Get Rhythm
"Get Rhythm" is a rockabilly song written and first recorded by American country musician Johnny Cash with the Tennessee Two.[1] Originally issued on May 1, 1956, by Sun Records as the B-side to Cash's debut number-one country single "I Walk the Line," the track encourages listeners to embrace a rock and roll rhythm as a remedy for the blues, drawing from an anecdote about a cheerful shoeshine boy.[2][3] Though overshadowed initially by its A-side counterpart, "Get Rhythm" later gained prominence through Cash's 1969 re-release with added crowd effects, which charted at number 60 on the Billboard Hot 100, and has since become a staple of his early catalog, covered by numerous artists including Ry Cooder and David Bowie.[4][5]Background and composition
Inspiration and writing
Johnny Cash drew inspiration for "Get Rhythm" from an observation of a shoeshine boy working in Memphis, Tennessee, around 1956, during the period he was recording at Sun Studios. The boy, performing his task on a sunny day amid the vibrant street life of the 1950s urban South, stayed upbeat by dancing and snapping his rag in rhythm to music, embodying resilience in a low-status occupation common to the era's segregated society. This encounter provided the song's core idea, with the boy advising to "get rhythm when you get the blues" as a practical antidote to low spirits.[6] Cash penned the song as an uptempo number to diverge from his predominant style of melancholic ballads, aiming to highlight individual initiative in countering emotional downturns through rhythmic engagement rather than passive endurance or external aid. He composed it specifically for Elvis Presley, a fellow Sun Records artist, but ultimately recorded it himself after Presley prioritized film commitments. The lyrics encapsulate a straightforward causal mechanism—rhythm inducing physiological and psychological uplift—rooted in Cash's firsthand witnessing of its effect on the shoeshine boy, aligning with his broader interest in music's restorative potential amid personal bouts of despondency during his early career.[7][8]Lyrics and themes
The song employs a straightforward verse-chorus structure, with three verses recounting the narrator's observation of a shoeshine boy in a Southern town who maintains an upbeat demeanor despite his ragged appearance and laborious work. The boy sings and dances rhythmically while shining shoes, embodying the song's prescriptive message delivered via the repetitive chorus: "Hey, get rhythm when you get the blues / Come on, get rhythm when you get the blues / Get a rock 'n' roll feelin' in your bones / Put taps on your toes and get gone."[4] This narrative arc contrasts external hardship—evident in lines like "he's got the dirtiest job in town / Bendin' low at the hotel door"—with internal vitality derived from musical engagement.[4] Central to the lyrics is a theme of self-reliant resilience, where rhythm serves as an active antidote to emotional lows, inducing a tangible physical response rather than relying on external circumstances for relief. The chorus explicitly links rhythmic action to a somatic effect—"a rock 'n' roll feelin' in your bones"—suggesting that initiating movement to music causally generates energy and counters inertia, as reinforced by imagery of tapping toes and avoiding aimless "floatin' around."[4] This promotes individual agency, portraying the shoeshine boy's habitual practice as a model for overcoming blues through deliberate, embodied initiative, without dependence on altered conditions.[4] The repetition across choruses underscores rhythm's reliability as a personal tool for mood regulation, emphasizing proactive choice over victimhood.[4]Recording and musical style
Production details
"Get Rhythm" was recorded in May 1956 at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, during one of Johnny Cash's early sessions with the Tennessee Two for Sun Records.[9] The personnel included Johnny Cash on lead vocals and acoustic rhythm guitar, Luther Perkins on lead electric guitar, and Marshall Grant on upright bass.[9][10] Producer Sam Phillips directed the session, emphasizing a sparse arrangement to replicate the raw energy of live performances.[11] The production utilized a minimalist approach typical of Sun Records, capturing the track live to tape without overdubs or additional layering.[11] A hallmark was the application of slap-back echo, generated by dubbing the signal from one Ampex 350 tape machine to a second synchronized machine with a slight delay of approximately 50-100 milliseconds, primarily enhancing the acoustic guitar's percussive slap.[11] This technique contributed to the song's distinctive, echoing rhythm without artificial reverb.[11] Cash's vocal delivery featured an energetic baritone style, diverging from his prior gospel influences toward more upbeat secular material.[12]Instrumentation and sound
