June Carter Cash
June Carter Cash | |
---|---|
Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash in 1969 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Valerie June Carter |
Born |
Maces Spring, Virginia, US | June 23, 1929
Died |
May 15, 2003 73) Nashville, Tennessee, US | (aged
Genres | Country, folk, gospel |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, actress, dancer, comedian |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, banjo, harmonica, autoharp, piano |
Years active | 1939–2003 |
Associated acts | Carter Family, Mother Maybelle and the Carter Sisters, Johnny Cash |
Valerie June Carter Cash (June 23, 1929 – May 15, 2003)[1] was an American singer, dancer, songwriter, actress, comedian, and author who was a member of the Carter Family and the second wife of singer Johnny Cash. Prior to her marriage to Cash, she was professionally known as June Carter and occasionally was still credited as such after her marriage (as well as on songwriting credits antedating it).
She played the guitar, banjo, harmonica, and autoharp, and acted in several films and television shows. Carter Cash won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Christian Music Hall of Fame in 2009.[2] She was ranked number 31 in CMT's 40 Greatest Women in Country Music in 2002.
Biography
Early life
June Carter Cash was born Valerie June Carter in Maces Spring, Virginia, to Maybelle Carter and Ezra Carter. She was born into country music and performed with the Carter Family from the age of 10, beginning in 1939. In March 1943, when the Carter Family trio stopped recording together at the end of the WBT contract, Maybelle Carter, with encouragement from her husband Ezra, formed "Mother Maybelle and the Carter Sisters" with her daughters, Helen, Anita, and June. The new group first aired on radio station WRNL in Richmond, Virginia, on June 1. Doc (Addington) and Carl (McConnell)—Maybelle's brother and cousin, respectively, known as "The Virginia Boys", joined them in late 1945. June, then 16, was a co-announcer with Ken Allyn and did the commercials on the radio shows for "Red Star Flour", "Martha White", and "Thalhimers Department Store", just to name a few.[3] For the next year, the Carters and Doc and Carl did show dates within driving range of Richmond, through Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, and Pennsylvania. June later said she had to work harder at her music than her sisters, but she had her own special talent—comedy.[4] A highlight of the road shows was her "Aunt Polly" comedy routine. Carl McConnell wrote in his memoirs that June was "a natural-born clown, if there ever was one." (Decades later, Carter revived Aunt Polly for the 1976 TV series Johnny Cash & Friends.) She attended John Marshall High School during this period.[5]
After Doc and Carl dropped out of the music business in late 1946, Maybelle and her daughters moved to Sunshine Sue Workman's "Old Dominion Barn Dance" on the WRVA Richmond station. After a while there, they moved to WNOX in Knoxville, Tennessee, where they met Chet Atkins with Homer and Jethro.
In 1949, Mother Maybelle and the Carter Sisters, with their lead guitarist, Atkins, were living in Springfield, Missouri, and performing regularly at KWTO. Ezra "Eck" Carter, Maybelle's husband and manager of the group, declined numerous offers from the Grand Ole Opry to move the act to Nashville, Tennessee, because the Opry would not permit Atkins to accompany the group onstage. Atkins' reputation as a guitar player had begun to spread, and studio musicians were fearful that he would displace them as a 'first-call' player if he came to Nashville. Finally, in 1950, Opry management relented and the group, along with Atkins, became part of the Opry company. Here the family befriended Hank Williams and Elvis Presley (to whom they were distantly related), and June met Johnny Cash.
June and her sisters, with mother Maybelle and aunt Sara joining in from time to time, reclaimed the name "The Carter Family" for their act during the 1960s and '70s.
With her thin and lanky frame, June Carter often played a comedic foil during the group's performances alongside other Opry stars Faron Young and Webb Pierce.
Career highlights
While June Carter Cash may be best known for singing and songwriting, she was also an author, dancer, actress, comedian, philanthropist, and humanitarian.[6] Director Elia Kazan saw her perform at the Grand Ole Opry in 1955 and encouraged her to study acting. She studied with Lee Strasberg and Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York. Her acting roles included Mrs. "Momma" Dewey in Robert Duvall's 1998 movie The Apostle, Sister Ruth, wife to Johnny Cash's character Kid Cole, on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993–97), and Clarise on Gunsmoke in 1957. June was also Momma James in The Last Days of Frank and Jesse James.
