Merle Haggard
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Merle Haggard Biography
As a performer and a songwriter, Merle Haggard was the most
important country artist to emerge in the 1960s. Haggard became one of
the leading figures of the Bakersfield country scene in the '60s. While
his music remained hardcore country, he pushed the boundaries of the
music quite far. Like his idol Bob Wills, his music was a melting pot
that drew from all forms of traditional American music -- country,
jazz, blues, and folk -- and in the process, developed a distinctive
style of his own. As a performer, singer, and musician, he was one of
the best, influencing countless other artists. Not coincidentally, he
was the best singer/songwriter in country music since Hank Williams,
writing a body of songs that became classics. Throughout his career,
Haggard has been a champion of the working man, largely due to his
rough and tumble history.
It's impossible to separate Haggard's music from his life. He was born
to James and Flossie Haggard on April 6, 1937. His parents moved from
Oklahoma to California during the Great Depression, converting an old
boxcar into a home. Before their marriage, James played fiddle in local
honky tonk bars. Flossie was a member of the Church of Christ, which
led to her forcing her husband to stop playing the honky tonks. James
died from a brain tumor when Merle was nine years old. After his
father's death, Merle became rebellious. In an attempt to straighten
her son out, his mother put him in several juvenile detention centers,
but it had little effect on Merle's behavior. As a teenager, he fell in
love with country music, particularly Bob Wills, Lefty Frizzell, and
Hank Williams. When he was 12 years old, Haggard was given his first
guitar by his older brother; Merle taught himself how to play by
listening to records that were lying around the house.
Even though he had begun to pursue music, Haggard continued to rebel,
running away with his friend Bob Teague to Texas when he was 14 years
old. A few months later, the pair returned to California, where they
were arrested as robbery suspects. After the real thieves were caught,
Haggard was sent back to juvenile hall, but he and Teague took off to
Modesto, CA. For a brief time, he did manual labor, was a short-order
cook, drove a truck, and committed a series of small crimes. Soon after
he moved to Modesto, Haggard made his performing debut with Teague at a
bar named the Fun Center; the two were paid five dollars and given all
the beer that they could drink.
By the end of 1951, Haggard had returned home and he was again arrested
for truancy, as well as petty larceny. In the beginning of 1952, he was
sent to Fred C. Nelles School for Boys in Whittier, CA; again, he ran
away. This time, the courts decided he was incorrigible and sent him to
the high-security Preston School of Industry; he was released after 15
months. Shortly after his release, he and a boy he met at PSI beat up a
local boy during an attempted robbery, and Haggard was sent back to
PSI.
After getting out of PSI for the second time, Haggard had the first
major event in his musical career. He went with Teague to see Lefty
Frizzell in concert in Bakersfield. Before the show, he went backstage
with several friends and he sang a couple songs for Frizzell. Lefty was
so impressed he refused to go on-stage until Haggard was allowed to
sing a song. Merle went out and sang a few songs to an enthusiastic
response from the audience.
The reception persuaded Haggard to actively pursue a musical career.
While he was working during the day in oil fields and farms, he
performed at local Bakersfield clubs. His performances led to a spot on
a local television show, Chuck Wagon. In 1956, he married Leona Hobbs;
the couple moved into his family's old converted boxcar. Throughout
1957, Haggard was plagued by financial problems, which made him turn to
robbery. At the end of the year, he attempted to rob a restaurant along
with two other burglars; the three were drunk at the time. Believing it
was three o'clock in the morning, the trio tried to open up the back
door of the restaurant. However, it was 10:30 and the establishment was
still open. Although the trio fled the scene, Haggard was arrested that
day. The following day, he escaped from prison in order to make peace
with his wife and family; later that day, he was recaptured. Haggard
was sentenced to a 15-year term and sent to San Quentin prison.
Prison didn't immediately lead Merle into rehabilitation. He was fired
from a series of prison jobs and planned an escape from the jail, but
was talked out of it by fellow inmates. Nearly two years into his
sentence, Haggard discovered that his wife was pregnant with another
man's child. The news sent Haggard over the edge. Soon, he and his
cellmate began a gambling racket and brewing beer in their cell. Before
long, Haggard was caught drunk and was placed in isolation for a week.
