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	<title>Johnny Cash &#8211; uke.lol</title>
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	<description>Four strings. Infinite chaos.</description>
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	<title>Johnny Cash &#8211; uke.lol</title>
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		<title>Folsom Prison Blues</title>
		<link>https://uke.lol/songs/folsom-prison-blues-johnny-cash/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2025 21:54:26 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[🎵 About the SongThere are “songs,” and then there are Johnny Cash songs — stories carved out of guilt, gravel, [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p><strong>🎵 About the Song</strong><br>There are “songs,” and then there are <em>Johnny Cash songs</em> — stories carved out of guilt, gravel, and a cheap guitar. <em>Folsom Prison Blues</em> is Cash’s signature anthem of regret and rebellion, written in 1953 while he was serving in the U.S. Air Force in Germany, inspired by a film he saw called <em>Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison</em>.</p>



<p>Cash later said, “I wrote it in 20 minutes.” Of course he did. Some legends arrive fully formed, train whistle and all.<br>By the time he recorded it at Sun Records in ’55, he’d created something primal — the perfect mix of country storytelling, bluesy swagger, and gospel guilt.</p>



<p>Then came <strong>January 13, 1968</strong>. Cash stood inside California’s actual Folsom Prison and performed the song to 2,000 inmates. You can hear the tension — and release — in every cheer, especially after that line: <em>“I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die.”</em><br>It’s still one of the greatest live moments ever captured on tape.</p>



<p>For ukulele players, <em>Folsom Prison Blues</em> is a dream: three chords, steady rhythm, and a groove that practically plays itself. It’s a train chug in musical form — a story that moves because it has to.</p>



<p><strong>🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips</strong></p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Chords:</strong> [E], [A], [B7] — that’s all you need.</li>



<li><strong>Rhythm:</strong> Cash’s trademark <em>“boom-chicka-boom”</em> pattern. Try alternating between bass and strum:
<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Down (on the root note) → Down-Up (the rest of the chord).</li>



<li>Keep it steady — imagine a train wheel turning.</li>
</ul>
</li>



<li>If the E chord gives you trouble, slap a <strong>capo on the 2nd fret</strong> and play it as <strong>D–G–A7</strong>. Same sound, easier shapes.</li>



<li>Aim for precision, not volume. Cash’s rhythm is tight, percussive, and relentless.</li>



<li>Play softly on the verses, then lean in harder when you reach the “train” imagery for that cinematic lift.</li>
</ul>



<p>Pro tip: palm-mute the strings lightly after each downstroke to nail that staccato “freight train” sound.</p>



<p><strong>💀 Trivia You Can Drop Casually</strong></p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Cash borrowed the melody and some lyrical phrasing from a 1940s track called “Crescent City Blues,” by Gordon Jenkins — and later settled a lawsuit for it.</li>



<li>The live Folsom performance redefined his career and reignited interest in outlaw country.</li>



<li>That “Reno” lyric nearly got his song banned from the radio — DJs thought it was too violent for post-war America.</li>



<li>When asked about it years later, Cash grinned and said, “I never shot anyone in Reno — it was just a good rhyme.”</li>



<li>The rhythmic chug became so iconic that it inspired the <em>boom-chicka-boom</em> nickname for his band, The Tennessee Three.</li>
</ul>



<p><strong>🔥 Final Word</strong><br>This is the ukulele stripped of its tropical tan — raw wood, freight dust, and a little sin. Play it like you’ve been awake all night in a roadside diner somewhere between Memphis and nowhere.</p>



<p>Let the rhythm roll like a train you can’t stop and sing it like you mean every word — whether you’ve ever been to Folsom or not.</p>
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