Fresh Air - Roots of Rock: Sun Records & Johnny Cash
Episode Date: August 26, 2025All week we're revisiting archival interviews with key figures in early rock and roll, rockabilly and R&B. Sam Phillips discovered Elvis Presley and produced his first records, which many consider Elv...is’ best. He also founded Sun Records and launched the careers of Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich and Johnny Cash. Cash is one of the most influential figures in country music. His collaboration with producer Rick Rubin, starting in the late 1990s, transformed Cash’s image and gained him a new, young audience. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for NPR and the following message come from the Walton Family Foundation,
working to create access to opportunity for people and communities by tackling tough social and
environmental problems. More information is at waltinfamilyfoundation.org.
This is Fresh Air. I'm Teria Gross. Today we continue our archive series,
R&B, Rockabilly, and Early Rock and Roll. We start today's show with Sam Phillips, the founder of Sun Records.
That's the Memphis-based label that launched the careers of Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Charlie Rich, Roy Orbison, and Johnny Cash.
We'll hear an interview with Cash in the second half of the show.
Before Phillips started his own record label, he produced the first records of bluesman BB King and Howland Wolf.
As Peter Goralnik, the author of a biography of Sam Phillips and a two-volume biography of Elvis has said,
quote, Phillips has left a remarkable legacy both of Boliv's.
black blues, and the white adaptation of it, which became rock and roll. He has written one of the
most astonishing chapters in the history of American popular music, and for this, we can only be
grateful. Sam Phillips sold Sun Records in 1969. He died in 2003. I spoke with him in 1997.
We started with one of the first records he produced in his Memphis studio. It's one of the very
early rock and roll records, recorded in 1951, this is Rocket 88, featuring singer Jackie
Brentston with Ike Turner at the piano.
noise they make, but let me
reintroduce my new rocket 88
Yes, it's great
Just one way
Everybody likes my rocket
88, baby we'll ride in style
Moving all along
Part of your genius
Has been finding musicians
Who brought together
Black music and country music
Creating rock and roll and rockabilly
I'm wondering how you were
exposed to black music as a white man growing up in the segregated south.
My interest in black music started at a very early age. I worked with black people in the
fields. My daddy was a farmer and he drew cotton and of course cotton had to be picked and
Hode. My father, incidentally, did not own the farm. He was a tenant farmer, and he in turn
would bring other people onto the farm to help them. So we were able to be together an awful
lot with black people because of the closeness of the type of work that we had to do on the
farms. You started your producing career recording blues musicians and leasing the records to companies
like RPM, modern, and chess records.
You recorded Helen Wolf, Walter Horton, Bobby Bland,
Little Junior Parker, BB King, the very start of their careers.
I'm wondering what it was like for you as a white man in the South,
in the late 40s and early 50s, to be recording black musicians.
Was it ever difficult to have rapport?
I'm wondering if they saw you as the man
because you were recording them and because you were white.
it was a type of thing that I think most black people had some doubt as to what quote-unquote we were up to early on
because in many instances black people were taken advantage of and maybe when they thought something was for free or for a certain price it didn't turn out that way
I knew that the black people that I was going to record,
most of which had never seen even microphones, let alone a little studio,
that the psychology that would be employed by me to have them feel comfortable
and to do the thing that they felt they wanted to do in the way of music,
rather than to try to please or do the type of thing that,
that a white man might want to do, have them do,
because I was not looking for Duke Ellington
or Count Basie or Nat King Cole
or any of the outstanding black jazz
and pop musicians.
The people that I was recording were people
that had to a great extent the feel for the things
they had experienced and they loved
and the way they spoke was to the people
through their music.
One of the great blues musicians
that you discovered
and first recorded was Howland Wolf.
I want to play the recording
that you produced of him doing Mounen
at midnight in 1951,
and this was something that you did for chess records.
I think it made it to number 10
on the R&B charts.
Tell us about your first encounter
with Howland Wolf.