During his time in isolation, he had several conversations with Caryl
Chessman, an author and a member of death row. The conversations and
the time in isolation convinced Haggard to turn his life around. After
he left isolation, he began working in the prison's textile plant and
took some high school equivalency courses; he was also allowed to play
in the prison's country band. At his second parole hearing in 1960,
Haggard was given a five-year sentence -- two years and nine months in
jail, two years and three months on parole; he left prison 90 days
later.
Merle moved back in with Leona and returned to manual labor. In the
meantime, he sang at local clubs at night. After taking second place at
a local talent contest, Haggard was asked to become a relief singer for
a band led by Johnny Barnett at one of the most popular Bakersfield
clubs, Lucky Spot. Soon, Merle was making enough money playing music he
could quit his ditch-digging job. While he singing with Barnett, he
gained the attention of Fuzzy Owen, who owned the small record label
Tally Records. Owen and his cousin Lewis Talley were instrumental in
establishing Haggard's musical career. Owen made the first recording of
Haggard, cutting a demo version of one of the singer's first songs,
Skid Row. Shortly after the recording, Haggard called Talley, who had
praised him earlier in his career. Talley was able to land Haggard a
job at Paul's Cocktail Lounge, which led to a slot on a local music
television show.
During this time, Bakersfield country was beginning to become a
national scene, largely due to the hit singles of Buck Owens. At a time
when mainstream country was dominated by the lush, smooth
countrypolitan sound of Nashville, Bakersfield country grew out of
hardcore honky tonk, adding elements of Western swing. Bakersfield
country also relied on electric instruments and amplification more than
other subgenres of country, giving the music hard, driving, edgy
flavor. During the late '50s, Tommy Collins and Wynn Stewart were two
of the Bakersfield artists to have hits, and both were influential on
Merle Haggard's career, musically as well as professionally. Haggard
had admired Stewart's vocal style, and it helped shape his phrasing.
Early in 1962, Haggard traveled to Las Vegas to see Wynn Stewart's club
show. Stewart was not at the club, having left to find a replacement
bass player. During the show, one of Stewart's guitarists remembered
Haggard and invited him to sing a couple of songs on-stage. Stewart
walked in while Haggard was singing and was impressed, asking him to
join his band as a bassist. For six months in 1962 and 1963, Merle
performed with Stewart's band. During this time, Haggard heard Wynn's
song Sing a Sad Song and asked the star if he could record it.
Stewart gave him the song and Merle recorded it for Tally Records in
1963. Although Tally had minimal distribution, the record became a
national hit, climbing to number 19 on the country charts early in 1964.
Sam Hill, Haggard's second single, wasn't as successful, but a duet
with Bonnie Owens, the former wife of Buck Owens, called Just Between
the Two of Us, broke into the Top 40. The next year, his version of
Liz Anderson's (My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers broke him into the
Top Ten and established him as a budding star. Capitol Records bought
out his contract with Tally and Merle released I'm Gonna Break Every
Heart I Can, his first single for Capitol, in the fall of 1965. The
single wasn't a success, scratching into the Top 50, but his next
single, Swinging Doors, was a smash hit, rocketing to number five in
the spring of 1966. Late in 1965, Haggard began recruiting a backing
band and named them the Strangers.
Haggard became a genuine country superstar in 1966, with three Top Ten
hits, including Swinging Doors. The Bottle Let Me Down climbed to
number three and The Fugitive (later retitled I'm a Lonesome
Fugitive ) became his first number one. He was voted the Top Male
Vocalist by the Academy of Country Music Awards, while he and Bonnie
were named the Top Vocal Group for the second year in a row.
Haggard's songwriting was beginning to blossom and audiences embraced
his music, sending his I Threw Away the Rose to number three early in
1967, beginning a remarkable streak of 37 straight Top Ten hits,
including 23 number one singles. I Threw Away the Rose was followed
by four straight number one hits -- Branded Man, Sing Me Back Home,
The Legend of Bonnie and Clyde, and Mama Tried, which was heard in
Killers Three, a movie that featured Haggard's debut as an actor. With
the exception of Bonnie and Clyde, the songs represented a change in
Haggard's songwriting, as he began to directly address his troubled
history. By 1970, he was talking about his time in San Quentin in the
press, yet these songs represented the first time he had mentioned his
past directly. Each single was a bigger hit than the previous song,
which encouraged Haggard to continue writing in a more personal style.
