"MotoArigato" (MotoArigato)
01/09/2014 at 17:05 Filed to: johnny cash, cindy cash, estate sale, jc unit one, tour bus, rock and roll museum, hall of fame, tennessee three, motoarigato | 2 | 4 |
"I have a home that takes me anywhere I need to go, that cradles me and
comforts me, that lets me nod off in the mountains and wake up in the
plains."
Such are the words Johnny Cash wrote about his beloved home away from
home, a majestic tour bus, specifically a customized MCI motorcoach
upgraded with powertrain and suspension boosts, sound deadening, and
other specialized equipment to the tune of over $500,000... in 1979
dollars. The silver, grey and black bus would come to be known as the
most visible symbol of the extravagance and grandeur of a Johnny Cash
show, with rumors spreading in each town along the route as excited fans
spotted the fabled "JC Unit One" on local roadways and news spread that
Johnny Cash had arrived in town.
Cash was not only a very private man, but one who enjoyed his personal
freedoms. He chose to buy and build his own road cruiser rather than
follow the usual rock star routine of renting a bus, because he wanted
his to have all the personal touches and features of home paired with a
sense of stability that familiar settings year after year would provide.
Seeing that Cash toured with his young son, John Jr., and that his wife
June Carter was an integral part of the stage show, it was necessary
that the family be comfortable for those fleeting moments of private
time while touring North America, tho it is said the bus did make at
least one European appearance. In 1991, as tour support for Cash's side
music project
The Highwaymen
, he used the bus
to shuttle band-mates Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings.
Cash sold the coach just after his wife of thirty-five years, June, died
in 2003, and the Man In Black himself succumbed just four short months
later from complications of diabetes, or as many who knew him believe is
more likely, he died of a broken heart. The bus was sold by Cash to a
ministry and then purchased by a car dealer who eventually sold it via
eBay to an experienced collector in North Carolina, Dave Wright. Wright
valued the bus for it's place in American music history and made a
personal vow to return it to it's original condition by having a road
worthy restoration completed at the original facilities.
"We call it Unit One. I love my bus. It really is my home too. When I
make it off another plane through another airport, the sight of that big
black MCI waiting by the curb sends waves of relief through me Aah!
safety, familiarity, solitude. Peace at last. My cocoon."
At the time, I was fortunate enough to be guiding Johnny Cash's original
band, the Tennessee Three, on what the they should do now that The Man
himself was gone. We agreed that the best thing they could do was keep
the unique sound they created together alive by continuing to tour and
play out in public. We worked hard to get the band back on the road
after John's death, a band that still included two of the original three
members. The drummer, WS "Fluke" Holland, is also the first drummer in
rock and roll music, featured on the original Carl Perkins version of
Blue Suede Shoes. Holland was also key to creating Elvis Presley's early
image, albeit unwittingly, by providing the poor southern singer with
clothing for his various appearances on TV and concert, all of which
were sized too big for the eventual "King of Rock and Roll." These
oversized jackets would quickly become a trademark of Elvis' and are
still in the personal collection of Holland in his Jackson, Tennessee
home.
Bob Wootton played guitar, taking over for Luther Perkins who died in
1968, but also sang vocals with Cash, acted as his body double for TV
and film work, and served as Cash's bodyguard on the road. After Cash's
death Wootton took over lead vocals for the live act and recordings, and
they continue to tour the US and Europe to this day.* One evening, I got
a message from Bob's wife, Vicky, telling me how someone had contacted
her to buy the original license plates that Bob (also the bus driver at
times) had ordered but never got a chance to put on before it was sold.
She told me that Dave Wright owned the JC Unit One and wanted the plates
to complete the restoration he was planning. After a long conversation
trading stories, Wright agreed to allow the Tennessee Three full use of
the bus for touring, stating that it was the right thing to do, getting
it back on the open road with the band who made it all possible.
We used the bus for some time, making appearances to support the release
of the biopic about Cash's life "Walk the Line." The JC Unit One was as
big a celebrity as the band as it loomed always near as a welcomed
respite on a moment's notice from genuine, but exuberant, crowds. It
delivered the band to the red carpet screening in Hollywood where they
were reunited with old friends like Jane Seymour (Cash once appeared on
Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman), during in-store appearances at Tower Records,
touring the backlot of Paramount Pictures, and even served as the Green
Room for us during the band's Oscar-night appearance on Jimmy Kimmel
Live. Fellow guest Johnny Knoxville was left like a starry-eyed fan as
he waited patiently outside the bus door for Wootton and Holland to
exit. He spoke briefly with the men, who had no idea who he was but were
very courteous nonetheless, telling them how he had purchased Cash's
small mountaintop cabin, before allowing the guys to head off to sound
check, all the while smiling like a star-struck teenager. You see, it's
not just meeting the band members that's so special to people like
Knoxville, once they are invited on board the bus and witness the
personalized touches and begin to hear the stories, that they are
transported back to a time and place that is unique to each individual,
perhaps it was the first time they saw Johnny Cash on television or
heard the unforgettable line "I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him
die."
!!! UNKNOWN CONTENT TYPE !!!
I loved telling people the stories of how Cash, not wanting to be told he couldn't export a rare wood from his Cinnamon Hill farm in Jamaica to his Tennessee estate, decied to make packing crates out of the wood for some furniture pieces he was shipping back to the States... !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!!
(* Originally published Nov. 2011, the band is no longer touring due to age and health considerations.)
f86sabre
> MotoArigato
01/09/2014 at 20:03 | 1 |
Thanks for sharing that. Amazing story.
MotoArigato
> f86sabre
01/09/2014 at 20:18 | 1 |
It's my pleasure, I'm glad you enjoyed the read. I don't recall if I put this in the article or not but at one show a fan stole a headlight as a souvenir while it was parked outside the venue. I'd love to show up at the Rock and Roll Museum and give an impromptu tour to some folks some day. :)
Indysgirl
> MotoArigato
09/08/2020 at 19:25 | 1 |
Yout dream must be a reality. We just saw the coach at the rock and roll museum.
MotoArigato
> Indysgirl
10/21/2020 at 13:12 | 0 |
I hope it
s holding up well!