"SAN QUENTIN" JOHNNY CASH (1969)

For the month of January, I’m selecting some of the most memorable and influential songs of the 60’s. While they all hail from the same decade, these are some of my favorite songs of any era. They remind me that the 60’s were so much more than just Woodstock and psychedelic rock. It was a flourishing period for blues, folk, progressive and straight-ahead rock. #31DaysOf60sSongs

Most music artists tend to have a favorite venue or at least a favorite type of venue to perform in. Jerry Garcia once famously said that only two theaters mattered: The Fillmore and The Capitol. Each venue space carries its own history, aura, and stories. For Johnny Cash, prisons were places where his audiences experienced redemption during some of his most famous concerts – and I wonder if these state penitentiaries allowed Cash to experience an equal amount of redemption himself. At Folsom Prison was Cash’s most renowned album from his four-part prison series, making At San Quentin a bit of an underrated gem.

The title track isn’t one of the more well known songs on his set list by any stretch. But judging from the roars, whistles and applause from the crowd, it was right up there with “Folsom Prison Blues” and “I Walk the Line”. Cash was giving much more than just a great performance. He took a much more empathetic stance, making every syllable in the lyrics an acknowledgement of what these inmates were up against. He made “San Quentin” their song, not his own song. In writing it and going behind prison doors to perform it, Cash leveled the playing field – essentially declaring the inmates as his equals. The song resonated with them so much, he went ahead and played it twice.

“San Quentin, I hate every inch of you. You've cut me and you scarred me through and through. Mister. Congressman you can't understand. San Quentin, what good do you think you do?”