The Wolf, as I've said so many times,
is one of my favorite artist.
He was so...
individual in the things that he did.
He had, number one, a voice that was so distinctive that there is, nobody could mistake it for
anybody else.
That intrigued me.
It was so absolutely untrained in so many ways, but at the same time, it was so honest
that it was just, it brought about a certain passion just by listening to him.
and there was one thing about the wolf that you never had to worry about
when he opened his mouth in a recording studio
and he would talk real low when he was talking to you
and he was a big man about six feet four and weighed probably 225
or 30 pounds and nothing but muscle but when he talked to you
you could barely hear him when he sang to you
you hardly needed a microphone on a amplifier
But more than that, his ability to get lost in a song for two or three minutes or however how long the song was
was certainly as good as anybody I ever recorded.
And when I say get lost in a song, I simply do mean that.
And I think that is a good, unsophisticated term of saying that we all tried to get lost in what we were doing.
and I think that was part of our success.
Well, let me play this 1951 Howling Wolf Record
that you produced Moon in and Night.
I'm anxious to hear that on my favorite record.
Well, somebody calling me on my telephone.
Well, keep on calling, tell them I'm not in home.
That's Halen Wolfer recording produced in 1951 by my guest, Sam Phillips.
Sam Phillips, you started Sun Records, your studio in Memphis.
after recording for independent companies,
other people's independent companies like chess records.
Why did you want to start your own studio?
Did you have a vision of what you wanted to do in your own studio?
I actually never wanted to actually form a label as such, like Sun Records.
I wanted to be strictly on the creative end of it,
because I believe so strongly in what I believed in
and I wanted to prove to myself one way or the other
that what I had felt apparently for an awfully long time
was either something that was worthwhile
or that the public, if it had the chance,
would tell us that, you know, you're on the wrong track.
but after dealing with RPM and modern records and chess
I guess I was disappointed in the way that I thought business was done
and I don't like to speak disparagingly of people
because these people were my friends
but I had some difficulty
and you know working with them from a standpoint of what I felt
was fair and equitable in the things that we had agreed on.
When Elvis first auditioned for you,
I know that he sang in styles of his favorite performers
from white and black, from Lonnie Johnson to Dean Martin,
what did you do to try to get a sense from Elvis
of who Elvis really was, of what his kind of own voice was?
Well, Elvis being as young as he was,
of course I'm 12 years and three days older than Elvis and he's 19 I guess I was 31 or whatever
but I can tell you the only time that we possibly had what you might say a difference of opinion
and what we were doing is that I really did not want to do some of the quote unquote more poppish things that Elvis truly did like
because Elvis, let's face it, had an absolute beautiful voice from the beginning,
trained or not.
It was beautiful.
But at the same time, he also had a certain intrigue about his voice,
and I knew that, and I knew that we needed to feel our way around
between great gut-bucket blues and country.
I really, truly thought that.
So I think Elvis, if he had had his way,
and he absolutely gave us no problem at all on it.
Maybe he wouldn't have put a country-type thing
on the backside of each R&B record that we put out on him.
Do you have a favorite of the Elvis Sun Sessions that...
I really do, and I've kidded about it a lot of because I wrote the song.
I really didn't.
It was the song Mystery Train that Little Junior Parker
really basically wrote it, and we did it by him on Sun.
and we did it in an entirely different tempo and approach
and he had the idea for the song and came in
and it wasn't quite like we thought it should be
and so I worked with him a little bit
because I really did love the idea of the song
so when we decided to do it on Elvis
it is something that I think that we did so entirely different
although Little Junior Parker's record was
Elvis's favorite of the two
I have to say that both of them were my favorites
until this day I'd have to say
Mr. Train ranks way up there
Why don't we hear
Since you produced Junior Parker's version of Mystery Train 2
Why don't we hear both the Junior Parker and the Elvis version
Back to Back?
We're in for a treat
Train
Train our ride
13 coaches long
Train I ride, 16 coaches long.
