HE WORE A BLACK VOLCANIC STONE AROUND HIS NECK IN THE STUDIO — BUT IT WASN’T A PIECE OF JEWELRY. In 1964, Johnny Cash was at the absolute peak of his career. “Ring of Fire” had just hit number one. He could have stayed safe. Instead, he drove to an Arizona reservation to meet a woman he had never spoken to. Nancy Hayes was a Sunday school teacher. She was also the mother of Ira Hayes—the Native American Marine who raised the flag at Iwo Jima, only to die in a drainage ditch at just 32 years old. Cash was about to record a risky album about Ira. Before he left the reservation, Nancy pressed a smooth, dark stone into his hand. The Pima call it an Apache tear. A stone born from a mother’s endless grief. Cash polished it. He put it on a gold chain and wore it against his chest the entire time he recorded Bitter Tears. When country radio predictably refused to play the song, Cash didn’t back down. He bought a full-page ad in Billboard and asked the industry one simple question: “Where are your guts?” He fought the system. He fought for a forgotten hero. But there is one thing Nancy told him that day in Arizona that he never put into any song, any letter, or any interview…
JOHNNY CASH CARRIED A SIMPLE BLACK VOLCANIC STONE INTO THE RECORDING STUDIO — BUT HE NEVER WORE IT AS A PIECE OF GLAMOROUS JEWELRY... He kept it pressed tightly against…