās foundational recordings for Sun Recordsālikely with this guitar.
Photos by Perry Bean
Stuartās instruments of choice for Songwriter were a ā50s Telecaster owned by Clarence White that bears the first B-bender, a 1939 Martin D-45 that Cash used on his ā60s-/early-ā70s TV show and gifted to Stuart, and a silver-panel Fender Deluxe, in addition to John Carterās ā59 Les Paul, another of Johnnyās old Martins, and a baritone that resides at the Cabin. And Stuartās focus was getting back to the template of Cashās original Tennesse Two and Tennessee Three bands, and the guitar style created by Luther Perkins, Stuartās first guitar hero. āThey had their own language, and itās a foundational sound inside of me,ā he says. āWith Johnnyās voice and the thumb of his right hand on the guitar as a guide, that architecture was all there. I heard the album the other day for the first time, and I thought, āMan, John Carter and David Ferguson worked their hearts out to honor the real sound.āā
John Carter Cash bought this 1959 Gibson Les Paul at Gruhnās in Nashville. It has a neck that is atypically slim for its vintage and appears as part of the psychedelic guitar interplay on the Songwriter song āDrive On.ā
Photos by Perry Bean
John Carter Cash remembers this Martin 40 H from his childhood as the guitar Johnny kept around the house to play on a whim or when he was chasing a song idea. The year is unknown, but as a guitar that Johnny Cash played, it is priceless.
Photos by Perry Bean
Hereās the headstock of the Stromberg that Mother Maybelle Carter used on the road while touring with Johnny Cash and her daughters. Her main guitar, dating back to the first recordings of country music, which she made as part of the Carter Family, was a Gibson L-5, but she judged this instrument hardier for travel.
Photos by Perry Bean
Fishing was a favorite pastime of the Cash family. This is June Carter Cashās fishing reel and tackle boxāone of the many personal and historic items in the cabin.
Photos by Perry Bean
When Johnny Cash completed his novel about the apostle Paul, titled Man in White, he commemorated the occasion by scratching his initials and the day into the arm of the studioās rocking chairāhis favorite place to sit.
āIn so many ways,ā John Carter allows, āmy father is always with me. People everywhere still love my fatherās music. For instance, a 15-year-old kid wrote saying that without the strength through hardship my father expressed in his songs, he would not be alive. So, I think itās important to support my fatherās legacy in the world in which we live.
āMy father made a distinction between the business of Johnny Cash and himself,ā John Carter notes. āItās almost like Iāve studied Johnny Cash my whole life, and so I can tie the two together somehow and still go through the healing process of losing a father while embracing him and his work on a level that spreads his musicās joy and brilliance to the world. I believe that his goal for his music and his life was to share with other people out there who connect on a level of the heart.ā And that echoes, boldly, throughoutSongwriter.