One Piece at a Time

"One Piece at a Time"
Single by Johnny Cash
from the album One Piece at a Time
B-side "Go On Blues"
Released March 1976
Format 7" single
Genre Country, country rock, country novelty
Length 4:00
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Wayne Kemp
Producer(s)

Charlie Bragg / Don Davis

Audio sample
file info · help
Johnny Cash singles chronology
"Strawberry Cake"
(1976)
"One Piece at a Time"
(1976)
"Sold Out of Flagpoles"
(1976)

"One Piece at a Time" is a country novelty song written by Wayne Kemp[1] and recorded by Johnny Cash in 1976. It would be the last song performed by Cash to reach number one on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.

Chart performance

Chart (1976) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles 1
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 29
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks 6
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 1
Canadian RPM Top Singles 40
Canadian RPM Adult Contemporary Tracks 1
U.K. Singles Chart 32

The song's story

Johnny Cash's "One Piece at a Time" Cadillac. Cash is in the driver's seat and Bruce Fitzpatrick is standing at the far right.

The singer leaves his home in Kentucky in 1949 to pursue work at General Motors in Detroit, Michigan. He assembles wheels on Cadillacs, watching each one roll by day after day on the assembly line, knowing that he will never be able to afford one of his own.

Beginning almost immediately, he and a co-worker decide to "steal" a Cadillac by way of using their assembly line jobs to obtain the parts via salami slicing. He takes the small parts home hidden in his large lunchbox; larger parts are smuggled out in his co-worker's motor home.

The process of accumulating all the necessary parts turns out to take over 24 years (at the end of the song, when he is asked about the year of the car, the singer's answer starts with 1949 and ends at 1973 as the song fades out), but once they have what they think is a complete car, they attempt to assemble the pieces. The result is an odd-looking Cadillac created from parts of many different models (the song mentions that the transmission was from 1953 and the engine was from 1973) and what pieces do not fit together very well (for example, it had only one tail fin and three headlights two on the left and one on the right, though all three headlights worked when activated).

The singer's wife is surprised at the outcome but wants a ride in it, anyway. Townspeople began laughing at the singer's unique car as he takes it to have it registered. However, the folks at the courthouse were not as pleasedit took the "whole staff" to type up the vehicle title, which ended up weighing 60 pounds.

The song ends with a CB radio conversation between the singer and a truck driver inquiring about the "psychobilly Cadillac", in which the singer replies, "you could say I went to the factory and picked it up; it's cheaper that way".

The song is in a moderate tempo in the key of F major, with a main chord pattern of F-B-C7-F. The verses are spoken-word.[2]

In popular culture

References

  1. "Hall of Fame - Wayne Kemp". Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  2. "'One Piece at a Time' sheet music". MusicNotes.com. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  3. "The House Of Cash". stevenmenke.com. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  4. Neel, Lara (3 March 2014). "A '49–'70 Cadillac Built for Johnny Cash". Motorbooks. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  5. "Man stole motorbike - part by part". Ananova. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2013.

External links

Preceded by
"After All the Good Is Gone"
by Conway Twitty
Billboard Hot Country Singles
number-one single

May 29-June 6, 1976
Succeeded by
"I'll Get Over You"
by Crystal Gayle
RPM Country Tracks
number-one single

June 19, 1976
Succeeded by
"El Paso City"
by Marty Robbins