Rosanne Cash

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Singer, songwriter

During the mid-1970s Rosanne Cash was one of country music's "New Women." An outspoken proponent of the progressive, rock-oriented country style, she paved the way for such non-traditional sounding artists as Shania Twain and Faith Hill. However, her much admired poetic depth would eventually lead the brooding singer-songwriter away from the commercial mainstream.

Daughter of Johnny Cash
The eldest daughter of Johnny Cash from his stormy first marriage to Vivian Libretto, Rosanne Cash has been performing since she was 18, forging a name for herself outside the shadow of her famous father. Steve Pond wrote in Rolling Stone that "Cash has been carving out her own niche, singing a distinctive mixture of new rock songs, old ballads and the odd country tune; hers is a tougher, hipper version of the country-rock hybrid that Linda Ronstadt once pursued." Cash herself jokingly called her early sound "Punktry," an unlikely fusion of country and punk rock that challenged traditional boundaries in form, content, and even language. Still, Cash told Alanna Nash in the book Behind Closed Doors: Talking with the Legends of Country Music, she feels that her roots are firmly based in the country sound. "The music I'm doing is a natural progression of where country music is going," she said. "It's lyrically oriented, which is what country music has always been, it's logical music, it's simple … maybe some of it does have a harder edge, but I consider myself a country artist."

"Nobody likes the kids of famous people," Cash told People magazine. "It's particularly hard if you go into the profession where the parent has been very successful. But if that's where your talent lies, it's dumb not to pursue it. Doctors' children become doctors. It shouldn't be all that strange that Johnny Cash's child likes to sing." Cash has not said a lot about her childhood, but noted in Stereo Review that her father "was bigger than life … because of his image and because he was not home a lot. 'Conquering hero' is a good term for it." Cash has admitted that her father's alcohol and drug problems, as well as his raging ambition, further distanced him from his family. She was 12 years old when her parents divorced.

Influenced By Folk and Rock
As a rebellious teen growing up in southern California, Cash began to experiment with drugs when she was 14. She has described her musical tastes at the time as "the same stuff most kids listened to" in California, including the Beatles. She was also influenced by the folk sound of Joni Mitchell, James Taylor, and two "old folkies," Tom Rush and Eric Andersen. At 18, right out of high school, she joined her father's entourage and began to travel and perform with him. This, she said in Stereo Review, was a mixed blessing. "It was a good learning ground," she admitted, "to watch him work, but I was so protected I couldn't get any objectivity about my work. I got to the point where I was doing a couple of songs, but it was still playing for his crowd and it was still cute for his daughter to be up there, you know—the crowds thought, 'Oh, how sweet,' no matter how bad you were. At some point, you have to fall on your face."

Although she never quite fell on her face, after three years on tour with her father she began questioning her viability as a solo performer. Finally she quit the show and enrolled in Vanderbilt University, where she majored in English and drama. The following year she moved to Hollywood to study in Lee Strasberg's noted drama school, hoping to become an actress. Too shy to study with Strasberg directly, she did take courses with his associates, describing the experience as "great … like therapy." Cash left the drama school after six months because Ariola Records, a German company, offered her a recording contract, and she traveled to Munich to make the album. One of the album's cuts attracted the attention of Rich Blackburn of Columbia Records, and he agreed to allow Cash and her fiancé, producer/songwriter Rodney Crowell, to make an album that would fit their own creative standards.

Peaked Commercially During the 1980s
The album, Right or Wrong, was deemed a critical success by both country and rock critics. "It had a no-nonsense feel to it," wrote Noel Coppage in Stereo Review, "with Rosanne's warm, moist, round tones supported by strikingly clean and lyrical electric-guitar fills and breaks before arrangements that touched bases with Austin and Los Angeles but were captives of neither." Subsequent Cash albums of the period were built on this rock-country fusion, utilizing rock rhythms and melodies but maintaining the country tradition of highly personal ballads about heartbreak, infidelity, and reconciliation. As a husband and wife team, Cash and Crowell produced most of her best albums and contributed original songs to all of them. The songs that Cash wrote were based on their marriage as well as on her addiction to cocaine, a condition that forced her to seek hospital treatment in 1985.

