NASHVILLE STOPPED RETURNING HIS CALLS. HE WAS 61 YEARS OLD, PLAYING HALF-EMPTY ROOMS IN BRANSON, MISSOURI. THEN A 30-YEAR-OLD HIP-HOP PRODUCER DID FOR JOHNNY CASH WHAT MUSIC ROW HAD REFUSED TO DO FOR FORTY YEARS — TREATED HIM LIKE AN ARTIST INSTEAD OF A PRODUCT. He was Johnny Cash — the greatest country voice of the twentieth century, and that’s a hill worth dying on.By 1992, none of it mattered anymore. Columbia had dropped him. Country radio wouldn’t touch him. Nashville had reduced him to playing tourist theaters between magic shows and dinner buffets.Then Rick Rubin came backstage. Def Jam. Beastie Boys. Slayer. The polar opposite of everything Nashville said country was supposed to be.They sat in silence for two full minutes. Cash finally spoke: “What’re you gonna do with me that nobody else has done?”Rubin said: “I don’t know that we will sell records. But I want to hear you sing the songs you love.”There’s one thing Cash whispered to Rubin in that studio the day before he died — too sick to stand, still wanting to record — that explains why he chose a metal producer over the entire country music establishment.Cash looked Nashville dead in the eye and said: “No.”Two microphones in Rubin’s living room. American Recordings won him a Grammy at 62. Six albums followed. His cover of “Hurt” made the song’s own writer say it no longer belonged to him.It took a hip-hop kid from New York to remember what country music used to mean. Today’s Nashville machine still does to legends what it tried to do to Cash. They did it to Merle. They tried it with Willie.No country label today would sign a 61-year-old artist and tell him to just sing the songs he loves. Not one of them.
When Johnny Cash Chose the Silence Over the Machine By the early 1990s, Johnny Cash had already lived several lifetimes…