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Johnny Cash's Opinion on Folsom Prison Blues |
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The culture of a thousand years is shattered with the clanging of the cell door behind you. Life outside, behind you immediately becomes unreal. You begin to not care that it exists. All you have with you in the cell is your bare animal instincts.
I speak partly from experience. I have been behind bars a few times. Sometimes of my own volition, some times ---------.(cannot read the hand writing sorry). Each time, I felt the same feeling of kinship with my fellow prisoners.
Behind the bars, locked out from "society", you're being rehabilitated, corrected, re-briefed, re-education on life itself, without you having the opportunity of really reliving it. You're the object of a widely planned program combining isolation, punishment taming, briefing, etc. Designed to make you sorry for your mistakes, to re-enlighten you on what you should and shouldn't do outside, so that when you're released, if you ever are, you can come out clean, to a world that's supposed to welcome you and forgive you.
Can't it work??? "Hell no." You say. How could this torment possibly do anybody any good...But then, why else are you locked in?
You sit on your cold steel mattress-less buck and watch a c**k roach crawl out from under the filthy commode, and you don't kill it. You envy the roach as you watch it crawl out under the cell door.
Down the cell block you hear a steel door open, then close. Like every other man that hears it, your first unconscious thought reaction is that it's someone coming to let you out, but you know it isn't.
You count the steel bars on the door so many times that you hate yourself for it. Your big accomplishment for the day is a mathematica deduction. You are positive of this, and only this: There are nine vertical, and sixteen horizontal bars on your door.
Down the hall another door opens and closes, then a guard walks by without looking at you, and on out another door. "The son of a ******" You like to say that you are waiting for something, but nothing ever happens. There is nothing to look forward to.
You make friends in the prison. You become one in a "clique", who's purpose is nothing. Nobody is richer or poorer than the other. The only way wealth is measured is by the amount of tobacco a man has or "duffy hay" as tobacco is called.
All of you have had the same things snugged out of your lives. Every thing it seems that makes a man a man. Woman, money, a family, a job, the open road, the city, the country, ambition, power, success, failure - a million things.
Outside your cell block is a wall. Outside that wall is another wall. It's twenty feet high, and its granite blocks go down another eight feet in the ground. You know you're here to stay, and for some reason you'd like to stay alive - and not rot.
So for the fourth time I have done so in California, I brought my show to Folsom Prisoners are the greatest audience that an entertainer can perform for. We bring them a ray of sunshine in their dungeon and they're not ashamed to respond, and show their appreciation. And after six years talking I finally found the man who would listen at Columbia Records. Bob Johnston believed me when I told him that a prison would be the place to record an album live.
Here's the proof. Listen closely to this album and you hear in the background the clanging of the doors, the shrill of the whistle, the shouts of the men.
Even laughter from the men who had forgotten how to laugh.
But mostly you'll fell the electricity and hear the single pulsation of two thousand heartbeats in men who have had their hearts forms cut, as well as their minds, there nervous systems and their souls.
Hear the sounds of the men, the convicts all brothers of mine - with the Folsom Prison Blues.
Written: In the cd booklet of Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison. Year: January 13, 1968 Written by: Johnny Cash
Raw_Chick · Thu Oct 25, 2007 @ 03:15am · 0 Comments |
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