Reflecting on her chart-topping album Rhythm and Romance, which contained songs about the near-dissolution of her marriage, Cash told Nash: "I have to pick songs that I feel relate to me personally. I don't think I could ever just do a song for ulterior motives. It's a real emotional process with me." Coppage observed that such a daring exploration of personal feelings gave added force to Cash's music: "Any listener making any sort of attempt to live an examined life can hardly help identifying with the humanity [Cash] projects."

Daring humanity and progressive sound have best described the Rosanne Cash repertoire. Cash told Nash: "There's a formula in Nashville about how you should make records, how you should relate to your audience, how much you should tour. The whole thing is a package deal…. And I just don't buy it! I don't buy it at all! I think there's individual ways to approach life and success." The mother of three children (one adopted), Cash seldom toured, preferring to live quietly with her family and and pursuing her songwriting, recording, and an occasional concert or television appearance. Cash told Esquire magazine: "Country music might have chosen me, rather than the other way around. I think I'm helping move country to the next logical step. You see, country-music listeners are much more sophisticated now. So much has happened since Hank Williams. They're more world-wise, more cosmopolitan, I guess. My music is that, I think—country, but world-wise."

Changed Direction During the '90s
Cash's enviable run of hits petered out after 1988 when she abandoned the hit singles production formula she and Crowell had invented. Looking to express deeper, more personal meaning, she crafted the 1990 album Interiors as a bittersweet paean to her crumbling relationship with Crowell. Boasting her last important hit single, "What We Really Want is Love," and several supportive reviews, the album sold well, but Cash was clearly moving away from country.

By 1993 Cash had married producer John Leventhal and moved to Greenwich Village in New York. Her final album for Columbia, 1993's The Wheel, was a downbeat, introspective collection that drew upon her spiritual and philosophical beliefs, and it was ultimately unsucessful.

An interesting career move was Cash's foray into the written word. She wrote a series of short stories that were compiled in the 1996 book Bodies of Water. Four years later she resurfaced as a children's book author with Penelope Jane—A Fairy's Tale, but she never completely lost her taste for making music. Working with Leventhal, she recorded the delightfully spare acoustic 10 Song Demo for Capitol, and it was successfully marketed to the alternative country and No Depression crowd.

It wasn't until 2003 that Cash returned to the recording studio. Armed with several top-notch original songs and such stellar guest stars as Sheryl Crow, Steve Earle, and her own illustrious father, Cash created Rules of Travel, a compelling cross between modern country and Adult Contemporary. For many, the emotional highlight was hearing Johnny Cash's trembling voice on the end-of-life ballad "September When it Comes." The experience inspired Rosanne Cash to write the title song for her 2006 album Black Cadillac. "I was really aware of what I had written, and what it meant," she told Dan LeRoy in Rolling Stone. "It wasn't pleasant."

Indeed, over the course of two years, Cash lost her dad, mother, and stepmother June Carter Cash. The grief she experienced and the cathartic spiritual resolve she discovered are plainly in evidence on her finest later work, Black Cadillac. She explained her philosophy about the album and her life to Holly Lebowitz Rossi of Beliefnet.com: "It's about what I discovered in the mourning process about my relationship to them, which I believe continues, about re-negotiating the terms of those relationships, because they're not over, although I'm the only one talking."

