And it gave me something I could finally sing in the shower without scaring the hell out of anybody within earshot; I can hit those low notes. If I could be anyone, anywhere with a microphone in front of me, it would be Cash in front of the Tennessee Two. "I hear that train a-comin', it's rollin' 'round the bend, and I ain't seen the sunshine since I don't know when..."
Plenty of obituaries of and tributes to the man are out there today, and plenty more will be rolled out in the days to come. But the words which resonate most for me were written by Langford, as eloquent a musician as you'll ever come across, in the liner notes to a tribute album he did in 1994:
He is the polar opposite of the cozy, safe, sexless and bland that white America usually clutches to its all purchasing, suffocating breast. Decency, truth, honesty... around him these gutted terms retain some of their original meaning and in a country that fears self-criticism above all else he holds a mirror up to its rotten hide... ironically it is patriotism and terrible guilty grief that fuels this righteous rage at totalitariansm, racism, genocide... going into the prisons & reservations, putting his own weakness under the same microscope.
Johnny Cash is gone, and he will be dearly missed. The world has lost a great voice.
As the man himself once sang, "I don't like it, but I guess things happen that way."