As a singer, she had both a solo career and a career singing with first her family and later her husband. As a solo artist, she became somewhat successful with upbeat country tunes of the 1950s such as "Jukebox Blues" and, with her exaggerated breaths, the comedic hit "No Swallerin' Place" by Frank Loesser. June also recorded "The Heel" in the 1960s along with many other songs.
In the early 1960s, June Carter wrote the song "Ring of Fire", which later went on to be a hit for her future husband, Johnny Cash. She co-wrote the song with fellow songwriter Merle Kilgore. June wrote the lyrics about her relationship with Johnny Cash and she offered the song to her sister Anita. Anita Carter was the first singer to record the song. In 1963, Johnny recorded the song with the Carter Family singing backup, and added mariachi horns. The song became a number-one hit and went on to become one of the most recognizable songs in the world of country music.
Her first notable studio performance with Johnny Cash occurred in 1964 when she duetted with Cash on "It Ain't Me Babe", a Bob Dylan composition, that was released as a single and on Cash's album Orange Blossom Special. In 1967, the two found more substantial success with their recording of "Jackson", which was followed by a collaboration album, Carryin' On with Johnny Cash and June Carter. All these releases antedated her marriage to Cash (upon which event she changed her professional name to June Carter Cash). She continued to work with Cash on record and on stage for the rest of her life, recording a number of duets with Cash for his various albums and being a regular on The Johnny Cash Show from 1969-1971 and on Cash's annual Christmas specials. After Carryin' On, June Carter Cash recorded one more direct collaboration album, Johnny Cash and His Woman, released in 1973, and along with her daughters was a featured vocalist on Cash's 1974 album The Junkie and the Juicehead Minus Me. She also shared sleeve credit with her husband on a 2000 small-label gospel release, Return to the Promised Land
Although she provided vocals on many recordings, and shared the billing with Cash on several album releases, June Carter Cash only recorded three solo albums during her lifetime: the first, Appalachian Pride, released in 1975, Press On (1999), and Wildwood Flower, the latter released posthumously in 2003 and produced by her son, John Carter Cash. Appalachian Pride is the only one of the three on which Johnny Cash does not perform, while Press On is notable for featuring June Carter Cash singing her original arrangement of "Ring of Fire".
One of her final appearances was a nonspeaking/nonsinging appearance in the music video for her husband's 2003 single, "Hurt", filmed a few months before her death. One of her last known public appearances was on April 7, 2003, just over a month before her death, when she appeared on the CMT Flameworthy awards program to accept an achievement award on behalf of her husband, who was too ill to attend.
She won a Grammy award in 1999 for, Press On. Her last album, Wildwood Flower, won two additional Grammys. It contains bonus video enhancements showing extracts from the film of the recording sessions, which took place at the Carter Family estate in Hiltons, Virginia, on September 18–20, 2002. The songs on the album include "Big Yellow Peaches", "Sinking in the Lonesome Sea", "Temptation", and the trademark staple "Wildwood Flower". Due to her involvement in providing backing vocals on many of her husband's recordings, a further posthumous release occurred in 2014, when Out Among the Stars was released under Johnny Cash's name. The album consists of previously unreleased recordings from the early 1980s, including two on which June Carter Cash provides duet vocals.
Her autobiography was published in 1979, and she wrote a memoir, From the Heart, almost 10 years later.[7]
Personal life
Carter was married three times and had one child with each husband. All three of her children went on to have successful careers in country music. She was married first to honky-tonk singer Carl Smith from July 9, 1952, until their divorce in 1956. Together, they wrote "Time's A-Wastin". They had a daughter, Rebecca Carlene Smith, professionally known as Carlene Carter, a country musician.[8] June's second marriage was to Edwin "Rip" Nix, a former football player, police officer, and racecar driver, on November 11, 1957. They had a daughter, Rosie, on July 13, 1958. The couple divorced in 1966. Rosie was a country/rock singer. On October 24, 2003, Rosie, aged 45, died from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning. Fellow musician D. Campbell and she were on a school bus, which had been converted for travel. Several propane heaters were being used to heat the bus. [8]
Carter and the entire Carter Family had performed with Johnny Cash for a number of years. In 1968, Cash proposed to Carter during a live performance at the London Ice House in London, Ontario. They married on March 1 in Franklin, Kentucky,[7] and remained married until her death in May 2003, just four months before Cash died. The couple's son, John Carter Cash, is a musician, songwriter, and producer.