Selected discography

Singles
(With Bobby Bare) "No Memories Hangin' Round," Columbia, 1979."Couldn't Do Nothin' Right," Columbia, 1980."Take Me, Take Me," Columbia, 1980."Seven Year Ache," Columbia, 1981."My Baby Thinks He's a Train," Columbia, 1981."Blue Moon with a Heartache," Columbia, 1982."Ain't No Money," Columbia, 1982."It Hasn't Happened Yet," Columbia, 1983."I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me," Columbia, 1985."Hold On," Columbia, 1985."Never Be You," Columbia, 1985."Second to No One," Columbia, 1986."The Way We Make a Broken Heart," Columbia, 1987."Tennessee Flat Top Box," Columbia, 1987.(With Rodney Crowell) "It's Such a Small World," Columbia, 1988."If You Change Your Mind," Columbia, 1988."Runaway Train," Columbia, 1988."I Don't Want to Spoil the Party," Columbia, 1989."Black and White," Columbia, 1989. "What We Really Want," Columbia, 1989."On the Surface," Columbia, 1991.
Albums
Right or Wrong, Columbia, 1980.Seven Year Ache, Columbia, 1981.Somewhere in the Stars, Columbia, 1982.Rhythm & Romance, Columbia, 1985.King's Record Shop, Columbia, 1987.Hits 1979–1989, Columbia, 1989.Interiors, Columbia, 1990.The Wheel, Columbia, 1993.10 Song Demo, Capitol, 1996.Rules of Travel, Capitol, 2003.Blue Moons and Broken Hearts: The Anthology 1979–1995, Raven, 2005.The Very Best of Rosanne Cash, Columbia/Legacy, 2005.Black Cadillac, Capitol, 2006.

Videos
Live: Interiors Tour, CBS, 1990.Retrospective—Video, Sony, 1991. Sources
Books
McCloud, Bruce, Definitive Country: The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Country Music and Its Performers, Perigree, 1995.
Nash, Alanna, Behind Closed Doors: Talking with the Legends of Country Music, Knopf, 1988.
Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Landon, Country Music: The Encyclopedia, St. Martin's Griffin, 2000.


Periodicals
Entertainment Weekly, January 20, 2006; January 27, 2006.
Esquire, July 1981.
Interview, May 2006.
Newsweek, August 12, 1985; January 27, 2006.
People, September 6, 1982; February 27, 2006.
Rolling Stone, February 25, 1988.
Stereo Review, May 1981.

Online
"Rosanne Cash," Rolling Stone, http://www.rollingstone.com (June 22, 2006).
"Rosanne Cash: Surrendering to Grief—and Love," BeliefNet.Com, http://www.beliefnet.com/story/186/story_18607_1.html (June 21, 2006).
  • Genres: Country

Biography

The history of popular music is littered with the careers of the children of famous artists, performers who manage to carve out some small measure of success based far less on talent than on the recognition that their famous names afford them. Perhaps no greater exception to this trend was Rosanne Cash, the daughter of Johnny Cash, whose idiosyncratic and innovative music made her one of the pre-eminent singer/songwriters of her day.

Born May 24, 1955, to her father and his first wife, Vivian Liberto, Rosanne was raised by her mother in Southern California after her parents separated in the early '60s. She was largely uninfluenced by her father's music until she joined his road show following her graduation from high school; over a three-year period, she was promoted from handling the tour's laundry duties to performing, first as a backup singer and then as an infrequent soloist. Still, Cash remained unsure of choosing a career in music, and took some acting classes; not wishing to succeed solely on the basis of her family's influence, she also worked as a secretary in London and traveled extensively abroad.

After releasing an eponymously titled solo record -- later disavowed -- in Germany in 1978, Cash signed with Columbia Records, and began performing with Texas singer/songwriter Rodney Crowell, who produced three songs for her American debut, 1979's Right or Wrong. The record featured three Top 25 hits, including "No Memories Hangin' Round," a duet with Bobby Bare. The same year, she and Crowell also married. Cash issued her commercial breakthrough Seven Year Ache in 1981; not only did the album yield three number one singles, the title track even crossed over into the Top 30 on Billboard's pop chart. However, the follow-up, 1982's Somewhere in the Stars, was a rush job, recorded during Cash's pregnancy. While failing to repeat Seven Year Ache's success, it did produce two more Top Ten singles, "Ain't No Money" and "I Wonder."

