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1 posted on 05/15/2003 4:19:18 PM PDT by JDoutrider
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To: JDoutrider
And she might be?
2 posted on 05/15/2003 4:19:44 PM PDT by b4its2late (Despite the high cost of living, have you noticed how it remains so popular?)
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To: JDoutrider
They come in threes. Dave D. and Robert Stack are the other two.
14 posted on 05/15/2003 4:23:48 PM PDT by Moonman62
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To: JDoutrider
How sad. Prayers go out to Johnny and family!!
20 posted on 05/15/2003 4:25:57 PM PDT by areafiftyone (The U.N. needs a good Flush!)
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To: JDoutrider
A wonderful and classy lady. Another sad loss. I met her in June 1968 and she was so courteous and nice to me; I was only 15 and she treated me with respect. My condolences to Mr. Cash and her family.
21 posted on 05/15/2003 4:27:00 PM PDT by vetvetdoug
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To: JDoutrider

June Carter Cash, member of pioneering country music family, dies at 73

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - June Carter Cash, a scion of a pioneering family in country music and the wife and Grammy-winning duet partner of singer Johnny Cash, died Thursday of complications from heart surgery. She was 73.

Cash died at Baptist Hospital with her husband and family members at her bedside, manager Lou Robin said.

Cash had been critically ill. She had surgery May 7 to replace a heart valve.

A singer, songwriter, musician, actress and author, Cash and her husband performed on record and on stage, doing songs like "Jackson" and "If I Were a Carpenter," which both won Grammy awards in 1967 and 1970, respectively. They recorded duets including "It Ain't Me Babe" in 1964 and "If I Had a Hammer" in 1972.

In 1961, she turned down an offer to work on a variety show that had Woody Allen as one of the writers, agreeing instead to tour with Johnny Cash for $500 a week. They married in 1968 after he proposed to her on stage on London, Ontario.

In his 1997 autobiography, Johnny Cash described how his wife stuck with him through his years of amphetamine abuse.

"June said she knew me -- knew the kernel of me, deep inside, beneath the drugs and deceit and despair and anger and selfishness, and knew my loneliness," he wrote. "She said she could help me. ... If she found my pills, she flushed them down the toilet. And find them she did; she searched for them, relentlessly."

She was co-writer, with Merle Kilgore, of Cash's 1963 hit "Ring of Fire," which was about falling in love with Cash. She said the song symbolized her feeling of being engulfed by Cash. "John was notorious," she said in 1999. "He roared when he wanted to."

In a 1987 Associated Press interview, she described her husband as "probably the most unusual, fine, unselfish person I've known. He's different. I think the word is 'power.' There's a lot of power to him. I've seen him on shows with people with a No. 1 record or a lot of No. 1 records, but when John walks on that stage, the rest of 'em might as well leave."

She did occasional acting roles, including the part of Robert Duvall's mother in the 1997 film "The Apostle." With her husband, she periodically performed at Billy Graham crusades.


22 posted on 05/15/2003 4:27:00 PM PDT by HAL9000
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To: JDoutrider
She was at the Midtown music festival last year I sawher on a Turnersouth show she seems like a nice lady. God bless her.
23 posted on 05/15/2003 4:27:52 PM PDT by anncoulteriscool
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To: JDoutrider

Rest In Peace June

Prayers for June. Prayers for the Cash family.

27 posted on 05/15/2003 4:32:12 PM PDT by deadhead (God Bless Our Troops and Veterans)
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To: JDoutrider
She is the niece of A.P. Carter and Sarah Carter which are the two key people in the Carter Family. Her mother is Maybell Carter who played the lead guitar and sang harmony with the group (the Carter Family). They were the first family of folk/country music here in the US. In fact it was Johnny Cash’s connection to the Carter family that really got him going from what I understand..
32 posted on 05/15/2003 4:37:48 PM PDT by airedale
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To: JDoutrider
I heard this on the radio news about an hour or so ago. There were no details then, only that she died in a hospital.
35 posted on 05/15/2003 4:44:58 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: JDoutrider

My dad named me after Cash.

All the good ones are dropping off the planet and leaving us stuck with the likes of Madonna and the Blixie Dicks.

