HIS MANAGER SAID IT BEST: “THOSE AMERICAN RECORDINGS ALBUMS PROBABLY ADDED 10 YEARS TO HIS LIFE.” NOT BECAUSE OF THE MUSIC — BUT BECAUSE SOMEONE FINALLY BELIEVED IN JOHNNY CASH AGAIN.By 1992, no label in Nashville wanted Johnny Cash. He was playing half-empty rooms in Branson, Missouri, forgotten by an industry he helped build. Then Rick Rubin — the man behind Def Jam, Beastie Boys, and Slayer — saw Cash perform at Bob Dylan’s 30th anniversary concert and thought: this man is still vital. Their first meeting backstage was two minutes of pure silence, just staring at each other. What followed was six albums, a Grammy, and a version of “Hurt” that made the song’s own creator say it no longer belonged to him. Rubin didn’t try to change Cash. He just handed him a guitar, set up a microphone in his cabin, and said: do whatever feels right. That trust gave the Man in Black his voice back — and the world got to hear it one last time.
When Belief Came Back: How the American Recordings Era Revived Johnny Cash By the early 1990s, Johnny Cash had become…