Train I ride, 16 coaches long.
Well, that long black train carried my bear from home.
Train, train
Coming round round the bed
Well, it took my baby
Train
Train
Coming around the bed
Well, it took my baby
But it never will again
Train, train.
This, Junior Parker and Elvis Presley,
both of their versions of Mystery Train,
both versions produced by my guest,
Sam Phillips, the founder of Sun Records.
You gave up recording in about 1963.
You gave up producing records.
Why did you stop?
I saw the handwriting on the wall
when you would do what you did,
had to do,
and your distributors had to work with you.
and then the major labels would come along and offer contracts that we couldn't even think about,
guarantees, because we were still very, very limited on funds.
So it was no use in me being a farm club, so to speak, for the Major League club,
and that's exactly what it came to be.
So I decided and I was not going to work because I was offered a job with,
with RCA by Steve Sholes to go to RCA at the time I sold Elvis's contract.
And I did not go because, number one, I knew I would not be of any value to RCA
because I had to do whatever I did, be it right or wrong, I had to do it in the way that I felt
was necessary to prove what I had set out to prove.
I knew that that wasn't necessarily going to work well with a big company.
it would be absolutely no percentage.
It would be only frustration.
I would accomplish absolutely nothing.
You must have, or I would imagine
that you must have really missed recording people
when you stopped and misdiscovering people.
I'll always miss it.
I sure will.
There is nothing on the face of God's earth
that gives us more solace in more different areas
and more different ways than music.
And you better believe that if I can stay around,
here another 74 years and I could start all over again and have my way with a major company or
I would be recording people because there's nothing there is nothing in this world that is more
rewarding whether you got a dollar out of it or not than working with I mean absolutely untried
unproven talent and seeing it come to the forefront and entertain I mean even the hardest-eared
control man in the world behind that glass.
Did you ever wish that you were the performer and you weren't behind the glass in the
control room, but you were in front of the microphone in front of the crowd?
Never, never, never.
And that's a good question.
That's probably one of the better ones, Terry, because I was never, ever jealous.
I was a pretty good musician.
I've always said I wasn't worth a damn, but my bandmaster and everything, Coffee High School said
I was good.
I directed a band in the summer.
and this sort of thing.
But no, that did not enter my mind.
Oh, no, listen, I had the good job.
I had the good job.
The boys out there on the floor, they had the tough job.
They had to worry about one instrument.
I had to worry about three, maybe, you know.
I think you just answered one of my questions.
You said you played tubo when you were younger.
You had said in one place that your favorite composer was John Phillips Sousa.
Now, I mean, I love marching band music.
I love band music.
and marches and stuff. But I was really shocked
to hear that from you, the man
who discovered Elvis Presley, John Phyllis.
Hey, you've been reading my record or something, girl.
Let me tell you something about John Phillips
Souser. What Marshall Music is
is what I call stiff music.
This man absolutely got
more melody chords.
I'm not talking about necessarily harmony chords
because, let's face it, martial music
is not made up just for.
or a nice big blend of harmony.
But you listen to this guy and the way that he handled it.
He is a, this guy is a master at crafting music
that if you can make people want to listen to it
and if you can make somebody want to listen to a good martial piece of music
like the Washington Postmark march or a simple for Bellis
and enjoy it, I mean, I'm going to tell you,
you are a master musician.
he is the best
at what he did
there's no but there's not a good second
you can't name one
and of course
the Boston Pops
has always been one of my favorite
that Fiedler was so crazy
I loved him man
he was scared of nothing
absolutely scared of nothing
the criticism he didn't give a damn
give him a drink before he went out on stage
a half a pint
and you can forget it honey
you were going to have fun
with music
I mean you know
don't get me really don't get me
No, no, no, wait, wait, wait. You mentioned, you know, that you have a little drink before.
My understanding is that you wouldn't let your musicians have a drink in the studio, with the
exception of Helen Wolfe.
