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Zana Feaver
Arkie
Join date: 17 Jul 2003
Posts: 396
09-12-2003 08:45
Johnny Cash and John Ritter.

All I can say is -- man, the world will never be the same without Johnny Cash. I've been walking around all morning singing "Jackson" in honor of both him and June, who died in May.

And John Ritter? My god what a shock! Died at 54 of a heart condition he didn't even know he had.

Guess I got two candles to light this weekend.

Zana
Maerl Underthorn
i love almonds
Join date: 27 Jun 2003
Posts: 370
09-12-2003 09:28
:( there will never be..another Johnny..........


A child of the Depression, J.R. Cash was born February 26, 1932, in Kingsland, Arkansas. Cash's parents took advantage of a New Deal farm program, moving their large family to Dyess Colony in northeast Arkansas. There they farmed cotton during the day and sang hymns on the porch at night.

At age 12, Cash was writing poems and songs and setting his sights on a musical career. After high school, he enlisted in the Air Force. The military wouldn't accept initials, so Cash chose John as his new first name. While stationed in Germany, Cash bought his first guitar and started a band.

When his hitch was over, Cash moved to Memphis where he sold appliances door-to-door while trying to break into the music business. In 1954, he auditioned for Sam Phillips at Sun Records, hoping to record some simple gospel songs. Instead, Phillips -- who had discovered Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis -- pushed Cash toward a more commercial sound.

Cash's first single, "Hey Porter," had a disappointing debut. But his follow-up, the 1955 "Cry, Cry, Cry," drew national attention. "Folsom Prison Blues" went into the Top Five in country singles in 1956, and "I Walk the Line" became Cash's first No. 1 hit. In 1957, he made his first appearance at the Grand Ole Opry. And by 1958, he'd published 50 songs, sold more than six million records and moved to the Columbia label.

Through the late 1950s and into the 1960s, Cash continued to have huge hits. "Don't Take Your Guns to Town," "I Got Stripes," "Ring of Fire," "Understand Your Man" and "The Ballad of Ira Hayes" were major hits of the period. He toured worldwide and played free shows at prisons in the United States -- he first played San Quentin in 1958 when a young Merle Haggard was in the audience.

Living and working at a hectic pace, Cash became dependent on drugs. They took a toll on his career and ended his first marriage. But by 1967, Cash had overcome his addiction with the help of his singing partner, June Carter. The next year he married Carter and made a triumphant comeback. Carter and Cash had five children.



'Man in Black'

By the end of the decade, Cash owned the voice of country music. In the fall of 1969, he was considered by many to be the hottest act in the world, even outselling The Beatles. That year, his work accounted for 5 percent of all record sales in the U.S.

"The Johnny Cash Show" aired on ABC TV from 1969 to 1971 and featured guests as diverse as Bob Dylan, Merle Haggard and Louis Armstrong.

In the 1970s, Cash continued to record, although his work became more progressive and less commercial. Having never given up his fondness for gospel music, Cash co-wrote (with Larry Murray) and produced a film based on the life of Jesus. "The Gospel Road" was released in 1973, with Cash providing narration and Carter in the role of Mary Magdelene.

Cash's 1975 autobiography, "Man in Black," sold 1.3 million copies.

In 1980, at 48, Cash became the Country Music Hall of Fame's youngest living inductee. He was part of the highly successful Highwaymen quartet with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson. When drug problems returned with the use of pain killers, Cash entered the Betty Ford Clinic.

Late in the decade, Cash's radio popularity was fading -- a more contemporary sound was moving into country -- and he broke with Columbia. A new contract with Mercury Nashville didn't reflect his earlier success, but concert performances remained big sellers.



Hall of Fame inductee

In 1992, Cash was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. In 1994, he became hot again with the release of the acoustic "American Recordings," featuring just Cash and his guitar on yet another label, American Records. The album landed him on the pages of Rolling Stone, People and Time.

The singer was given a Kennedy Center Honors award in 1996 and was reported to have been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1997. In recent bulletins, he's been said to have Shy-Drager syndrome, a degenerative nerve disease that attacks the nervous system in much the same way as Parkinson's disease.

Whether singing about outlaws of the Old West, murder and prison ballads or mountain laments, Cash sang in an unadorned, frank baritone about the plight of the common citizen.

"My roots are in the working man," Cash told the Music City News in 1987. "I can remember very well how it is to pick cotton 10 hours a day, or to plow, or how to cut wood. I remember it so well because I don't intend to ever try to do it again."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'The man in black' Johnny Cash dead at 71

Friday, September 12, 2003

Posted: 1027 GMT ( 6:27 PM HKT)

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (CNN) -- Country music legend Johnny Cash died early Friday of complications from diabetes at Baptist Hospital in Nashville, hospital spokeswoman Nicole Bates said. He was 71.

Cash was sent home Monday from Baptist after a week's stay for a stomach condition, according to his official Web site. Bates said he was sent home to "rest and recover."

His family was with him when he died Friday morning at 2 a.m. (3 a.m. EDT), she said.
Maerl Underthorn
i love almonds
Join date: 27 Jun 2003
Posts: 370
09-12-2003 09:31
Are all the Children In............by Johnny Cash


When I'm alone I often think of an old house on the hill

Of a big yard hedged in roses where we ran and played at will

And when the night time brought us home hushing our merry din

Mother would look around and ask are all the children in

Well it's been many a year now and the old house on the hill

No longer has my mother's care and the yard is still so still

But if I listen I can hear it all no matter how long it's been

I seem to hear my mother ask are all the children in

And I wonder when the curtain falls on that last earthly day

When we say goodbye to all of this to our pain and work and play

When we step across the river where mother so long has been

Will we hear ask her a final time are all the children in (I come)
Dave Zeeman
Master Procrastinator
Join date: 28 Jan 2003
Posts: 1,025
09-12-2003 12:06
Not being a huge music fan, but being a huge comedy fan, I'm one of the people who will be mourning Ritter especially. He was one of the best guests on Conan O'brien ever. He would create comedy gold without even realizing he'd done it. My heart goes out to the crew of "8 simple rules" whose show was doing awesome and will hopefully continue on to be great without Spin-City syndrome.
I'll miss you Ritter, make God laugh for me!
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