After a three-year hiatus, Cash returned with her most significant artistic statement yet in Rhythm & Romance, a deft fusion of country and pop that won wide acclaim from both camps. The record earned her two more number ones, "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me" (co-written with Crowell) and a cover of Tom Petty's "Never Be You." In 1987, she issued King's Record Shop, a meditation on country music traditions which generated four successive number one hits in John Hiatt's "The Way We Make a Broken Heart," "Tennessee Flat Top Box" (a hit for her father in 1961), "If You Change Your Mind," and John Stewart's "Runaway Train." Also hitting number one was "It's Such a Small World," a duet with Crowell from his Diamonds & Dirt LP; not surprisingly, she was named Billboard's Top Singles Artist in 1988.

The next year, Cash assembled the retrospective Hits 1979-1989; one of the record's few new songs, a cover of the Beatles' "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party," pushed the consecutive number ones streak to five. By 1990, her marriage to Crowell was beginning to dissolve; Interiors, an essay on the couple's relationship, was released the following year, and while the record was the subject of great critical acclaim, it was a commercial failure that generated only one Top 40 hit, "What We Really Want." In 1991, Cash and Crowell divorced; The Wheel, released in 1993, was an unflinchingly confessional examination of the marriage's failure that ranked as her most musically diverse effort to date.

After a three-year hiatus, Cash returned with a vengeance in 1996; not only did she publish her first book, a short-story collection titled Bodies of Water, but she also issued her first release on Capitol Records, 10 Song Demo, an 11-cut collection of stark home recordings released with minimal studio gloss. In 2003, Cash returned with Rules of Travel, an album five years in the making and her first full-fledged studio release since The Wheel. Sony reissued Interiors, King's Record Shop, and Seven Year Ache in 2005, as well as a the greatest-hits collection Blue Moons and Broken Hearts: The Anthology 1979-1995. Cash returned to the studio that same year, releasing Black Cadillac in January of 2006. The List, which appeared in 2009, featured songs from a personal list her father gave her when she turned 18 of what he considered the 100 most essential American songs, and the result was both a personal and a testimonial statement. ~ Jason Ankeny & Steve Leggett, Rovi
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Rosanne Cash
Background information
Birth name Rosanne Cash
Born (1955-05-24) May 24, 1955 (age 56)
Origin Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres Country, rock, folk, blues
Occupations Singer-songwriter, author
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1978–present
Labels Ariola
Columbia
Capitol
Manhattan
Associated acts Johnny Cash, Rodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris, Juice Newton, Dolly Parton
Website Official website

Rosanne Cash (born May 24, 1955) is an American singer-songwriter and author. She is the eldest daughter of country music icon Johnny Cash and his first wife, Vivian Liberto Cash Distin.

Although Cash is often classified as a country artist, her music draws on many genres, including folk, pop, rock and blues. In the 1980s, she had a string of chart-topping singles, which crossed musical genres and landed on both C&W and Top 100 charts, the most commercially successful being her 1981 breakthrough hit "Seven Year Ache", which topped the U.S. country singles charts and reached the Top 30 on the U.S. pop singles charts. In 1990, Cash released Interiors, a spare, introspective album which signaled a break from her pop country past. The following year Cash ended her marriage and moved from Nashville to New York City, where she continues to write, record and perform. Since 1991 she has released five albums, written two books and edited a collection of short stories. Her fiction and essays have been published in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Oxford-American, New York Magazine, and various other periodicals and collections.

She won a Grammy in 1985 for "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me", and has received nine other Grammy nominations. She has had 11 #1 country hit singles, 21 Top 40 country singles and two gold records.

She was portrayed, as a youngster, by Hailey Anne Nelson in Walk the Line, the 2005 Academy-award winning film of her father's life.

Contents

Early life

Cash was born in Memphis, Tennessee in 1955, just as father Johnny was recording his first tracks at Sun Records.[1] The family moved to California in 1958, first to Los Angeles, then Ventura, where Cash and her sisters were raised by mother Vivian. (Vivian and Johnny separated in the early 1960s[2] and divorced in 1966.) After graduating from high school, she joined her father's road show for two and a half years, first as a wardrobe assistant,[3] then as a background vocalist and occasional soloist.[4] In 1976, Cash briefly worked for CBS Records in London before returning to Nashville to study English and drama at Vanderbilt University, then relocated to Los Angeles to study at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute in Hollywood.[5] She recorded a demo in January 1978 with Emmylou Harris' songwriter/sideman Rodney Crowell, which led to a full album with German label Ariola Records.[5]