The original 1956 recording of "Get Rhythm" employs a minimalist rockabilly instrumentation consisting of Johnny Cash's lead vocals and acoustic rhythm guitar, Luther Perkins' electric lead guitar, and Marshall Grant's upright bass, with the Tennessee Two providing the backing without drums.[13][1] Perkins' Fender Esquire guitar, amplified through a clean tube setup, delivers the core rhythmic drive via his signature alternate picking technique—alternating bass notes with muted treble strings to evoke a percussive, tremolo-like shimmer known as the "boom-chicka-boom" pattern.[14] This method, rooted in Perkins' limited technical proficiency but executed with precision, generates a relentless forward momentum that simulates a fuller drum kit absent in the session.[15] Grant's bass lines reinforce this propulsion by locking into a shuffled backbeat, striking root notes on beats 1 and 3 while filling with walking patterns that underscore the song's 12-bar blues-derived structure blended with country swing elements.[16] The interplay between Perkins' guitar riffing and Grant's bass creates a taut, dance-oriented pulse at approximately 111 beats per minute, prioritizing raw energy and simplicity over harmonic complexity in line with Sun Records' raw production ethos.[17] This rhythmic foundation synthesizes white Southern country picking traditions with Black blues shuffle rhythms, evident in the song's emphasis on off-beat accents and steady quarter-note propulsion.[18] The track's concise 2:14 duration further amplifies its kinetic focus, allowing the instrumentation to loop tightly without extraneous fills.[19]Release and commercial performance
Original 1956 single
"Get Rhythm" was issued as the B-side to "I Walk the Line" on Sun Records single number 241, credited to Johnny Cash with the Tennessee Two, on May 1, 1956.[20][2] The A-side, "I Walk the Line," quickly ascended to number one on the Billboard country singles chart, where it remained for six weeks, marking Cash's first chart-topping hit and propelling the single's overall commercial breakthrough.[21][22] While "Get Rhythm" did not achieve separate chart recognition amid the A-side's dominance, it benefited from coupled sales and radio exposure, particularly on Southern stations and live broadcasts such as the Big "D" Jamboree in Dallas, Texas.[23] This regional airplay underscored Cash's integration into the rockabilly genre, paralleling contemporaries like Elvis Presley on the Sun label, and contributed to the single's role in establishing his early national profile.[24]1969 reissue and later availability
In July 1969, Sun Records, under Phillips International, reissued "Get Rhythm" as a single (Sun 1103), featuring a live crowd sound effect added to the original track, which reached number 60 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 23 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.[4][5] This reissue capitalized on Cash's rising fame during his Columbia Records era, marking a post-Sun revival of his early material. The track also appeared on the compilation LP Get Rhythm (Sun 105), released in October 1969, which collected Sun-era recordings including "Mean Eyed Cat" and "I Walk the Line."[25] Subsequent availability expanded through the "Original Sun Sound" compilation series, with "Get Rhythm" featured on albums like Original Sun Sound of Johnny Cash (1964, remastered editions ongoing).[26] In the digital era, the song has been remastered and made widely accessible on streaming platforms, including a 2022 Universal Music Group edition in the album Get Rhythm: Sam Phillips and Sun Records' Beginnings, ensuring continued distribution and revenue from licensing and royalties reflective of its lasting commercial appeal.[27]Critical reception and analysis
Contemporary reviews
Cash Box magazine, in its review published on May 19, 1956, commended the Sun 241 single as a "strong twosome," with "Get Rhythm" characterized as a "quick-paced rhythmic cure for the blues" featuring a "contagious beat" and strong commercial potential for both pop and country markets.[28] The publication assigned the disk an overall B+ rating, highlighting the B-side's fast-moving, happy energy as a counterpoint to the slower, moody "I Walk the Line," thereby showcasing Cash's vocal versatility backed by the Tennessee Two's instrumental work.[28] Billboard, in the same week's edition, described the coupling as a "top-notch pairing" from the artist of "Folsom Prison Blues," emphasizing the infectious rhythm of "Get Rhythm" as supportive of its blues-relief theme and effective in broadening Cash's appeal beyond somber narratives. Reviewers noted the track's upbeat drive and accessibility, positioning it as a lively demonstration of Cash's range in early rockabilly-inflected country. As the B-side to the chart-topping "I Walk the Line," which reached number one on the Billboard Country chart and number 17 on the Pop chart, "Get Rhythm" garnered praise within the single's context but limited independent acclaim in 1956, failing to chart on its own amid focus on the A-side's success. Trade press responses underscored its energetic rhythm as a foil to Cash's typically introspective hits, affirming his early adaptability without overshadowing the primary release.[28]Retrospective assessments and controversies