40 posted on 05/15/2003 4:57:57 PM PDT by ALS
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To: JDoutrider
Nothing follows

Yes, that's why it's called "death." Sorry. Say, I wonder why we say it present tense? I mean, she died, right? She just did it once, right? It's past tense, right? I'm not picking on you, the media does it this way. I just don't know why.

Well, this is too bad. She was one of the first country singers I ever heard when I was a kid visiting the grandfolks.

41 posted on 05/15/2003 5:00:50 PM PDT by Anamensis
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To: JDoutrider
Bye bye June. sniff.
42 posted on 05/15/2003 5:05:45 PM PDT by tet68 (Jeremiah 51:24 ..."..Before your eyes I will repay Babylon for all the wrong they have done in Zion")
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To: JDoutrider
I am sorry to hear this. My prayers go for her soul and for Johnny C.
45 posted on 05/15/2003 5:12:15 PM PDT by ThanhPhero
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To: JDoutrider
Prayers for "The Man in Black".
51 posted on 05/15/2003 5:22:54 PM PDT by mdittmar
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To: JDoutrider
She just appeared on CMT's Flameworthy Music Video Awards, accepting an award for Johnny. I thought he was the one who was ill...this is sad.

Godspeed to the family.

57 posted on 05/15/2003 5:43:27 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat (I'm SO glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government.)
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To: JDoutrider
This is sad news.

Maybe someone can help mw with a memory. I recall her doing TV commercials for some product. What it was escapes me. Probably only ran in local markets where the name Carter meant something.

64 posted on 05/15/2003 6:14:45 PM PDT by don-o
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To: JDoutrider
I would like to share a memory with everyone. Years and years ago, Johnny Cash and June went to a huge penitentary to perform. The television camera followed them both in. The guard at the final barred entrance, had to challenge them. Must have been routine, I guess. "Who have we got here" he said firmly and gruffly. Johnny said "Just Juney and me".

The guard let them in, and when the heavy door clanged behind them, Junes face registered a quick concern. I think she realised what it was to have to be even temporarily in that place.

What a show they both put on. The cameras panned on men, finally as human beings, being treated as human beings. An elderly man was caught crying and smiling. Sentimental old stuff, ya say. Yep. A lovely lady.

66 posted on 05/15/2003 6:28:35 PM PDT by Peter Libra
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To: JDoutrider
June Carter Cash dies with family at her side

Country music star known for her warmth, personality

June Carter Cash spent a lifetime around country music giants and co-authored one of country's best-known songs, yet her life is defined less by relations, connections or creations than by warmth and force of personality.

Mrs. Cash, 73, died yesterday at 5:04 p.m. in Baptist Hospital, eight days after undergoing heart surgery on May 7. At the request of the family, funeral services will be private, according to a statement from Baptist Hospital late last night.

The last surviving daughter of iconic guitarist Mother Maybelle Carter and the wife of the legendary Johnny Cash, Mrs. Cash began performing on radio shows with the Carter Family in 1939.

Nearly a quarter century later, she enlisted friend Merle Kilgore to help compose a song about the fright involved in her escalating relationship with Johnny Cash. The resulting song, Ring of Fire, is now a standard of American popular music, as Johnny Cash's definitive 1963 hit version spawned covers by artists from Ray Charles to Frank Zappa.

''A song like that goes on forever,'' Johnny Cash told The Tennessean last summer, though when Mrs. Cash heard his comment she immediately deferred the credit: ''John was the best part of that: It was the way he sung it and the way he did it.''

In the liner notes of her 1999 Press On album, Mrs. Cash described Ring of Fire's inception: ''I felt like I had fallen into a pit of fire and I was literally burning alive.''

Her intuition wasn't far off the mark, as joining with Johnny Cash meant helping to tame a man who was, to paraphrase Kris Kristofferson's synopsis of him, both great and wasted. For years, Johnny Cash battled a drug addiction, and scores of fans credit Mrs. Cash with saving her husband's life.

''What June did for me was post signs along the way, lift me up when I was weak, encourage me when I was discouraged, and love me when I felt alone and unlovable,'' Johnny Cash wrote in Cash: The Autobiography. ''She's the greatest woman I have ever known. Nobody else, except my mother, comes close.''