Music career

Cash at an outdoor concert in 2009

1978–1980: First American release

Her self-titled debut album was recorded in 1978, but Ariola never released it in the United States, and it has since become a collector's item. Mainly recorded and produced in Munich, Germany with German-based musicians, it also included three tracks recorded in Nashville and produced by Crowell.[6] Though Cash was unhappy with the album, it attracted the attention of Columbia Records, who offered her a recording contract.[7] She began playing with Crowell's band The Cherry Bombs in California clubs. Crowell and Cash married in 1979,[3] and Cash started work on her first Columbia LP.

The album, Right or Wrong, was released in early 1980,[8] and produced three Top 25 singles.[6] The first, "No Memories Hangin' Around", a duet with country singer Bobby Bare, reached 17 on the Country Singles chart in 1979. It was followed by "Couldn't Do Nothin' Right" and "Take Me, Take Me" in 1980.[9] Cash, pregnant with her first child, was unable to tour in support of the album, which was nevertheless a critical success.[8] Cash and Crowell moved to Nashville in 1981.

1981–1989: Critical and commercial success

Cash's career picked up considerable momentum with the release of her second album, Seven Year Ache, in 1981. The album achieved critical raves and solid sales, and the title track was a #1 hit on the Billboard Country Chart, and crossed over to the Billboard Pop Chart, peaking at #22. The album yielded two additional #1 country hits, "My Baby Thinks He's a Train" and "Blue Moon with Heartache",[8] and was certified Gold by the RIAA.

Cash's third album, Somewhere in the Stars (1982), was considered a disappointment after the commercial success of Seven Year Ache.[5] The album still reached the Top 100 of the U.S. pop album charts, and included three U.S. country chart singles, "Ain't No Money", "I Wonder" and "It Hasn't Happened Yet".[10] Cash struggled with substance abuse during this time, and in 1984 she sought medical treatment.[8]

After a three-year hiatus, Cash released her fourth studio album, Rhythm & Romance (1985), which yielded two #1 hits, "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me" and "Never Be You", and two other Country Top 10 singles, "Hold On" and "Second to No One". Rhythm & Romance drew high critical praise for its fusion of country and pop.[4] "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me" won the 1985 Grammy award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance; "Hold On" won the 1987 Robert J. Burton Award from BMI as the Most Performed Song of the Year.[5]

In the '80s, Cash curtailed her touring for childbearing and raising a family (three daughters with Crowell, as well as Crowell's daughter by his first marriage, Hannah). She continued to record and in 1987 released the most critically acclaimed album of her career, King's Record Shop.[11] It spawned four #1 hits, including a cover version of her father's "Tennessee Flat Top Box", John Hiatt's "The Way We Make a Broken Heart", "If You Change Your Mind", John Stewart's "Runaway Train", and became Cash's second gold album. In 1988 Cash recorded a duet with Crowell, "It's Such a Small World" (released on his Diamonds & Dirt album), which also went to #1 on the country charts, and Cash was named Billboard's Top Singles Artist of the year.[5]

In 1989, Columbia released her first compilation album, Hits 1979–1989. The album yielded two new hit singles, the Beatles cover "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party", which landed at #1 on the Billboard country charts, and "Black and White", which earned Cash her fifth Grammy nomination.[6]

1990–1995: Break up, relocation

In 1990, Cash released the critically acclaimed, deeply personal Interiors. Cash produced herself for the first time, and wrote or co-wrote all the songs. "Her brutally dark take on intimate relationships was reflected throughout and made clear the marital problems that had been hinted at on earlier albums."[3] "Highly autobiographical (though Cash has often insisted it isn't quite as true to life as everyone assumes), Interiors was a brilliant, introspective album"[12] and "her masterpiece".[13] Other critics called it "maudlin"[5] and "pessimistic".[10] Interiors topped many best album lists in 1990,[12] and received a Grammy award nomination for Best Contemporary Folk Album. It yielded one Top 40 single ("What We Really Want"), and marked the beginning of sharp commercial decline for Cash.

