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  1. History. Roy Cash Sr., oldest brother of Johnny Cash, was service manager at a car dealership in Memphis, Tennessee.In 1953, while the younger Cash was stationed in Germany with the US Air Force, Luther Perkins joined the staff there, where he met co-workers Marshall Grant and A.W. "Red" Kernodle.

  2. 26. Feb. 2024 · In the following years, Cash would move on to play more shows and record music. His older brother Roy introduced him to the Tennessee Three – Luther Perkins and Marshall Grant and AWRed” Kernodle – and the foursome played both parties and church functions.

  3. Wide Open Road is the only known take to feature the steel guitar playing of A. W. 'Red' Kernodle and gives us a clue to how they would have sounded had he remained a member of the group. It has to be said that he was not the greatest steel guitar player and his decision to leave was ultimately a benefit to the Cash sound as he recalled in a ...

  4. Luther borrowed an electric guitar and Marshall a stand-up bass, although nobody was sure how to tune it. They were all self-taught musicians and started to play more seriously. There was a fourth member, steel guitar player A. W. 'Red' Kernodle, who would record just once with Cash but was so nervous that he would leave the studio, never to ...

  5. 22. März 2024 · The Tennessee Three became the Tennessee Two when Red Kernodle left the group. As fate would have it, after Kernodle left, Cash, Luther Perkins, and Grant recorded “Cry, Cry, Cry,” “Hey Porter,” and “Folsom Prison Blues.” Those songs were well received and in February 1956, Cash received a royalty check for $6,000 (about $67,000 in today’s dollars). Cash decided he no longer ...

  6. 18. Nov. 2003 · See Full Discography. With His Hot and Blue Guitar (1957) Sings the Songs That Made Him Famous (1958) The Fabulous Johnny Cash (1958) Songs of Our Soil (1959) Hymns by Johnny Cash (1959) Sings Hank Williams (1960)

  7. Luther borrowed an electric guitar and Marshall a stand-up bass, although nobody was sure how to tune it. They were all self-taught musicians and started to play more seriously. There was a fourth member, steel guitar player A. W. 'Red' Kernodle, who would record just once with Cash but was so nervous that he would leave the studio, never to ...