pop culture locations from movies, music, tv & more...
johnny cash museum (upcoming)
from johnny cash posted in music by pete_nice
Scheduled to open up in the summer of 2012 at a former rug store, the Johnny Cash Museum will feature 18,000 square feet of memorabilia, interactive exhibits and a 250-seat auditorium.
Funded by long-time Johnny Cash friends and co-hosts of The Johnny Cash Radio Hour, Bill and Shannon Miller state that some of the artifacts will come from the defunct House of Cash (closed 1999), the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and Cash's Hendersonville home.
Nashville-based Griffin Technologies will provide the interactive displays and iPad applications. The couple hopes to keep ticket prices around $13.
No firm opening date has been set, so I guess it's wait and see if it really happens.
nickajack cave
from johnny cash posted in music by pete_nice
In 1968, Johnny Cash had hit rock bottom. Substance abuse had shattered his life, and he decided to end it all in Nickajack Cave. Crawling as far as he could into the recesses of the cave until his flashlight gave out, Cash curled up and waited to die.
As he put it: "The absolute lack of light was appropriate, for at that moment I was as far from God as I have ever been. My separation from Him, the deepest and most ravaging of the various kinds of loneliness I’d felt over the years, seemed finally complete.”
Then something changed for Cash. “I felt something very powerful start to happen to me, a sensation of utter peace, clarity and sobriety... There in Nickajack Cave I became conscious of a very clear, simple idea: I was not in charge of my own destiny... I was going to die at God’s time, not mine.”
Today, Nickajack Cave is a protected wildlife refuge for the endangered gray bat. There is an observation deck to view the bats leaving to feed at dusk.
johnny cash’s hendersonville home (former)
from johnny cash, barry gibbs posted in music by pete_nice
For 35 years, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash lived in a home on Old Hickory Lake at this address. The home was a mixture of wood, stone, and marble, and was built without a blueprint. The Cashes entertained everybody from Bob Dylan to Rev. Billy Graham to Al Gore in their home.
Contrary to the 2005 film Walk the Line, Johnny did not stumble onto the property while rambling hungover. He did, however, drive a tractor into the lake at one point.
Four years after Johnny Cash passed, former Bee Gees star Barry Gibb purchased the home for $2.6 million. His intent was to restore the property with everything intact, but some flammable wood preserver caught fire and the home was completely destroyed.
The forests around Hendersonville are apparently not kind to wood structures. Roy Orbison's original house, which was next door, also succumbed to fire in 1965. Luther Perkins (Johnny Cash's long-time guitarist) died in a house fire nearby in 1968.
johnny cash’s grave
from johnny cash posted in music by pete_nice
On Monday, September 15, 2003, Johnny Cash was laid to rest next to his wife, June Carter Cash, at Hendersonville Memory Gardens in Hendersonville, TN. He was 71 years old.
June Carter Cash had passed away six months earlier on May 15, 2003, at the age of 73.
The Cash family had lived in a home outside Hendersonville for many years, and the Johnny Cash Museum is also in Hendersonville.
Luther Perkins, the long-time guitarist for Johnny Cash, was also interred at Hendersonville Memory Gardens in 1968 (after dying in a house fire).
The Biblical verse Psalm 19:14 is inscribed on Johnny Cash's grave.
empty bottle
from jay reatard, flameshovel records posted in music by corporate_sunshine
The Empty Bottle is a nightclub and concert venue in Chicago's Ukrainian Village neighborhood. Opened in 1992, it caters to the indie and eclectic music crowd and has an adjoining restaurant named Bite.
Above the Empty Bottle are the headquarters of Flameshovel Records.
At one point, Jay Reatard pulled the disco ball down off the ceiling here and bounced it off somebody's head. The owner charged him $150 for it. Eventually, the owner said he would pay him an extra $150 if he would play the venue again. Sometimes it pays to be an a**hole.
He recounts this anecdote in the bio-documentary Better Than Something.