Johnny Cash's Prison Gamble: How Singing for Felons Who Couldn't Buy Albums Saved His Career
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Cash had been obsessed with prisons for years, having performed at various correctional facilities since 1957, but always as charity work, never for commercial recording. Columbia Records thought he'd lost his mind. The label brass couldn't fathom why their artist would want to capture a concert before an audience that couldn't buy albums—you know, because they were locked up.
The venue was the prison cafeteria, a cheerless concrete box with all the acoustic charm of a parking garage. Two shows were performed that day, at 9:40 AM and 12:40 PM, before roughly 1,000 inmates total. Cash, dressed entirely in black naturally, opened with "Folsom Prison Blues," the song he'd written years earlier while serving in the Air Force (not, as legend sometimes claims, while incarcerated himself—Cash's jail time would come later, and briefly).
The inmates erupted at the line "But I shot a man in Reno just to watch him die." Their roar of approval was primal, unsettling, and pure gold for the recording. Throughout the performance, Cash fed off their energy, cracking jokes about San Quentin, being high on amphetamines, and generally saying things that would make a parole board blanch.
*At Folsom Prison* became a massive commercial success, revitalizing Cash's flagging career and proving that sometimes the best audience is one that has no choice but to stay for the entire show.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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