Early years with family

Born June 23, 1929, into the clan known quite correctly as ''the first family of country music,'' Valerie June Carter spent her early years as a self-described tomboy. She'd milk cows or gather kindling wood at her family's Maces Springs, Va., home, or take delight in riding on a motorcycle with father Ezra Carter. Once, Ezra ran the motorbike into a ditch, shooting his daughter into a cornfield.

''I survived with only scratches and an eager yearning to do anything my father did — to follow him and do anything his boy would have done,'' Mrs. Carter wrote in her own autobiography, Among My Klediments. ''Only I wasn't a boy. I was a girl. But I really tried hard not to be. I wanted to be Daddy's boy.''

Though the monetary rewards of Mother Maybelle's groundbreaking recording sessions with The Carter Family (a group that included Maybelle's cousin, Sara, and Sara's husband, A.P.), were not commensurate with the records' historical significance, June Carter and her two sisters lived comparatively well. The middle of three daughters, June grew up with clean clothes and abundant confidence, as she watched her mother become a major music star and saw her father do improbable things like build a dam that brought power to the area.

''My daddy was one of the heroes of the whole family,'' Mrs. Cash said last summer, during an interview at her childhood home in Maces Springs. ''He brought the first electricity to this valley.''

Sisters Helen and Anita took naturally to singing, but June's entry into the family business was more problematic. She had trouble singing on-key.

''When you don't have much of a voice and harmony is all around you, you reach out and pick something you can use,'' she wrote in Among My Klediments. ''In my case, it was just plain guts. Since I couldn't sing, I talked a lot and tried to cover up all the bad notes with laughter.''

When the Carter Family moved to San Antonio, Texas, to perform on border radio stations, Mrs. Cash made no attempt to cover her rural Virginia roots. She accentuated her accent and took the family microphone to deliver hicked-up radio ads for hair tonic and other products. As a teenager, she developed into quite a cornpone character actress, walking across stage and carrying a big piece of wood. When Maybelle would ask, ''Where you going?'' Mrs. Cash would reply, ''I'm looking for a room. I've got my board.''

After Sara left the act in 1943, Maybelle soldiered on, with her teenage daughters in tow. Mrs. Cash played autoharp, wore comic clothing and cracked jokes for the act that became known as Mother Maybelle & The Carter Sisters.

''My generation knew June Carter as Johnny Cash's wife, as the woman who wrote Ring of Fire and as part of the Carter Family,'' said singer-songwriter Dwight Yoakam, who recorded Ring of Fire on his 1986 debut album. ''By the time I became aware of her, she was this really seductive, Appalachian mountain princess who had captured Johnny Cash's eye. We didn't realize what my parents' generation knew, which was that June was the funniest of the Carter Sisters. Her act was this absurd, comedic take on herself.''

Mother Maybelle & The Carter Sisters played radio stations in Richmond, Va., Knoxville and Springfield, Mo., hooking up along the way with a young and talented guitarist named Chet Atkins. Atkins' pals Homer & Jethro teamed with June in 1949 to produce a Top 10 country version of Baby It's Cold Outside.

In 1950, the Carter women joined the Grand Ole Opry, where June became popular for what Carter Family biographer Mark Zwonitzer called her ''Huckleberry humor and wholesome sex appeal.''

Popularity did not, however, turn the country girl into any sort of prima donna. Kilgore recalled Mrs. Cash's decision to let him drive them both from Nashville to a show in Louisiana on a hot summer day.

''I had a Ford Falcon station wagon, with no air conditioning,'' Kilgore said. ''June said, 'That's OK, we'll drive fast.' ''

In Nashville, the Carters befriended many top performers, including Elvis Presley and the not-long-for-this-world Hank Williams. Mrs. Cash was a close friend of Williams' wife, Audrey, and one night in 1952 Mrs. Cash nearly caught a stray bullet that flew from Williams' gun during one of Hank and Audrey's domestic disputes.

July of 1952 brought a marriage to country star Carl Smith, one of the top hit-makers of the 1950s. They divorced in 1956, but not before producing a daughter, future country singer Carlene Carter.

Around that time, Mrs. Cash began splitting time between Nashville and New York, where she studied acting under director Elia Kazan. In New York, she made friends, including Robert Duvall and James Dean. She name-checked the latter in a song called I Used To Be Somebody:

''We were young and foolish/ And crying out for fame/ He said James Dean was his name.''

