Johnny Cash: Difference between revisions

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Starting in [[The Nineties]], Cash underwent a [[Career Resurrection]]. Under the guidance of [[Record Producer]] Rick Rubin, Cash recorded a series of albums nicknamed "the American series", starting with 1994's ''American Recordings''. Marked by minimalist production (''Recordings'' was recorded solely with a guitar and vocals) and covers of various bands, such as [[Tom Waits]]' "Down There by the Train", [[Soundgarden]]'s "Rusty Cage", [[U2]]'s "One", [[Nick Cave]]'s "The Mercy Seat", [[Nine Inch Nails]]' "Hurt" and [[Depeche Mode]]'s "Personal Jesus", these albums earned him critical acclaim and a new, younger audience of [[Alternative Rock]] fans. He died in 2003 at the age of 71, only a few months after his [[Happily Married|beloved wife]], June Carter Cash, died. By that time, he'd earned a reputation not only as a [[Cool Old Guy]], but as one of the greatest legends in music history.
 
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{{creatortropes}}
* [[The Alleged Car]]: The car from "One Piece at a Time" is one of the weirder examples. See [[Stealing From the Till]] below.
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* [[Dark Is Not Evil]]
* [[Despair Event Horizon]]: "Folsom Prison Blues" and "25 Minutes to Go"
* [[Do Not Call Me "Paul"]]: "A Boy Named Sue"
* [[Embarrassing First Name]]: "A Boy Named Sue"
* [[Fan Nickname]]: He was affectionately referred to as "The Man in Black" for obvious reasons.
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[[Category:Johnny Cash]]
[[Category:Music]]
[[Category:Singer-songwriter]]
[[Category:Actors]]
[[Category:Authors]]
[[Category:Names to Know in Music]]
[[Category:Library of Congress Living Legend]]