Rosanne Cash’s First Songwriting Credit Was a 1976 Song Recorded by Her Father Johnny Cash

In 1974, Rosanne Cash made her record­ing debut on her father John­ny Cash’s album, Junkie and the Juice­head Minus Me, singing lead on Kris Kristofferson‘s “Bro­ken Free­dom Song.” Just four years lat­er, Rosanne released her epony­mous debut, which fea­tures a cov­er of her father’s I Walk the Line track “Under­stand Your Man.” Rosanne would occa­sion­al­ly cov­er more of his songs—”Big Riv­er,” “Ten­nessee Flat Top Box”—throughout the next 20 years.

“Love Has Lost Again”

Cash’s “Love Has Lost Again” is a love sto­ry lan­guish­ing around the end of a romance

I guess we’re over, and it’s all been said before
But I still want you, though there’s no rea­son any­more
I can’t remem­ber when you and I began
It makes no dif­fer­ence cause love has lost again

If there’s a rea­son we for­got it long ago
And if there’s an answer, it’s one I’ll nev­er know
The price of giv­ing, I just don’t under­stand, but it’s col­lect­ed, and love has lost again

All that’s left now is the clos­ing of the door
It sounds so final, but I don’t lis­ten any­more
It’s not the last time that I’ll break instead of bend
But for the moment, love has lost again
It’s not the last time

“There’s less navel-gaz­ing, I’m proud to say,” Cash told Amer­i­can Song­writer in 2023, jok­ing about her ear­li­er song­writ­ing. “There are some spe­cif­ic tech­ni­cal things I do dif­fer­ent­ly. I’m not as attached to nature metaphors as I used to be. I’m not obsessed with the intri­ca­cies of romance as much as I was.”

She con­tin­ued, “I like writ­ing in the voic­es of char­ac­ters. I’m more will­ing to take chances, lyri­cal­ly. Learn­ing to co-write with [hus­band John Lev­en­thal] made me less ter­ri­to­r­i­al. I think I’m a bet­ter song­writer, over­all.”

Through­out the decades, Rosanne and her father also record­ed sev­er­al more duets togeth­er, includ­ing “When He Comes” from Cash’s 1979 gospel album A Believ­er Sings the Truth and their 1982 cov­er of Tom T. Hall’s 1969 song “That’s How I Got to Mem­phis,” the sto­ry of a man in search of a for­mer lover

In 2003, Rosanne released her final duet with her father, “Sep­tem­ber When It Comes,” from her album Rules of Trav­el. John­ny Cash died lat­er that year on Sep­tem­ber 12 at the age of 71

Released on Rosanne’s album Rules of Trav­el, the bal­lad, told from her per­spec­tive of her child­hood, and the pro­found bond with her father, peaked at No. 16 and was nom­i­nat­ed for a Gram­my Award for Best Con­tem­po­rary Folk Album.