Later, she would parlay her acting skills into several key roles, including a part as Duvall's mother in The Apostle.

''I had a great love for acting, and maybe, if I hadn't gotten to know Johnny Cash better, my life would have been different,'' she wrote for the Press On notes.

Being a 'rock for Johnny'

Before she got to know Johnny Cash, she married a man named Rip Nix. That union brought a daughter, Rosey. By the late 1950s, she'd already met Cash, backstage at the Grand Ole Opry. According to author Zwonitzer, Johnny Cash — then married to his first wife — greeted her by saying, ''Hello, I'm Johnny Cash and I'm going to marry you someday.''

That prediction ultimately came to pass, though the two would not take vows until March 1, 1968, soon after the release of the Carryin' on With Johnny Cash & June Carter duet album. But she became a regular part of Johnny Cash's concerts beginning in 1962, and he recorded Ring of Fire in 1963.

''There are so many things I could tell about those years — the sleepless nights in the apartment he shared with Waylon Jennings, the wrecks, the pain, the hurt,'' she wrote in Among My Klediments. ''He should have died a thousand times from an overdose or a wreck. ... But God never let him go, and neither did I.''

A problematic courtship blossomed into one of country music's greatest love stories, of course.

''She was such a rock for Johnny, and I think the world saw that,'' said friend Jeff Hanna of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. ''Her strength was immeasurable. They were meant to be together.''

Ring of Fire co-writer Kilgore was best man at the Cashes' wedding. He said any concerns about Johnny Cash's lifestyle were allayed by those who fathomed Mrs. Cash's depth of caring.

''He was so wild, but they were madly in love,'' Kilgore said.

Johnny Cash's troubles with pills didn't go away immediately, but no one could deny Mrs. Cash's positive effects on his lifestyle. The Cashes won two Grammy Awards for best country duo recordings, one for If I Were A Carpenter and the other for the propulsive Jackson.

''The everlasting image welded into my memory of the two of them is Jackson,'' Yoakam said. ''When John and June did Jackson, it was just hot as pistols, fever-pitched sexuality.''

In Nashville, Johnny and Mrs. Cash became the center of a circle of creative Nashvillians who included songwriter Kristofferson.

''I'm happy to say he's no longer wasted, and he's found a good woman,'' said Kristofferson of Johnny Cash, in the intro to a song on Kristofferson's debut album. ''I'd like to dedicate this to John and June, who helped show me how to beat the devil.''

Living with faith

Mrs. Cash made a solo album, Appalachian Pride, in 1975, but for the most part she put individual ambitions on hold and concentrated on more supportive roles. She and other members of the Carter clan accompanied her husband on concert appearances, helped raise the couple's son, John Carter Cash, and assisted in most every aspect of Johnny Cash's life.

Throughout, Mrs. Cash leaned on Christianity for guidance and for limits.

''If you always follow your heart, that old heart will get you in trouble,'' she told the Nashville Banner's Michael McCall in 1990. ''If you have boundaries that hem and haw and fly up in the air, you might as well give up. 'Cause that heart will go boogety, boogety, boogety, and you'll get messed up.''

Among those who came to know Mrs. Cash's spiritual side was the Rev. Billy Graham, who, with wife Ruth Graham, was a close friend of the Cash family.

''We have always had much love for the Cash family,'' Graham said in a statement. ''June will be greatly missed, and we look forward to seeing her in heaven.''

While her part in her husband's touring show helped keep Mrs. Cash in the public eye and helped to spread the Carter Family legacy, she seldom stepped out to display her solo talents after Appalachian Pride's release. In the late 1990s, though, at her husband's insistence and with son John Carter Cash's production help, she recorded the heralded Press On album.

The album, released in 1999 and recently reissued on Dualtone Records, contains some Carter Family standards, a couple of well-chosen cover songs and some originals that do well to capture Mrs. Cash's unique sense of humor and wordplay: One minute, Mrs. Cash was singing the poignant I Used To Be Somebody, the next she was relating her feeling that ''Quentin Tarantino makes the strangest movies I have ever seen.''