Carter's distant cousin, the former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, became closely acquainted with Cash and Carter and maintained their friendship throughout their lifetimes. In a June 1977 speech, Jimmy Carter acknowledged that June Carter was his distant cousin, with whom they shared a common patrilineal ancestor.[9]
Carter was a longtime supporter of SOS Children's Villages. In 1974, the Cashes donated money to help build a village near their home in Barrett Town, Jamaica, which they visited frequently, playing the guitar and singing songs to the children in the village.[10]
June Carter Cash also had close relationships with a number of entertainers, including Audrey Williams, James Dean, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Jessi Colter, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Elvis Presley, Robert Duvall, and Roy Orbison.
Death
June died in Nashville, Tennessee, on May 15, 2003, at 73 years old, of complications following heart-valve replacement surgery, in the company of her family and her husband of 35 years, Johnny Cash.[7][11] At Carter's funeral, her stepdaughter, Rosanne Cash, stated, "if being a wife were a corporation, June would have been a CEO. It was her most treasured role."[12] Johnny died four months after June's death, and her daughter, Rosie Nix Adams, a month after that. Johnny and June (along with Rosie) are buried in Hendersonville Memory Gardens near their home in Hendersonville, Tennessee.
Awards
Carter and her future husband, Johnny Cash, reached number 2 on the U.S. Country charts with their 1967 duet of "Jackson". Their performance won the 1968 Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Performance Duet, Trio or Group. The two, married at the time, won the 1971 Grammy Award, for Best Country Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group, for their 1970 duet "If I Were a Carpenter".
Carter Cash won the 2000 Grammy Award, for Best Traditional Folk Album, for her 1999 album Press On. The album was a top-15 success on the Americana chart. Carter Cash's last album, Wildwood Flower, was released posthumously in 2003. Carter Cash won the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album, and she also won the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance for the single "Keep on the Sunny Side".[3]
Legacy
June Carter was played by Reese Witherspoon in Walk the Line, a 2005 biographical film of Johnny Cash (played by Joaquin Phoenix). The film largely focused on the development of their relationship over the course of 13 years, from their first meeting to her final acceptance of his proposal of marriage. Witherspoon performed all vocals for the role, singing many of June's famous songs, including "Juke Box Blues" and "Jackson" with Phoenix.[13] Witherspoon won an Academy Award, Golden Globe, BAFTA and Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actress in the role.[14]
Musician and actress Jewel portrayed June Carter Cash in a Lifetime television movie called Ring of Fire, which aired on May 27, 2013. The film is based on John Carter Cash's memoir Anchored in Love: An Intimate Portrait of June Carter Cash.[15]
Discography
Albums
Year | Album | Chart Positions | |
---|---|---|---|
US Bluegrass | US Country | ||
1975 | Appalachian Pride | — | — |
1999 | Press On | — | — |
It's All in the Family | — | — | |
2003 | Wildwood Flower | 2 | 33 |
Louisiana Hayride | — | — | |
2005 | Keep on the Sunny Side: June Carter Cash - Her Life in Music | — | — |
Church in the Wildwood: A Treasury of Appalachian Gospel | — | — | |
Ring of Fire: The Best of June Carter Cash | — | — | |
2006 | Early June | — | — |
Albums with Johnny Cash
- Note: this list only lists albums on which June Carter Cash received co-billing. Most 1970s and 1980s album releases by Cash featured at least one duet with her, and/or she provided backing vocals.
