HE DIDN’T WRITE THIS SONG — BUT THE MOMENT HE SANG IT, EVERY SOUL IN NASHVILLE KNEW IT HAD BEEN WAITING FOR HIS VOICE ALL ALONG. Johnny Cash didn’t need to write this song. He just needed to have lived it — and God knows he had. A janitor named Kris Kristofferson had been sweeping Cash’s studio floors for years, slipping him demos that kept getting buried under a pile of forgotten tapes. One day, Kristofferson landed a helicopter in Cash’s yard just to make him listen. The song was about waking up alone on a Sunday morning — hungover, hollowed out, hearing church bells through the window of a life that had gone sideways. No romance. No redemption. Just the brutal, aching honesty of a man who knows he’s lost and can’t remember the way home. When Cash performed it live on the CMA Awards stage in 1970, he refused to change a single word — even the line Nashville executives begged him to cut. It won Song of the Year anyway. Some songs find their singer. This one found the only man broken enough to mean every word.
Johnny Cash and the Song That Sounded Like It Had Been Waiting for Him Some songs are admired the first…