That is right.
Damn you, woman, I swear to God, do you have my jail record up there, too?
But honestly, that's a fact.
And the wolf, I looked at him as big as he was, and then half of a pint of Thunderbird
wine, and actually that half pint was half gone already.
I said, you know, there can't be too much harm done if I permit him to break the rules around here.
And besides that, if he stepped on me, I might be no more.
Now, what about other people?
Why wouldn't you let them drink?
Because, after all, you wanted them to be as relaxed and as natural and uninhibited as they could?
I don't really know.
I really honestly don't know, Terry.
there was just something
I wanted to really get high
on what we were attempting to do
and the one thing that I can tell you
unequivocably again
is that we did get high on our music
even the cuts that we didn't feel
that we had it on
we got high on it
and I want to tell you there is no high in this world
better than when you cut something
that you didn't believe that you could do
You maybe said to yourself, I know I can do it, but you really didn't believe you could do it, and you do it?
Now, you tell me something that would be more potentially high.
Now, that's high-octane stuff, so far as I'm concerned.
Sam Phillips founded Sun Records.
Our interview was recorded in 1997.
He died in 2003.
One of the people whose careers he launched was Johnny Cash.
We'll hear my 1997 interview with Cash after a break.
I'm Terry Gross, and this is fresh air.
Hey, Porter, hey Porter, would you tell me the time?
How much longer will it be to we cross that Mason-Nixon line?
At daylight, would you tell that engineer to slow it down?
Or better still just stop the train, because I want to look around.
Support for NPR and the following message come from the Walton Family Foundation,
working to create access to opportunity for people and communities by tackling tough social and environmental problems.
More information is at walton family foundation.org.
Next in our series of interviews on R&B, Rockabilly, and Early Rock and Roll,
we have my 1997 interview with Johnny Cash, one of country music's most influential performers.
He's in both the country music and rock and roll halls of fame.
Some of his best known recordings include I Walken,
the line, Ring of Fire, and Folsom Prison Blues. His early recordings were on Sun Records,
which was owned by Sam Phillips, who we just heard from, and was the most influential label that
produced Rockabilly. I spoke with Cash when his autobiography was published. In the book, he said that
after his hits in the 60s, he didn't sell huge numbers of records, but he kept making music he's
proud of. But in 1994, he hooked up with record producer Rick Rubin, who had produced many rap and rock hits.
The recordings they made together included many Cash covers of contemporary rock songs,
including songs by 9-inch nails and sting.
And as the autobiography says, the Cash and Rubin collaborations transform Cash's image
from Nashville Hasbin to hip icon, and it gains him a new, young audience.
Soon after we spoke in 1997, he announced that he had Parkinson's disease
and was canceling the remainder of his book tour, which had just begun.
His diagnosis was later changed to autonomic neuropathy, a disease affecting the nervous system.
Cash died in 2003.
Earlier that year, he won a Grammy for Best Male Country Vocal Performance for his new version of Give My Love to Rose,
which he first recorded on Sun Records in 1957.
Here's this 1956 recording of Get Rhythm, which was produced by Sam Phillips on Sun Records.
Hey, get rhythm.
get the blues come on get rhythm when you get the blues get a rock and roll feeling in
your bonp but taps on your toes and get gone get rhythm when you get the blues a little shoe shine
boy he never gets slow down but he's got the dirtiest job in town bending low at the people's feet
on a windy corner of the dirty street will i ask him while he shine my shoes how to keep from
getting the blues he grinned as he raised his love
Little hit, he popped his shoe shine ragging, and he said, get rhythm.
When you get the blues, come on, get rhythm.
You grew up during the Depression.
What are some of the things that your father did to make a living while you were a boy?
My father was a cotton farmer first, but he didn't have any land or what land he had.
He lost it in the Depression.
So he worked as in the woodman, woodman cut pulp wood for the paper mills, rode the rail.
on, in box cars, going from one harvest to another to try to make a little money, picking
fruit or vegetables.
