Music rolls on at Folsom Prison 50 years after Johnny Cash made history
FOLSOM STATE PRISON, Calif. - Irony isn't something the residents of Folsom State Prison spend much time contemplating. But it's not lost on Roy McNeese Jr. exactly where he spends every Tuesday. That's when he leads music theory classes for fellow inmates looking to turn their lives around.
McNeese's classroom is a compact space adjacent to Folsom's expansive, echo-heavy dining hall. Prisoners wishing to hone their instrumental or vocal chops while serving time, or to learn from McNeese how to write music and better understand songwriting techniques, enter the room each week through a heavily fortified metal door - a door with two words on it:
"Condemned Row."
Nowadays, however, stark gray cells that long ago housed death row inmates - before San Quentin took over housing them in 1937 - are used to store electronic keyboards, drum kits, guitar amplifiers and other gear for the prison's music program, one of several rehabilitation programs Folsom offers.
The equipment is used by about 40 inmates who play in one or more bands at Folsom, which gained worldwide fame thanks to Johnny Cash's career-defining 1956 hit "Folsom Prison Blues." Cash's song featured a chilling confession that's
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