JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR
JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR
JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR
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JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR
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JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR

C.F. MARTIN & COMPANY, NAZARETH, PENNSYLVANIA, 1956

Details
JOHNNY CASH: A MARTIN D-21 ACOUSTIC GUITAR
C.F. MARTIN & COMPANY, NAZARETH, PENNSYLVANIA, 1956
An acoustic guitar, D-21, bearing the logo C.F. Martin and Co. / EST 1833 at the headstock, stamped internally D-21 147683 C.F Martin and Co. NAZARETH, PA., with solid spruce top, Brazilian rosewood back and sides, mahogany neck, Brazilian rosewood fretboard, and Brazilian rosewood bridge, mother-of-pearl dot markers, together with a hardshell case of the period labelled J R, with vintage Western Airlines luggage tag and a vintage ticket stub for the Oklahoma Turnpike, and an additional modern hardshell case; accompanied by various documents concerning the provenance, including a notarized letter of provenance from Johnny’s brother Tommy Cash, a letter of provenance from the widow of Billy McCravy, to whom Tommy traded the guitar in 1960, invoice and appraisal documents from Gruhn Guitars, Nashville, a late 1990s Johnny Cash signature guitar pick with letter of provenance from Gruhn Guitars, a letter and additional notes from collector Steven Capener detailing his conversations with Tommy Cash in 2005, and a copy of a photograph of Tommy Cash with the guitar, circa 2005
Length of back: 20 in. (50.8 cm.)
Overall length: 40 5⁄8 in. (103.4 cm.)
Provenance
Gifted by Johnny Cash to his brother Tommy Cash, 1960.
Traded by Tommy Cash to Billy McCravy, circa 1960; and by descent to his widow.
Acquired privately from Gruhn Guitars, Nashville, in 2004 by Steven Capener.
Acquired privately from the above by Zak Tyler, January 2022.
Sold Julien's, New York, 20-23 May 2022, lot 371.
Exhibited
Indianapolis, Eiteljorg Museum, Guitars! Roundups to Rockers, 9 March - 4 August 2013.
Honolulu, Hawaii, Bishop Museum, Kaula Piko: The Source of Strings, 18 July 2020 - 31 January 2021.

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The Jim Irsay Collection
The Jim Irsay Collection General Enquires

Lot Essay

According to Johnny Cash’s brother and fellow country musician Tommy Cash, Johnny owned and played this guitar in the late 1950s, before gifting it to the twenty-year-old Tommy in 1960. Tommy subsequently traded the guitar to his friend Billy McCravy for other musical equipment. The accompanying letter from McCravy’s widow explains that Tommy and her husband Billy were both stationed in Frankfurt, Germany, when Johnny Cash was travelling through the country on tour – presumably his ten-day tour of US military bases in Germany from 2-11 December 1960 – and passed the guitar to his younger brother.

After McCravy’s death, the guitar was consigned to Gruhn Guitars, Nashville, where it was acquired by collector Steven Capener in 2004. When Capener spoke with Tommy Cash in 2005, Tommy reportedly stated that Johnny had used this guitar “quite a lot” in the late 1950s, particularly in 1958, 1959 and 1960. During this period, Johnny Cash had left Sun Records to sign with Columbia, where he released his second studio album The fabulous Johnny Cash in 1958, led by the hit single ‘Don't Take Your Guns to Town’, and followed up with his first gospel album Hymns by Johnny Cash and a fourth studio album Songs of Our Soil in 1959, while continuing to perform and tour with the Tennessee Two. The well-used guitar case notably displays the initials J R for Cash’s birth name J.R. Cash. It was only when he joined the US Air Force after high school that Cash adopted the name “John R. Cash”, as initials were not permitted as a first name on the enlistment papers. Offered with documented family provenance, this is the only known 1950s era Johnny Cash guitar to have come to auction.

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