Did every kind of work imaginable from painting to shoveling to herding cattle.
He's always been such an inspiration to me because of very kinds of things that he did
in the kind of life he lived.
He inspired me so, that all the things he did so far from being a soldier in World War I to being an old man,
and his patio sitting on the porch, watching the dogs, you know.
I think about his life, and it would inspire me to go my own other direction.
And I just like to explore minds and the desires of people out there.
You know, it's interesting that you say your father inspired you so much.
I'm sure you wouldn't have wanted to lead his life picking cotton.
I did.
Until I was 18 years old, that is.
Then I picked the guitar, and I've been picking it.
is right did you have a plan to get out did you did you very much want to get out of the town
where you were brought up and get out of picking cotton yeah i knew that when i left there at
age of 18 i wouldn't be back and it was kind of common knowledge among all the people there
that when you graduate from high school here you go to college or go get a job or something and
do it on your own and uh haven't been familiar with hard work
It was no problem for me, but first I hitchhiked to Pontiac, Michigan, and got a job working in Fisher Body, making those 1951 Pontiacs.
I worked there three weeks, got really sick of it, went back home and joined the Air Force.
You have such a wonderful, deep voice. Did you start singing before your voice changed?
Oh, yeah. I got no deep voice today. I've got a cold. But when I was so young, I had a high-time.
tenor voice. I used to sing Bill Monroe songs. And I'd sing Dennis Day songs that I like...
Oh, no.
Yeah, songs that he sang on the Jack Benny Show.
Wow.
Every week he sang an old Irish folk song. And next day in the fields, I'd be singing that song
if I was working in the fields. And I always loved those songs. And with my high tenor,
I thought that was pretty good, you know, almost as good as Dennis Day.
But when I was 17, 16, my father and I cut wood all day long, and I was swinging at cross cuts off and hauling wood.
And when I walked in the back door late that afternoon, I was singing, everybody going to have religion and glory.
Everybody going to be singing a story.
I sang those old gospel songs from my mother, and she said, is that you?
And I said, yes, ma'am.
And she came over and put her arms around me and said, God's got his hands on you.
I still think of that, you know?
She realized you had a gift.
That's what she said, yeah.
She called it The Gift.
Well, how did you feel about your voice changing?
It must have stunned you if you were singing like Dennis O'Day
and then suddenly you were singing like Johnny Cash.
Well, yeah.
I don't know.
I guess when I was a tenor, I just, and when it changed, I thought, well, it goes right along with these hormones
and everything's working out.
It was really good, you know.
I felt like my voice was becoming the man's voice.
Right, right.
So did you start singing different songs as your voice got deeper?
Mm-hmm.
Lucky old son.
Memories are made of this.
16 tons.
I developed a pretty unusual style, I think.
If I'm anything, I'm not a singer, but I'm a song stylist.
What's the difference?
Well, I say I'm not a singer, so that means I can't sing.
sing but
doesn't it?
Well but I mean that's not true
I understand you're making a distinction
but you certainly can sing
yeah go ahead
thank you
well a song stylist
it's like to take an old folk song like
Dita's gone and do
a modern white man's virgin of it
a lot of those
I did that way you know I would
take songs that I'd loved
as a child and
redo them in my mind for
the new voice I had, the low voice.
I know that you briefly took singing lessons,
and you say in your new book that your singing teacher
told you, you know, don't let anybody change your voice,
don't even bother with the singing lessons.
How did you end up taking lessons in the first place?
My mother did that,
and she was determined that I was going to leave the farm
and do well in life,
and she thought with the gift I might be able to do that.
So she took in washing.
She got a washing machine in 1940.
as soon as they got electricity.
And she took in washing.
She washed the school teacher's clothes,
anybody she could,
and sent me for singing lessons for $3 per lesson.
And that's how she made the money to send me.
What was your reaction when the teacher told you
don't let anybody change what you're doing?
