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tomcasagranda
Cash wise:
Keith was at a urinal, prior to the rock n roll hall fame gig. Cash was adjacent, at the other urinal, and Keith burst into Loading Coal from 1960's Ride This Train. Keith did ask Cash to sing along, but he didn't, as he thought it odd to be duetting on Loading Coal at a urinal.
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tomcasagranda
Cash wise:
No Expectations was recorded in 1978 for the Jack Clement produced album, Gone Girl. None of the Stones appeared on it. The version is too fast, and Rick Rubin could have done a far better job with a slower version.
Stones-wise: Keith was influenced by Luther Perkins, and has mentioned how much he loved a Sun album of Cash's with a cover of Hank Williams' I Heard That Lonesome Whistle Blow.
A humorous story exists, also, of how Keith was at a urinal, prior to the rock n roll hall fame gig. Cash was adjacent, at the other urinal, and Keith burst into Loading Coal from 1960's Ride This Train. Keith did ask Cash to sing along, but he didn't, as he thought it odd to be duetting on Loading Coal at a urinal.
However, in 1968, at the time of the Rock n Roll Circus, Johnny Cash was recovering from his first major bout of amphetamine addiction. The Stones were not exactly models of sobriety at this point, and it could have caused problems for a recovering addict.
Was Cash familiar, music-wise, with the blues ? The answer to that was resoundingly yes. He did an early blues song called Walkin The Blues at his first Columbia session from 1958. He was also familiar with a Memphis record store called Home Of The Blues, hence one of his early Sun Hits. I also think Rufus Thomas was a proprietor of Home Of The Blues, the store. Cash also covered Vera Hall's Another Man Done Gone from 1963 on Blood, Sweat, & Tears, and I Got A Woman and What'd I Say from 1967's Carryin' On with June Carter. Unlike other country acts, Cash was no stranger to the blues, which would be the Sun influence.
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Made In The Shade
Country music singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, front left, and Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, second from right, jam with Sid McGinnis (rear left), Steve Cropper (over Cash’s shoulder), U2 guitarist The Edge, (rear center), and rocker Little Richard (dark glasses, far right), at the end of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremonies in New York, Jan. 16, 1992. Cash was inducted into the Hall of Fame. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
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DreamerQuote
tomcasagranda
Cash wise:
No Expectations was recorded in 1978 for the Jack Clement produced album, Gone Girl. None of the Stones appeared on it. The version is too fast, and Rick Rubin could have done a far better job with a slower version.
Stones-wise: Keith was influenced by Luther Perkins, and has mentioned how much he loved a Sun album of Cash's with a cover of Hank Williams' I Heard That Lonesome Whistle Blow.
A humorous story exists, also, of how Keith was at a urinal, prior to the rock n roll hall fame gig. Cash was adjacent, at the other urinal, and Keith burst into Loading Coal from 1960's Ride This Train. Keith did ask Cash to sing along, but he didn't, as he thought it odd to be duetting on Loading Coal at a urinal.
However, in 1968, at the time of the Rock n Roll Circus, Johnny Cash was recovering from his first major bout of amphetamine addiction. The Stones were not exactly models of sobriety at this point, and it could have caused problems for a recovering addict.
Was Cash familiar, music-wise, with the blues ? The answer to that was resoundingly yes. He did an early blues song called Walkin The Blues at his first Columbia session from 1958. He was also familiar with a Memphis record store called Home Of The Blues, hence one of his early Sun Hits. I also think Rufus Thomas was a proprietor of Home Of The Blues, the store. Cash also covered Vera Hall's Another Man Done Gone from 1963 on Blood, Sweat, & Tears, and I Got A Woman and What'd I Say from 1967's Carryin' On with June Carter. Unlike other country acts, Cash was no stranger to the blues, which would be the Sun influence.
Thank you Tom!
Cash is still so good to listen to. And he was such a nice man.