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Ring of Fire (song)

"Ring of Fire"
Ring of Fire (Johnny Cash song) 1963 release.jpg
Single by Johnny Cash
from the album Ring of Fire: The Best of Johnny Cash
B-side "I'd Still Be There"
Released April 19, 1963
Format Vinyl
Recorded March 25, 1963
Genre
Length 2:38
Label Columbia
Writer(s)
Producer(s) Don Law
Johnny Cash singles chronology
"Busted"
(1962)
"Ring of Fire"
(1963, 1968)
"The Matador"
(1963)
"Ring of Fire"
Single by Eric Burdon & the Animals
from the album Love Is
B-side "I'm an Animal"
Released 1969
Format 7" single
Genre
Length 4:58 (album version)
Label MGM
Producer(s) Tom Wilson
Eric Burdon & the Animals singles chronology
"White Houses"
(1968)
"Ring of Fire"
(1969)
"River Deep Mountain High"
(1969)
"Ring of Fire"
Single by Social Distortion
from the album Social Distortion
B-side "Story of My Life"
Released 1989
Format 10" single
Genre Punk rock
Length 3:51
Label Epic
Producer(s) Dave Jerden
Social Distortion singles chronology
"Ball and Chain"
(1989)
"Ring of Fire"
(1989)
"Ring of Fire"
Single by DragonForce
from the album Maximum Overload
Released 18 August 2014 (2014-08-18)
Recorded 2013–14
Genre
Length 3:15
Label
Producer(s) Jens Bogren

"Ring of Fire", or "The Ring of Fire", is a song written by June Carter Cash and Merle Kilgore and recorded by Johnny Cash. The single appears on Cash's 1963 album, Ring of Fire: The Best of Johnny Cash. The song was originally recorded by June's sister, Anita Carter, on her Mercury Records album Folk Songs Old and New (1963) as "(Love's) Ring of Fire". "Ring of Fire" was ranked No. 4 on CMT's 100 Greatest Songs of Country Music in 2003 and #87 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

The song was recorded on March 25, 1963, and became one of the biggest hits of Cash's career, staying at number one on the country chart for seven weeks. It was certified Gold on January 21, 2010, by the RIAA and has also sold over 1.2 million digital downloads.

Although "Ring of Fire" sounds ominous, the term refers to falling in love – which is what June Carter was experiencing with Johnny Cash at the time. Some sources claim that Carter had seen the phrase "Love is like a burning ring of fire," underlined in one of her uncle A. P. Carter's Elizabethan books of poetry. She worked with Kilgore on writing a song inspired by this phrase as she had seen her uncle do in the past. She had written: "There is no way to be in that kind of hell, no way to extinguish a flame that burns, burns, burns".

Cash's first wife, Vivian Liberto, offers a different conception of "Ring of Fire" in her book I Walked the Line. She contends that June Carter Cash was not a co-writer of the song: "To this day, it confounds me to hear the elaborate details June told of writing that song for Johnny. She didn't write that song any more than I did. The truth is, Johnny wrote that song, while pilled up and drunk, about a certain private female body part. All those years of her claiming she wrote it herself, and she probably never knew what the song was really about." Liberto claims that Cash decided to give Carter co-writer status because "She needs the money".


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