Retrospective assessments have praised "Get Rhythm" for embodying self-empowerment through music, portraying rhythm as a practical antidote to melancholy in line with the era's post-World War II economic optimism and cultural emphasis on personal resilience. Music historians note its role in Cash's early catalog as a high-energy track that encouraged listeners to actively combat "the blues" via physical and auditory engagement, reflecting 1950s American values of bootstrapping amid prosperity.[29] The song features prominently in Cash compilations like the 1988 Classic Cash: Hall of Fame Series, underscoring its enduring appeal in retrospectives of his Sun Records output.[30] Criticisms remain sparse, with some analysts observing its rockabilly style as echoing contemporaries like Elvis Presley, potentially derivative in rhythm and structure during the genre's formative phase at Sun Studios. However, Cash's distinctive baritone delivery and narrative focus on everyday uplift distinguished it, contributing to its inclusion in discussions of his foundational influence rather than dismissal as imitative.[31] A minor controversy emerged in modern commentary alleging racial insensitivity in the depiction of the "shoeshine boy," interpreted by some as reinforcing stereotypes of Black labor in menial roles on "a dirty street."[32] [33] This portrayal, however, stems from Cash's direct observation in 1950s Memphis of a Black shoeshine boy who sang to maintain cheer amid hardship, transforming potential drudgery into proactive agency via rhythm—a message aligned with Cash's own battles against depression and the song's inspirational intent rather than derision.[34] Absent empirical evidence of mocking undertones or era-specific backlash, such critiques apply anachronistic lenses disconnected from the song's causal roots in observed resilience and Cash's autobiographical context of economic struggle during the Great Depression.[31] The track's consistent rotation in Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tributes, including references during Cash's 1992 induction, affirms its reception as a positive staple without substantive historical controversy.[35]Cover versions and adaptations
Early and notable covers
One of the earliest documented covers of "Get Rhythm" was an instrumental version by Little Jimmy Dempsey, released in September 1970, which preserved the song's percussive drive through stripped-down arrangement. This was followed by Stoneground's recording in 1971, an American rock band that infused the track with psychedelic rock elements while retaining its rhythmic bounce.[36] The SecondHandSongs database, which comprehensively tracks adaptations and logs 77 versions overall, indicates that covers proliferated during the 1970s rockabilly revival, demonstrating the song's influence on genre enthusiasts seeking to recapture Sun Records-era energy.[36] In 1977, country performer Bob Luman delivered a straightforward honky-tonk rendition, aligning with his career in blending country and rockabilly styles, while rockabilly revivalist Ray Campi & His Rockabilly Rebels offered a high-energy take emphasizing slap bass and twangy guitar to evoke 1950s authenticity.[36] [37] NRBQ's 1978 version showcased the band's eclectic approach, fusing the original's boogie rhythm with quirky, proto-new wave flourishes that highlighted the song's adaptability beyond strict country confines.[36] Later 1980s interpretations included Jacky Ward's 1982 country cover, which maintained a mid-tempo swing suited to Nashville productions of the era.[36] British pub rock outfit Dr. Feelgood recorded it in 1986 for their album Brilleaux, accelerating the tempo into a raw, R&B-infused stomp that underscored the track's working-class appeal and rhythmic compulsion.[36] Similarly, Scott Goddard's 1986 rendition leaned into rockabilly vigor.[36] Ry Cooder's 1987 cover, selected as an editor's pick for its interpretive depth, incorporated slide guitar and world music textures, slowing the pace slightly to emphasize causal grooves derived from the original's train-like percussion while bridging country roots with blues experimentation.[36] These pre-1990 versions collectively illustrate the song's spread among revivalists, who often preserved its signature "boom-chicka-boom" rhythm but varied arrangements to suit punk-adjacent energy or fusion styles, evidencing empirical uptake in niche scenes without mainstream chart dominance.[36]| Artist | Year | Style Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Little Jimmy Dempsey | 1970 | Instrumental, percussive focus |
| Stoneground | 1971 | Psychedelic rock infusion |
| Bob Luman | 1977 | Honky-tonk country-rockabilly |
| Ray Campi & His Rockabilly Rebels | 1977 | High-energy revivalist slap bass |
| NRBQ | 1978 | Eclectic proto-new wave |
| Jacky Ward | 1982 | Mid-tempo Nashville country |
| Dr. Feelgood | 1986 | Raw pub rock acceleration |
| Ry Cooder | 1987 | Blues-slide fusion with groove emphasis |