You know, I'm not going to teach you anymore.
I was pretty happy about that.
I didn't really want to change, you know.
I felt good about my voice.
You left home when you were about 18.
And then how old were you when you actually went to Memphis?
Well, I went to Memphis after I finished the Air Force in 1954.
I lived on that farm until I went to the Air Force.
I was in there four years, and when I came back, I got married and moved to Memphis.
Got an apartment.
Started trying to sell appliances at a place called Home Equipment Company.
But I couldn't sell anything and didn't really want to.
all I wanted was the music
and if somebody in the house
was playing music when I
would come I would stop
and sing with him like
one time Gus Cannon
the man who wrote
Walk Right in
which was a hit for the rooftop singers
and
I sat on the front porch with him
day after day when I found him
and sing those songs
when you got to
Memphis, Elvis Presley had already recorded
that's all right. Sam
Phillips had produced him for his label
Sun Records. You called Sam Phillips
and asked for an audition. Did
it take a lot of nerve to make that
phone call? No.
It just took the right time.
I was fully confident that
I was going to see Sam Phillips
and to record for him
that when I called him
I thought I'm going to get on Sun Records.
So I called him and he turned me down flat.
then two weeks later it turned down again
he told me over the phone that he couldn't sell gospel music
so it was independent not a lot of money you know so
I didn't press that issue but one day I just
decided I'm ready to go so I went down with my guitar
and sat on the front steps of his recording studio
and met him when he came in and I said I'm John Cash
I'm the one that's been calling and if you'd listen to me
I believe you'll be glad you did.
And he said, come on in.
That was a good lesson for me, you know, to believe in myself.
So what did Phillips actually respond to most of the songs that you played him?
He responded most to a song of mine called Hey Porter,
which was on the first record.
But he asked me to go write a love song or maybe a bitter weeper.
So I wrote a song called Cry, Cry, Cry.
Went back in and recorded that for the other side of the record.
Well, why don't we hear a cry, cry, cry, which is on the first single that Sun Records released by you.
Okay.
Everybody knows where you go when the sun goes down.
I think you only live to see the lights uptown.
I wasted my time when I would try, try, try.
Because when the lights have lost a glow, you'll cry, cry, cry.
Soon your sugar deadies will all be gone
You wake up some cold day and find you're alone
You'll call for me but I'm gonna tell you bye bye
When I turn around and walk away
You'll cry cry cry
You're gonna cry cry cry cry and you cry alone
When everyone's forgotten and you're left on
you're on, you're going to cry, cry, cry.
We're listening to my 1997 interview with Johnny Cash.
We'll hear more after a break.
This is fresh air.
What was it like when you started to go on tour?
You know, after coming from the cotton fields, it's true.
I mean, you'd been in the Army and you'd been abroad, you know, with the Army.
But what was it like for you in the early days?
of getting recognized, you know, traveling around the country.
Well, when I started playing concerts,
I went out from Memphis to Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee,
played the little towns there
that I would go out myself in my car and set up the show
or get the show booked in those theaters.
And then along about three months later, Elvis Presley asked me to sing with him
at the Overton Park Shell in Memphis.
And I sing, cry, cry, cry, and hey, porter.
And from that time on, I was on my way, and I knew it, I felt it, and I loved it.
So Elvis asked me to go on tour with him.
And I did.
I worked with Elvis four or five tours in the next year or so.
And I was always intrigued by his charisma.
You can't be in the building without Elvis, with Elvis without looking at him, you know.
and he inspired me so
with his fire and energy
that I guess
that inspiration from him
really helped me to go
what were the temptations like
for a young married man
like yourself on the road
slowly becoming a star
fame was pretty hard to handle
actually
the country boy and me
tried to break loose and take me back to
the country but
the music was stronger
the urge to go out and do
the gift was a lot stronger
and
the temptations were
women
girls which I loved
and
then amphetamines
not very much later
from running all night
you know in a car is on tour
and the doctor's got these nice pills
that give us energy and keep us awake so
started taking us
those and I liked them so much, I got addicted to them.
