After Perkins's death, Johnny Cash invited close friend
Carl Perkins (no relation to Luther) to fill in as lead guitarist for the band. Perkins would, on and off, remain a part of Cash's touring group for the next decade. In September 1968, Cash hired
Bob Wootton, an Arkansas guitar player who had been a lifelong fan of Cash's, as permanent lead guitarist for the group. Apart from a brief respite, Wootton stayed with the band for 29 years until Cash finally retired from touring and performing live in 1997. In October 1968, almost two months after Luther's death, Cash's hit live album
Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison, on which Perkins had played, won Album of the Year at the second-ever
Country Music Association Awards (CMAs). In his acceptance speech, Cash signaled out Luther as he thanked those who supported him, ending his remarks by thanking "Luther Perkins, especially." On Cash's follow-up live album
Johnny Cash at San Quentin, recorded and released the following year, one of the inmates in the audience is heard asking Johnny where Luther is. After Cash announces Perkins's death, months earlier, to the crowd, Cash asks everyone to give "one big cheer for Luther Perkins," with which the audience complies, bursting into loud cheers and applause. Luther Perkins was inducted into the
Rockabilly Hall of Fame, as inductee #0230. ==Controversy==