Though it may have been inspired by the breakup of her marriage, it also signified her departure from Nashville and its country music establishment. In 1991 Cash relocated to New York City; in 1992, she and Crowell divorced.[6] The Wheel, released in 1993, was "an unflinchingly confessional examination of the marriage's failure that ranked as her most musically diverse effort to date".[4] The album was Cash's last for Columbia Records. It received considerable acclaim from critics, though neither of its two singles, "The Wheel" or "You Won't Let Me In", charted.

1995–present: New York, new albums and books

Cash at the 2010 Brooklyn Book Festival to discuss her writing

Cash settled in lower Manhattan, and in 1995 married producer/songwriter/guitarist John Leventhal, with whom she had co-produced The Wheel. She signed with Capitol Records, and in 1996 released 10 Song Demo, a collection of stark home recordings with minimal accompaniment. She also pursued a career as a writer, and in 1996 Hyperion published her short story collection Bodies of Water, to favorable reviews.[3] In 1997, Cash was awarded an honorary doctorate from Memphis College of Art. She gave the commencement address that year[14] and continues to work with college master classes in writing and speak to women's groups.

In 1998, she and Leventhal began working on what would later become Rules of Travel. The recording sessions were cut short when she became pregnant and was unable to sing for two and a half years, due to a polyp on her vocal cords.[10]

Unable to record, Cash focused on her writing. Her children's book Penelope Jane: A Fairy's Tale, which included an exclusive CD, was published by Harper Collins in 2000, and in 2001 she edited a collection of short fiction by songwriters titled Songs Without Rhyme: Prose by Celebrated Songwriters.[3] Recovering her voice, she resumed recording and in 2003, released Rules of Travel, her first full-fledged studio album for Capitol. The album had guest appearances by Sheryl Crow and Steve Earle, a song co-written by Joe Henry and Jakob Dylan, and the poignant "September When It Comes", a duet with her father.[6] Rules Of Travel was nominated for a 2003 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.[15]

Cash was also an inaugural member of the Independent Music Awards' judging panel to support independent artists.[16]

In 2005, Legacy Recordings reissued Seven Year Ache (1981), King's Record Shop (1987), and Interiors (1990), plus a new collection spanning 1979–2003, The Very Best Of Rosanne Cash.

Rosanne Cash at the 2006 South by Southwest

In 2006, Cash released Black Cadillac, an album marked by the loss of her stepmother, June, and father, Johnny, who both died in 2003; and her mother, Vivian, Johnny's first wife, who died as Rosanne finished the album in 2005.[17] The album was critically praised, and named to the Top 10 lists of the New York Times,[18] Billboard,[19] PopMatters,[20] NPR [21] and other general interest and music publications. The album was nominated for a 2006 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk/Americana Album.[22]

Cash toured extensively in support of the album, and created a multimedia performance, with video, imagery and narration drawn from the songs and from Cash's family history.[23] In 2006, a short documentary by filmmaker Steve Lippman, "Mariners and Musicians", based on the album and interviews with Cash, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and was screened at festivals worldwide.[24] Cash's music was also featured prominently in an American Masters biography of photographer Annie Leibovitz, who has photographed Cash and her family numerous times.[25]

In late 2007, Cash underwent brain surgery for a rare condition (Chiari I malformation) and was forced to cancel her remaining concert dates.[26] After a successful recovery,[27] she resumed writing and live appearances. In 2008 she wrote for Measure for Measure, the songwriters' column in The New York Times,[28] recorded with Kris Kristofferson and Elvis Costello,[29] and appeared on Costello's TV series Spectacle.[30]

Cash released her next studio album, entitled The List, on October 6, 2009. The album is based on a list of 100 greatest country and American songs that Johnny Cash gave her when she was 18.[31] Cash picked 12 songs out of the 100 for the album. The album features vocal duets with Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Jeff Tweedy, and Rufus Wainwright. An iTunes Store-only 13th song features a duet with Neko Case.

