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Wednesday, Jul 6, 2011 2:14 PM UTC2011-07-06T14:14:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Johnny Cash, Spike Jonze top list of 100 best music videos

NME heralds the launch of its new site with a (semi) definitive list of the best clips ever made

Johnny Cash in "Hurt."

Johnny Cash in "Hurt."

To launch of their new video site today, NME.com has made a list of their Top 100 music videos. In order.

You know that producing a definitive piece like this is every music nerd’s biggest dream, and that he or she already has that list ready and waiting to go, so I just imagine the conference room of NME probably looked like a battlefield of broken bottle glasses and mangled EPs. How all the editors got together and finally found their 100 picks is beyond me, but you can’t deny that their number one pick – Johnny Cash covering the Nine Inch Nail’s “Hurt” – is a solid choice. It’s not too fringe, it was the last song Cash filmed (and the one he made right after his wife died, though she appears in the video), and it’s filled with some of the rawest emotion ever caught on tape from the Man in Black.

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Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrewMore Drew Grant

Monday, Nov 9, 2009 1:07 AM UTC2009-11-09T01:07:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The bitter tears of Johnny Cash

The untold story of Johnny Cash, protest singer and Native American activist, and his feud with the music industry

Johnny Cash touring Wounded Knee with the descendants of those who survived the 1890 massacre in December of 1968.

Johnny Cash touring Wounded Knee with the descendants of those who survived the 1890 massacre in December of 1968.

In July 1972, musician Johnny Cash sat opposite President Richard Nixon in the White House’s Blue Room. As a horde of media huddled a few feet away, the country music superstar had come to discuss prison reform with the self-anointed leader of America’s “silent majority.” “Johnny, would you be willing to play a few songs for us,” Nixon asked Cash. “I like Merle Haggard’s ‘Okie From Muskogee’ and Guy Drake’s ‘Welfare Cadillac.’” The architect of the GOP’s Southern strategy was asking for two famous expressions of white working-class resentment.

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Friday, Nov 18, 2005 12:25 PM UTC2005-11-18T12:25:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

“Walk the Line”

Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon let it burn, burn, burn -- and do their own singing! -- in this inspiring Johnny Cash biopic.

"Walk the Line"

There’s no way to make a true biopic of a figure as extraordinary and as complex as Johnny Cash: No picture is big enough to hold him. The best you can do is to make a movie about an idea of Johnny Cash, to select a few angles of the man and amplify them into a suitably mighty sound. That’s what James Mangold has done in his deeply passionate “Walk the Line,” which examines the legend of Cash through the lens of his slow-burning, long-lasting relationship with June Carter, whom he married in the late ’60s after having known her — and performed with her — for more than 10 years.

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Stephanie Zacharek is a senior writer for Salon Arts & Entertainment.  More Stephanie Zacharek

Friday, Sep 12, 2003 8:00 PM UTC2003-09-12T20:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Johnny Cash, 1932-2003

He was the Man in Black and the man with the voice that sounded like black coffee. America's greatest protest singer, a seminal figure in both rock and country, is dead at 71.

Johnny Cash, 1932-2003

If you took every note that Johnny Cash didn’t quite hit and laid them end-to-end, they’d probably reach clear around the world. And so what? His was one of the greatest voices of both country and rock ‘n’ roll (he’s one of the few artists to be elected to both halls of fame), a voice that was beautifully suited to heart-wrenching romantic ballads but that was just as often, or perhaps more often, used to speak up for the downtrodden and the forgotten — or for anyone who may have simply made a mistake in life. Low and dark, devoid of cream and especially sugar, Cash’s voice was the sound of black coffee, a sound you didn’t know you needed until you got that first sip. And by then you were hooked.

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Stephanie Zacharek is a senior writer for Salon Arts & Entertainment.  More Stephanie Zacharek

Wednesday, Apr 9, 2003 8:00 PM UTC2003-04-09T20:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

“Not every question has an answer”

Rosanne Cash talks about her ailing dad, the Dixie Chicks and the war, losing her voice and the new album that helped her find it again.

"Not every question has an answer"
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Fans have waited a long time for a new Rosanne Cash record. Produced by her husband, John Leventhal, “Rules of Travel” draws stylistic influences from throughout her career, from the “Seven Year Ache” of the ’80s through the ’90s confessionals “Interiors” and “The Wheel.” It also features, for the first time, a duet between Cash and her father, the one and only Johnny Cash. On an early day of the war in Iraq, when the television networks were still showing reports of bombing and invasion 24-7, Cash and I settled in for a chat on the phone. Although it was difficult to avoid talking about the war, we managed to find time for the new disc, her long silence, dad Johnny’s political legacy and how she lost her voice — and then got it back.

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Ken Foster is the author of a collection of short stories, "The Kind I'm Likely to Get," and the editor of two anthologies, "The KGB Bar Reader" and "Dog Culture: Writers on the Character of Canines."  More Ken Foster

Thursday, Jan 2, 2003 8:00 PM UTC2003-01-02T20:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Real Life Rock Top 10

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1) Mendoza Line, “Sleep of the Just,” from “Almost You: The Songs of Elvis Costello” (Glurp)

Aren’t tribute albums terrible? This one is really terrible — and the Atlanta band’s view all the way into one of Costello’s greatest recordings ranks with Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” and DJ Shadow’s “The Private Press” as the most undeniable sound of the year.

Maybe it was always obvious that the song is about the gang-rape of a local girl at an army base, with the woman looking back: “The soldier asked my name and did I come here very often/ Well, I thought that he was asking me to dance.” Maybe the song was always about the woman cherishing his death when his company’s transport vehicle is blown up: He’s getting the sleep of the just, all right, the big sleep. In Costello’s performance, though, the beauty of the composition makes the story into a fable, and the people in it float like ghosts.

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The Rude Mechs' theatrical adaptation of Greil Marcus' book "Lipstick Traces" will play Jan. 30-Feb. 1 at DiverseWorks in Houston. For more columns by Greil Marcus, visit his column archive.  More Greil Marcus

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