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Rosanne Cash

2010
Paging through Country music biographies

August 25, 2010

by Jim Higgins, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Two new books about country singers have wildly contrasting tones and preoccupations, but each has nuggets to offer fans and the curious.

"Composed: A Memoir," by Rosanne Cash; Viking (256 pages. $26.95)

"My life has been circumscribed by music," writes Cash, a daughter of Johnny Cash and a significant performer herself. She's also an essayist, fiction writer and marvelous tweeter ((at)rosannecash). In deft prose she sketches her childhood anxiety, her Catholic school girlhood, early work as a CBS A&R minnow in England, Method acting classes (where she became "the girl who couldn't stop crying"), then finally her career in music.

Her father hovers over her life story like an inspiring guardian angel. After making her successful "King's Record Shop" album, she bullied Columbia/Sony for a big money renegotiation because she was furious the label had dropped her dad. She also had a challenging dream that pushed her to develop her songwriting, work on her voice and take up painting.

Her new recording, "Interiors," signaled her turn toward a singer-songwriter style of music, and also led to her marriage to musician John Leventhal (she was previously married to country singer and producer Rodney Crowell, who has his own memoir coming out in 2011.)

Woven throughout her book are loving recollections of her father. She knew he was a country legend, but in her eulogy for him, she wrote: "He was not an icon when he told us how he loved us, how beautiful and handsome we were, how proud he was." A reader can't help but think that Johnny Cash still loves his literate daughter's stubborn independence and honesty.