In addition to her own recordings, Cash has made guest appearances on albums by Rodney Crowell, Guy Clark, Vince Gill, Lyle Lovett, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Marc Cohn, The Chieftains, John Stewart, Willy Mason, Mike Doughty, and others, as well as children's albums by Larry Kirwan, Tom Chapin, and Dan Zanes and Friends. She has also appeared on tribute albums to Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Bob Dylan, The Band, Tammy Wynette, Doc Pomus, Laura Nyro, Yoko Ono, John Hiatt and Jimi Hendrix.

In December 2009, it was announced that Cash would be portraying Monique in the upcoming album Ghost Brothers of Darkland County, a collaboration between rock singer John Mellencamp and novelist Stephen King.[32]

Recently, she was enlisted by the USA's tourism organization Brand USA to develop a song to promote foreign tourism to the United States. The "Land of Dreams" song now utilized by Brand USA features Cash in video advertisements that will be shown initially in the United Kingdom, Canada and Japan.

Personal life

Family

Cash with John Leventhal in 2010

Cash's parents, Johnny Cash and Vivian Liberto, were married in San Antonio, Texas in 1954. She has three younger sisters, Kathy, Cindy and Tara. Johnny and Vivian divorced in 1966, and he married June Carter in 1968. Cash's stepsisters are country singers Carlene Carter and Rosie Nix Adams, also known as Rosey Carter, June Carter's daughters from her first two marriages. Johnny and June's son John Carter Cash is Rosanne's half brother. Cash's father died in 2003; her mother died in 2003.[33]

Cash married country music singer-songwriter Rodney Crowell in 1979. They have three daughters: Caitlin, Chelsea and Carrie. Cash also raised Crowell's daughter, Hannah, from a previous marriage. Cash and Crowell divorced in 1992. She married her second husband, John Leventhal, in 1995, and they have one son, Jakob.[33] Cash lives with her husband, son and youngest daughter in Chelsea, Manhattan.[34]

Chiari malformation

On November 27, 2007, Cash was admitted to New York’s Presbyterian Hospital for brain surgery. In a press statement, she announced that she suffered from Chiari Malformation Type I and expected to "make a full recovery".[35] The surgery was successful,[27] though recovery was slow, and in March 2008 she was forced to cancel her spring tour dates for further recuperation. She wrote about the experience in her New York Times article "Well, Actually, It Is Brain Surgery".[36] She resumed writing, recording and performing in late summer of 2008.

Other projects

Cash supports several charitable organizations. She is a longtime board member of PAX,[37] an organization dedicating to preventing gun violence among children. She was honored by PAX at their fifth annual benefit gala in 2005.[38]

Cash is active on behalf of SOS Children's Villages, which houses and cares for orphaned and abandoned children. The Cash family are long-term supporters of SOS. In the 1970s Johnny and June Cash donated property and financed the construction of a family house in Jamaica for SOS, and after their deaths the family established a memorial fund to benefit their work. In 2004, Cash accepted the SOS Children's Champion Award on behalf of her father for the Cash family's support of SOS Children's Villages.[39] Cash sponsors a child through SOS.

She also sponsors three children through Children, Incorporated, which works to support and educate needy children and young adults worldwide.

Discography

Rossane Cash during the presentation of her book at the Miami Book Fair International 2011