And then
I started
taking downers of sleeping pills
to come down and rest
after two or three days.
So it became a cycle.
I was taking the pills for a while
and then the pills started
taking me.
I want to play what I think was your
first big hit. I walked the line.
That was my third record.
And
you wrote
this song. Tell me the story of how you wrote it and what you were thinking about at the time.
In the Air Force, I had an old Wilcox K recorder and used to hear a guitar runs on that recorder
going, do, do, do, do, like the chord zone, I walked the line. And I always wanted to write
a love song using that theme, you know, that tune. And so I started to write the song. And I was in
Leadwater, Texas one night with Carl Perkins.
And I said, I've got a good idea for a song.
And I sang the first verse that I had written.
And I said, it's called Because You're Mine.
And he said, I walk the line is a better title.
So I changed it to I walk the line.
Now, were you thinking of your own life when you wrote this?
Mm-hmm.
It was kind of a prodding to myself to play it straight, Johnny.
And was this, I think I read that this was supposed to be a
I mean, it's supposed to be slow when you first wrote it.
That's the way I sang it, yeah, at first.
But Sam wanted it up, you know, up-tempo, and I put paper in the strings of my guitar to get the sound.
And with a bass and a lead guitar, there it was.
Bear and Stark, that song was, when it was released, and I heard it on the radio.
And I really didn't like it.
And I called Sam Phillips and ask him, please not send out any more records of that song.
song. Why? He laughed at me. I just didn't like the way it sounded to me. I didn't know I
sounded that way. And I didn't like it. I don't know. But he said, let's give it a chance. And it
was just a few days until that's all it took to take off. That's funny. I mean, you'd heard your
voice before it, hadn't you? So it was something in your own singing you weren't liking when you
heard it? Well, the music and my voice together, I just felt like it was really weird. But I got
used to it very quickly.
I don't know if that I didn't, I didn't hate it,
but I just didn't like it. I thought I could do better.
Well, let's hear I walk the line. This is a great record.
It was great then, and it still is. This is Johnny Cash.
I keep a close watch on this heart of mine
I keep my eyes wide open all the time
I keep the ends out for the tie that binds
because you're mine
I walk the line
I find it very, very easy to be true
I find myself alone when each day's through
Yes, I'll admit that I'm a fool for you
Because you're mine, I walk the line
We're listening to the interview I recorded with Johnny Cash in 1997
We'll hear more after a break.
This is fresh air.
I think it was in the late 1950s that you started doing prison concerts,
which you eventually became very famous for.
What got you started performing in prison?
Well, I had a song called Folsom Prison Blues
that was the hit just before I walked the line.
And the people in Texas heard about it at the state prison
and got to write me letters asking me to come down there.
I responded, and then the warden called me
and asked if I would come down and do a show
for the prisoners in Texas.
And so we went down, and there's a rodeo
at all these shows that the prisoners have there.
And in between the rodeo things,
they asked me to set up and do two or three songs.
So that was what I did.
I did Folsom Prison Blues,
which they thought was their song, you know.
And I walked the line,
ring a hay porter cry cry cry and then the word got around on the grapevine that
Johnny Cash was all right and that you ought to see him so the request started coming in from
other prisoners all over the United States and then the word got around so I always wanted
to record that you know to record a show because of the reaction I got it was far and above
anything I had ever had in my life the complete explosion of noise and
action that he gave me with every song.
So then I came back to the next year and played the prison again, the New Year's Day show.
Came back again in the third year and did the show.
And then I kept talking to my producers at Columbia about recording one of those shows.
It was so exciting.
I said that the people out there ought to share that, you know, and feel that excitement too.
So a preacher friend of mine named Floyd Gressich set it up.
for us, and Lou Robin and a lot of other people involved at Folsom Prison.
