Playing off their excitement, he slyly portrays himself as a rebel: Before "I Still Miss Someone", Cash explains, "This show is being recorded for an album release on Columbia Records, and you can't say 'hell' or 'shit' or anything like that." Previously the latter has been bleeped out, but this reissue reinstates the expletive. Furthermore, the definitive versions of several of his hits are here, including the raucous "Cocaine Blues" and "Folsom Prison Blues", but the show is equally remarkable for the banter he maintains with the prisoners. It's an ideal setlist, with every song playing to the prisoners: "25 Minutes to Go" and "Dark As a Dungeon" of course, but also "Green, Green Grass of Home" and "I Still Miss Someone", which evoke a more general sense of yearning. When Cash and his crew arrived to play this show, he had been playing prisons routinely and had even serenaded the rowdy crowds at Folsom before, but this was the first time anyone had seen any commercial benefit in recording a show.ĭescribed as worried but determined before the show, Cash gives a superlative performance, feisty and playful and a bit maudlin. This edition of At Folsom Prison is a companion piece of sorts to Columbia/Legacy's 2006 reissue of At San Quentin, but it's easily the greater of the two, if only because it was both such a risky endeavor and such a rewarding payoff. His countercultural appeal during the late 1960s and his abiding popularity throughout the 1970s are grounded in the rough-and-tumble energy he exudes on stage. And it's justified by Cash's notoriously volatile performance, which made this concert the foundation of his mid-career resurgence and the framing device for the 2005 biopic Walk the Line. Welcome him after he says, "Johnny Cash." I'll have my hands up, and you just follow me.Ĭall it staged if you want, but the moment comes across as genuine, as if the emcee had told the prisoners what they had planned to do anyway. I'm Johnny Cash." When he says that, then you respond. When John comes out here, he will say- and which will be recorded- "Hi there. Until it closed its doors in 1994, the Sacramento Union was the oldest daily newspaper west of the Mississippi.Hugh Cherry: I need your help. The photographs of the concert, seen below, are from the Sacramento Union Newspaper Archives. The Statler Brothers, another opening act, provided takeoffs on Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, The Ink Spots, and the McGuire Sisters. Although Cash wrote his famous song “Folsom Prison Blues” in 1955, it wasn’t until this 1966 concert that he first stepped foot in Folsom Prison.Īccording to the NovemSacramento Bee article, “Folsom Inmates Brave Chill for ‘Friend’ Cash,” the concert also featured the four female singers, Maybelle Carter, June Carter, Helen Carter, and Anita Carter, who were known as the Carter Family.
On Novem(the same day that Ronald Reagan was elected governor of California), Johnny Cash performed at Folsom Prison in front of approximately 1,800 inmates. But did you know that his first concert at Folsom Prison was 50 years ago today? You’ve probably heard Johnny Cash’s famous song, “Folsom Prison Blues,” and may know that Cash performed his live album, Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison, at the prison in January 1968.