Year | Album | Chart Positions | |
---|---|---|---|
US Country | US | ||
1967 | Carryin' On with Johnny Cash and June Carter | 5 | — |
1973 | Johnny Cash and His Woman | 32 | — |
1978 | Johnny & June | — | — |
2000 | Return to the Promised Land | — | — |
2006 | 16 Biggest Hits: Johnny Cash & June Carter Cash | 26 | 126 |
June Carter and Johnny Cash: Duets | — | — |
Singles
Year | Single | Peak positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|
US Country | CAN Country | |||
1949 | "Grandma Told Me So" | — | — | N/A |
1950 | "Root Hog, or Die" | — | — | |
"Bashful Rascal" | — | — | ||
1951 | "Thing" | — | — | |
"Mommie's Real Peculiar" | — | — | ||
1953 | "No Swallerin' Place" | — | — | |
"You Flopped When You Got Me Home" | — | — | ||
1954 | "Tennessee Mambo, Left Over Mambo" | — | — | |
1955 | "He Don't Love Me Anymore" | — | — | |
1956 | "Strange, Strange Woman" | — | — | |
"Baby I Tried" | — | — | ||
1961 | "Heel" | — | — | |
1962 | "Mama Teach Me" | — | — | |
"Overalls and Dungarees" | — | — | ||
1963 | "I Pitched My Tent (On the Old Camp Ground)" | — | — | |
1964 | "Tall Lover Man" | — | — | |
"Go Away, Stranger" | — | — | ||
1965 | "Everything Ain't Been Said" | — | — | |
1971 | "A Good Man" | 27 | 12 | |
1973 | "Follow Me" | — | — | The Gospel Road |
1975 | "The Shadow of a Lady" | — | — | Appalachian Pride |
2003 | "Keep on the Sunny Side" | — | — | Wildwood Flower |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Singles with Johnny Cash
Year | Single | Peak positions | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country | US | CAN Country | CAN | CAN AC | AU | UK | |||
1964 | "It Ain't Me Babe" | 4 | 58 | — | — | — | 85 | 28 | Orange Blossom Special |
1967 | "Jackson" | 2 | — | — | — | — | — | — | Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 |
"Long-Legged Guitar Pickin' Man" | 6 | — | — | — | — | — | — | Carryin' On with Johnny Cash and June Carter | |
1969 | "If I Were a Carpenter" | 2 | 36 | 1 | 13 | 11 | 52 | — | Hello, I'm Johnny Cash |
1971 | "No Need to Worry" | 15 | — | 7 | — | — | — | — | International Superstar |
1972 | "The Loving Gift" | 27 | — | 22 | — | — | — | — | Any Old Wind That Blows |
1973 | "Allegheny" | 69 | — | 35 | — | — | — | — | Johnny Cash and His Woman |
1976 | "Old Time Feeling" | 26 | — | 24 | — | — | — | — | Greatest Hits, Vol. 3 |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Featured singles
Year | Single | Artist | Peak positions |
Album |
---|---|---|---|---|
US Country | ||||
1949 | "Baby, It's Cold Outside" | Homer and Jethro | 9 | Non-album song |
References
- ↑ "June Carter Cash in the 1930 US Census", Root dig, March 2007.
- ↑ "Awards". Christian Music Hall of Fame and Museum. 2009. Archived from the original on May 15, 2012. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
- 1 2 "June Carter Cash", Artists (biography), CMT.
- ↑ Bufwack, Mary (1998), "Carter Sisters", in Kingsbury, Paul, The Encyclopedia of Country Music, New York: Oxford University Press, p. 85.
- ↑ "Walk the line, drive the road". Virginia.
- ↑ "June", Johnny Cash.com.
- 1 2 3 Downey, Ryan J. Country Star June Smith First Wife Carl Smith 73. MTV.com. 2003-05-15.
- 1 2 "Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash", Marriage (profile), About.
- ↑ Carter 1978, p. 1115 (Conference on HIRE, June 14).
- ↑ "Johnny Cash". Spotlight on. SOS Children's Villages. 2006. Retrieved 2008-08-06.
- ↑ June Carter Cash at Find a Grave
- ↑ http://capitalnews.com.au/editorial.asp?editorial_id=313&issue=44
- ↑ "The Reel Deal", Oregon Herald, December 2005, retrieved 2007-03-23.
- ↑ "Awards for Walk the Line". IMDb.
- ↑ "Jewel Will Play June Carter Cash in TV Movie". People. May 6, 2012. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
Further reading
- Carter, James 'Jimmy' (1978), Public papers of the presidents of the United States: Jimmy Carter, 1977, Government Printing Office.
- Cash, June Carter (1979), Among My Klediments, Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, ISBN 0-310-38170-3.
- Dawidoff, Nicholas (1998), In the Country of Country: A Journey to the Roots of American Music, Vintage Books, ISBN 0-375-70082-X.
- McConnell, Carl P (January 24, 1976), A Brief History of My Family and an Autobiographical Sketch of My Musical Life. Background for liner notes for a Doc and Carl album recorded at Johnny Cash's Nashville studio. Online at "Southern music".
- Zwonitzer, Mark; Hirschberg, Charles (2002), Will you miss me when I'm gone? The Carter Family and their legacy in American music, New York: Simon & Schuster.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to June Carter Cash. |
- "June Carter Cash", Music, Yahoo!.
- June Carter Cash at the Internet Movie Database
- A.P. Carter Museum, Virginia.
- Official Carter Family Fold Website
- "June Carter Cash". Find a Grave. Retrieved November 30, 2013.