So we went into Folsom on February 11th, 1968, and recorded a show live.
Why don't we hear Folsom Prison Blues from your live at Folsom Prison record?
This is Johnny Cash.
Hello, I'm Johnny Cash.
I hear the train are coming
It's rolling around a bend
And I ain't seen the sunshine
Since I don't know when
I'm stuck in Folsom prison
And time keeps dragging on
But that train keeps rolling
On down the sun and tall
When I was just a baby
My mama told me son
Always be a good boy
Don't ever play with guns
But I shot a man in Reno
Just to watch him die
When I hear that whistle blowing
I hang my head and cry
That's Johnny Cash live at Folsom Prison
And Johnny Cash has a new autobiography
That's just been published
I guess Merle Haggard was in the audience for one of your San Quentin concerts.
It must have been pretty exciting to find that out.
That was before he had recorded, I think, that he was in there.
Yeah, 68 and 69, right on the front row was Merle Haggard.
Yeah, and who knew?
I didn't know that until about 1963, 62.
He told me all about it.
He saw every show that I did there.
And, of course, the rest is history for Merle.
He came out and immediately had success himself.
You know, it's interesting, you've always, or almost always worn black during your career.
And I was interested in reading that your mother hated it, too.
See, yeah.
Yes, you do.
See, we have something in common.
Our mothers don't like black.
I love it.
Me too.
But you gave in for a while.
She started making you bright, flashy outfits, even a nice white suit.
What did it feel like for you to be on stage in bright colors or all in white?
Well, that was
that was
1956 and I hadn't been
wearing the black
for very long
I was okay
I would wear anything
my mother made me
you know
I just couldn't afford
to turn her down
but before long
I decided to start
with the black
and stick with it
because it felt good
to me
on stage that
a figure there in black
and everything
coming out of his face
that's the way I wanted to do it
a few years ago
you started
making records with
Rick Rubin
seemed initially like a very improbable match.
He had produced a lot of rap records
and produced the Beastie Boys
and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
You know, it would seem like a surprising match.
It ended up being a fantastic match.
How did he approach you?
Lou Robin, my manager,
came to me and talked to me about a man called Rick Rubin
that he had been talking to
that wanted me to sign with his record company.
It was American recordings.
I said, like the name, maybe it would be okay.
So, you said, I would like you to go with me and sit in my living room with a guitar and two microphones and just sing to your heart's content everything you ever wanted to record.
I said, that sounds good to me.
Why don't we hear Delia's gone from Johnny Cash's American Recordings CD.
And Johnny Cash, I want to thank you so much for talking with us.
I want to say, you're really good at what you do, and I appreciate you.
Thank you.
Dealia, oh Delia, one more life, if I hadn't a shot, poor Delia, I'd have her for my wife.
Delia's gone, one more round, Delia's gone.
My interview with Johnny Cash was recorded in 1997.
He died in 2003.
Tomorrow, we continue our archive series, R&B, Rockabilly, and Early Rock and Roll.
We'll hear from Johnny Otis, who had the hits Harlem Nocturn and Willie in the Handgive,
and discovered Little Esther, Jackie Wilson, Big Mama Thornton, Hank Ballard, and Edda James.
We'll also hear my interview with Edda James, who's now best known for her recording of At Last.
Hope you'll join us.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne Meebaudenado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaloner, Susan Yucundi, and Aboumian, and John Sheehan.
Our digital media producer is Molly Ceevney Nesper.
Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson.
Roberta Shorak directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.
But jailer, oh, jailer.
Jailer I can't sleep
Cause all around the bedside
I hear the patter of Delia's feet
Delia's gone
One more round
Delia's gone
So if you're woman's devilish
You can let her run
Or you can bring her down
And do her like
Delia got done
He'll just gone
One more
Support for NPR
And the following message
Come from the Walton Family Foundation
Working to create access to opportunity
For people and communities
By tackling tough social and environmental problems
More information is at
Walton Family Foundation.org