subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Fri, Jul 18 2008 

Published: October 21, 2007 01:42 am    print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

Upcoming Cash festival is really about life

By Steve Gillespie / managing editor

The live album by Johnny Cash, “At Folsom Prison,” was released in 1968. That’s where the blockbuster movie “Walk The Line” ends and it’s about where my knowledge of Johnny Cash begins.

I remember my dad bringing home the album Johnny Cash “At San Quentin” in 1969 and we listened to it over and over on our record player. I kept playing it long after he was tired of it.

At 6 years old “A Boy Named Sue” was probably the first song I ever knew all the words to from beginning to end and I’d sing it on demand for grown ups who thought it was charming for such a little fellow to be singing about cutting off a piece of another person’s ear in a bar fight and wallowing in the “mud and the blood and the beer.”

Yeah, 1969 was the year of Johnny Cash. His television variety show started that year. “A Boy Named Sue,” written by Shel Silverstein, and “Wanted Man” written by Bob Dylan, both charted No. 1 on the Country and Western charts from the San Quentin album. He received Album of the Year honors from the Country Music Association and Cash was named CMA Entertainer of the Year. “A Boy Named Sue” was chosen CMA’s Single of the Year as well.

Cash wouldn’t have another No. 1 album on the Billboard charts until after his death in September 2003, with “American V: A Hundred Highways,” released last year.

Johnny Cash grew up in Dyess, Ark., a farm community established in the 1930s as a product of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal program. Dyess is just a few miles south of my hometown in Mississippi County Arkansas.

The fascination with him at such an early age didn’t have anything to do with that. I didn’t know he was from down the road when I first heard “At San Quentin.” What I was, and would continue to be fascinated with as years went by, was the sound and subject of those songs. No one else had songs that rolled with the rhythm of trains. No one else yelled “Suey!” in the middle of their performance. No one else told stories about being in trouble like he did. And, no one else treated people in prison like people — at least, not in such a public way.

It also was the San Quentin album that introduced the song “Starkville City Jail,” in which Johnny told the story of how he was arrested for breaking curfew in Starkville, Miss., during the wee hours of the morning after a show. When the police asked him what he was doing he said he was just “picking flowers.” He spent the night in Starkville’s drunk tank. The incident happened in May of 1965. He told the prisoners in San Quentin he wrote the song for anyone they might want to get back at — in his case it was the guy in Starkville that still had his $36.

During the first weekend of next month, Nov. 2-4, the Johnny Cash Flower Pickin’ Festival will be held in Starkville. It was organized by Robbie Ward from here in Meridian and it will include lectures, entertainment from Marty Stuart and many other artists, worship services, an auction and a posthumous pardon for Johnny’s indiscretion.

More details on the festival can be found on the Web site pardonjohnnycash.com. Also, you can read an exclusive interview with Robbie Ward and get more details about the festival in this week’s edition of Meridian 360º in Thursday’s Meridian Star.

The festival is not a celebration of Johnny Cash being in jail, just as his songs about people being in trouble never glorified their bad situations. The songs focused on the despair of it all — the regret, the need for help, truth, and forgiveness.

When Johnny returned to Starkville to play a concert in 1970 he had front row tickets waiting for the law enforcement officers who had anything to do with busting him on his little misdemeanor five years earlier.

Sometimes we hurt ourselves and others. Sometimes we’re treated unfairly. Life is messy and we all need redemption from time-to-time. That’s what the festival is about. That’s what Johnny Cash’s music was about. That’s what life is about.



Steve Gillespie is managing editor of The Meridian Star. E-mail him at sgillespie@themeridianstar.com.

print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

Click to discuss this story with other readers on our forums.



monster
wheels
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Premium Jobs

Certified Staff Openings (Educational)
CERTIFIED STAFF OPENINGS
For School Year 2008-2009
OPENING DATE:  07/08/2008
CLOSING DATE:  07/22/2008 o
...>MORE

Be A Driver!
Drive With The Best Of The Best!
Come join our great family of drivers and be home daily!
KENAN ADVANTAGE G
...>MORE

Airgas
Airgas-South, Inc. is seeking a qualified
Local, Industrial Route Driver for its Meridian, MS branch operation....>MORE

RN
F/T RN 7a-7p
Guardian Angel Hospice
6434 Dale Drive
Marion. EOE
601-483-7449
...>MORE

P/T Couriers
** COURIERS **
PART TIME Independent Contractors with cargo vans or mini-vans needed for part-time
route
...>MORE

Full Time Registered Nurse
F/T Registered Nurse
needed at Total Pain Care to work with Dr. Ken Staggs. 
Advanced computer skills, elect
...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Homes

Beautiful Home
PS School 4207 - 33rd Ave.
4 BR, 2 BA, Hwd & tile, gas FP. New inside paint & remodeled BAs. $105,000.
601-
...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2008. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index

rc