At the heart of Press On was a stripped-down acoustic sound that harkened to Carter Family days.

''How can you be any purer than pure if your name is Carter?'' she said to The Tennessean's Jay Orr in 1999. ''How can you get away from being a Carter? There's a part of you that's gonna come through. How do you keep from doing it? It's what you're born to do.''

Press On won a Grammy — Mrs. Cash's third — for best traditional folk album. A new album, Wildwood Flower, has been completed and is slated for a Sept. 9 release.

Growing older together

Johnny and Mrs. Cash had been off the road for the past half-decade, and he often has been ill.

''Nobody could ever have a truer companion through the sickness as June was,'' Johnny Cash told The Tennessean in 2000. ''We're closer now than we've ever been in our lives. We've seen a lot of them die and fall, seen great artists bite the dust, but she and I have fought together and fought for each other, and we're one.''

Johnny and Mrs. Cash eventually bought back Ezra and Maybelle Carter's home at Maces Spring, and the couple often returned there. Last summer, Mrs. Cash attended a dinner celebration in nearby Bristol, commemorating the 75th anniversary of ''The Bristol Sessions,'' the recording dates that launched the careers of The Carter Family, Jimmie Rodgers and others.

The morning after that posh dinner, Mrs. Cash was back at the homestead, singing in the living room with family members, including daughter Carlene and granddaughter Tiffany Anastasia Lowe.

The room rang with harmonies, as three generations of Carter kin sang Hello Stranger, It Takes A Worried Man and even I Used To Be Somebody.

After the singing session, Mrs. Cash told stories about Hank Williams, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and assorted Carters, and she took care to point out various landmarks on the property.

''My daddy planted those right there,'' she said, pointing to some shrubs. ''You know, John came out here and he couldn't stop loving it. Look at that water running there, just like a little velvet ribbon.''

Mrs. Cash had a way with description, with stories and songs and with people. She was a collector of music, a spreader of humor, an international ambassador of country music and a saving grace to Johnny Cash. Mrs. Cash's death leaves a void that extends past the immediate family for which she cared, past the grounds of her properties and past the line that divides performer from audience.

''Our lives are entwined with the people over the footlights,'' she once wrote. ''We are a part of them.''

Mrs. Cash is survived by her husband, Johnny; son, John Carter Cash; daughters; Carlene Carter and Rosey Nix; and numerous stepchildren, grandchildren and other relatives.


Peter Cooper writes about music for The Tennessean. He can be reached at 259-8220 or by e-mail at pcooper@tennessean.com.
http://www.tennessean.com/entertainment/news/archives/03/05/32812679.shtml
76 posted on 05/16/2003 7:04:53 AM PDT by Lost Highway
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To: JDoutrider
I know someone posted the first two lines, but it seems appropriate as a goodbye to post the full lyrics to the Carter Family standard that June performed. The Carter Family first recorded "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?" in 1935.


I was standing by the window
On one cold and cloudy day
And I saw the hearse come rolling
For to carry my mother away

Will the circle be unbroken
Bye and bye, Lord, bye and bye
There's a better home a-waiting
In the sky, Lord, in the sky

Lord, I told the undertaker
Undertaker, please drive slow
For this body you are hauling
How I hate to see her go

I followed close beside her
Tried to hold up and be brave
But I could not hide my sorrow
When they laid her in the grave

Went back home Lord my home was lonesome
Missd my mother she was gone
All my brothers sisters crying
What a home so sad and lone


78 posted on 05/16/2003 8:10:03 AM PDT by Our man in washington (You want on or off this ping list, drop me a line!)
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To: All
She died of complications durring a heart surgery. I see lots of condolances for Johnny which is great, but we seem to be forgetting she was a member of the Carter Family, daughter of Maybelle (wrote "My the Circle Be Unbroken") and step-mother of Roseanne Cash. June Co-wrote "Ring of Fire" and sang "Jackson" and "If I Were a Carpenter" with Johnny. Country Music lost a legend, Johnny Cash lost a wife, and Carlene, Rosie, and John Carter Cash all lost their mother. read more here:
http://www.cmt.com/news/feat/june.carter.cash.obit.051503.jhtml
88 posted on 05/16/2003 6:24:56 PM PDT by Motorcycle Cowboy
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