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BY: Steve Beard
He wrote books, hosted a popular television show, starred in and produced movies, and recorded some 1,500 songs found on 500 albums. The king of blue-collar troubadours, Cash had the lurching height of a NBA forward, the distinctive features of an Abe Lincoln, the swagger of John Wayne, and the he could rise to a moral authority equal to Moses'.
'Can You Hear the Angels Sing?'
Cash was brought up in Depression-era Arkansas, a farm boy whose family scraped at twenty acres of government-granted land. His was a white-trash culture that depended on the white light of religion. The echoes of Pentecostal fire and brimstone preaching reverberating through his soul. "The first preachers I heard at a Pentecostal church in Dyness, Arkansas, scared me," Cash wrote. "The talk about sin and death and eternal hell without redemption, made a mark on me. At four, I'd peep out of the window of our farmhouse at night, and if, in the distance, I saw a grass fire or a forest fire, I knew hell was almost here." That deep sense of everlasting accountability was etched deep into the soul of Cash.
The young Cash loved music, especially when his mother, Carrie, sang gospel songs in the cotton fields or played guitar and sang "What Would You Give In Exchange for Your Soul?" by the Monroe Brothers. "The music in the Pentecostal churches in the early years was wonderful," Cash recalled. "They were more liberal with the musical instruments used. I learned to sit through the scary sermons, just to hear the music; mandolins, fiddles, bass, banjo, and flattop guitars. Hell might be on the horizon, but the wonderful gospel-spiritual songs carried me above it."
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