Books

References

  1. ^ Johnny Cash biography Sun Records.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  2. ^ Wolff, Kurt (2000). In Country Music: The Rough Guide. Orla Duane, Editor. London: Rough Guides Ltd. p. 465.
  3. ^ a b c d e Rosanne Cash: Biography RollingStone.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  4. ^ a b c Ankeny, Jason Rosanne Cash biography Allmusic; retrieved 1-01-09
  5. ^ a b c d e f Cash, Rosanne Country Works.com Century of Country; retrieved 01-01-09
  6. ^ a b c d e CMT biography - Rosanne Cash Country Music Television; retrieved 1-01-09
  7. ^ Johnson, Anne Janette Biography - Rosanne Cash Musician Guide.com; retrieved 1-01-09
  8. ^ a b c d Irwin Stambler and Grelun Landon (2000). In Country Music: The Encyclopedia. New York: Macmillan p. 80.
  9. ^ Rosanne Cash Charts and Awards Allmusic; retrieved 01-01-09
  10. ^ a b c Rosanne Cash biography oldies.com; retrieved 1-01-09
  11. ^ Thom Jurek King's Record Shop-Overview Allmusic.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  12. ^ a b Rosanne Cash Interview Pop Entertainment; retrieved 01-01-09
  13. ^ Thom Jurek Interiors-Overview Allmusic; retrieved 01-01-09
  14. ^ Jeffrey D. Nessin, President, Memphis College of Art: Commencement Ceremony, May 16, 1998, Memphis, TN Citation
  15. ^ CMT News: 2004 Grammy Nominations CMT.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  16. ^ Independent Music Awards – Past Judges
  17. ^ Rosanne Cash Biography NetGlimse.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  18. ^ Rosanne Cash: Black Cadillac Reviews Metacritic.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  19. ^ 2006 Critics' Choice Billboard.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  20. ^ PopMatters Picks: Best Country of 2006PopMatters.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  21. ^ John Schaefer's Best of 2006 Albums WNYC.org; retrieved 01-01-09
  22. ^ 2007 Grammy Nominations: The Complete List of Country Artists, Albums and Songs Country Music Television News & Updates; retrieved 1-01-09.
  23. ^ Rosanne Cash Eulogizes Johnny Cash at St. Ann's Warehouse NY Times.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  24. ^ Mariners and Musicians IMDB.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  25. ^ "Annie Leibovitz: Life Through a Lens", American Masters; retrieved 01-01-09
  26. ^ Rosanne Cash to Undergo Brain Surgery Country Music Television News & Updates; retrieved 1-01-09.
  27. ^ a b Rosanne Cash Recuperating from Brain Surgery Country Music Television & Updates; retrieved 1-01-09.
  28. ^ Measure for Measure blog - NY Times.com NY Times.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  29. ^ "Measure for Measure: The Ear of the Beholder", NY Times.com; retrieved 01-01-09
  30. ^ Sundance Channel: Spectacle SundanceChannel.com; retrieved 1-01-09
  31. ^ "Fresh Air from WHYY: Rosanne Cash Runs Down Her Father's 'List'". Fresh Air. NPR; WHYY. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113496614. Retrieved 2009-10-06. 
  32. ^ http://www.mellencamp.com/?module=news&news_item_id=527
  33. ^ a b "Rosanne Cash", NNDB, retrieved 1-01-09.
  34. ^ Sisario, Ben (February 2, 2012). "Rosanne Cash, the Rubin Art Museum's Resident Musician". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/03/arts/music/rosanne-cash-the-rubin-art-museums-resident-musician.html?_r=1. 
  35. ^ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22220526/from/ET/
  36. ^ Cash, Rosanne (April 5, 2008). "Well, Actually, It Is Brain Surgery". The New York Times. http://measureformeasure.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/04/05/well-actually-it-is-brain-surgery/. Retrieved May 22, 2010. 
  37. ^ "PAX / Real Solutions to Gun Violence", PAX-USA.org, retrieved 1-1-09.
  38. ^ PAX Benefit Gala to Honor Rosanne Cash PAX-USA.org; retrieved 1-1-09.
  39. ^ and i'm wanna work with brooklny rapper manolo who's has the song the office  ?site=US&hNav=show&nav=6.5&cat=/654_friends_worldwide&fn=6542_roseannecash_enus SOS "Rosanne Cash accepts award from Children's Charity". SOS Children's Villages. http://www.sos-usa.org/cgi-bin/sos/jsp/retrieve.do and i'm wanna work with brooklny rapper manolo who's has the song the office  ?site=US&hNav=show&nav=6.5&cat=/654_friends_worldwide&fn=6542_roseannecash_enus SOS. Retrieved 2007-06-29. 

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More Hot Country Requests #1 (1990 Album by Various Artists)
I'll Be There (1980 Album by Gail Davies)
Roseanne Cash: Interiors Live (1993 Music Film)