Throughout 1968, Haggard's star continued to rise, with two number one
hits ( Bonnie and Clyde, Mama Tried ) and the number three I Take a
Lot of Pride in What I Am, as well as four albums. Later that year, he
recorded his first conceptual album, Same Train, a Different Time.
Released in early 1969, the record was not only an affectionate salute
to one of Haggard's heroes, it reflected a fascination with American
history and a desire to expand his music by adding stronger elements of
Western swing, jazz, and blues.
Merle released three singles in 1969 -- Hungry Eyes, Workin' Man
Blues, and Okie from Muskogee -- and all three reached number one.
In particular, Okie from Muskogee sparked a tremendous amount of
attention. An attack on the liberal hippies who represented American
pop culture in the late '60s, the song struck a chord in audiences
across the country, just missing the pop Top 40. Because of the song,
Haggard was asked to endorse George Wallace, but he refused. Okie from
Muskogee cemented the singer's stardom, and he won a large amount of
awards in 1969 and 1970. In both years, he was named the Top Male
Vocalist by the ACM and the Strangers were voted the best band, while
the new Country Music Association voted him Entertainer of the Year and
Top Male Vocalist in 1970.
Haggard released a sequel to Okie called The Fightin' Side of Me at
the beginning of 1970, and it also shot to number one. That year, he
released A Tribute to the Best Damn Fiddle Player in the World (Or My
Salute to Bob Wills), which helped spark a revival of Western swing in
the '70s. Throughout 1971 and 1972, the hits kept coming, including
Soldier's Last Letter, Someday We'll Look Back, Daddy Frank (The
Guitar Man), Carolyn, Grandma Harp, It's Not Love (But It's Not
Bad), and I Wonder If They Ever Think of Me. In 1972, the governor
of California, Ronald Reagan, granted Haggard a full pardon. The
following year, his hit streak continued, and he scored his biggest
hit, If We Make It Through December, which peaked at number 28 on the
pop charts. As his reign on the top of the country charts continued in
1974, he played on Bob Wills' last album, For the Last Time. Wills died
in 1975, leaving Merle his fiddle.
Haggard stayed with Capitol Records until 1977, and never once did his
grip on the American audience slip during his tenure there. During his
time on MCA afterward, he continued to have a number of hits, but his
work was becoming slightly inconsistent. His first two singles for the
record label, If We're Not Back in Love by Monday and Ramblin'
Fever, hit number two and he continued to have hits with the label
throughout the end of the decade and the first part of the '80s. I'm
Always on a Mountain When I Fall and It's Been a Great Afternoon
were number two hits in 1978. In 1979, he only had two hits, while in
1980, two selections from the Clint Eastwood movie Bronco Billy reached
the Top Three, The Way I Am and Misery and Gin ; Haggard also
appeared in the film. The two hits paved the way for his two biggest
singles with MCA, the number one duet with Eastwood Bar Room Buddies
and the number one I Think I'll Just Stay Here and Drink. Early in
1981, Haggard had a Top Ten hit with Leonard, a tribute to his old
friend Tommy Collins.
Later that year, Haggard published his autobiography, Sing Me Back
Home; he also left MCA and signed with Epic Records. Once he began
recording for Epic, he began producing his own records, which gave the
music a leaner sound. His first two singles for the label, My Favorite
Memory and Big City, were number one hits. The following year, he
released a duet album with George Jones, called A Taste of Yesterday's
Wine, which featured the number one single Yesterday's Wine and the
Top Ten C.C. Waterback. From 1983 until the beginning of 1985,
Haggard continued to score number one hits, including the number one
duet with Willie Nelson Pancho and Lefty.
Merle's chart fortunes began to change in 1985, as a new breed of
singers began to dominate the chart. Nearly every one of the artists,
from George Strait to Randy Travis, was greatly influenced by Haggard,
but their idol's new singles now had a tough time reaching the top of
the charts. He had two Top Ten hits in 1986, and 1987's Chill Factor
was a success, spawning the Top Ten title track and Twinkle, Twinkle
Lucky Star, which would prove to be his last number one hit. In 1990,
he signed with Curb Records, but he continued to have trouble reaching
the charts; 1994 spawned his last modest hit, In My Next Life, which
reached the Top 60.
When his contract with Curb ran out, Haggard, hoping for better
promotion and greater artistic freedom, signed with Anti, a subsidiary
of the Epitaph punk-pop label. His first effort for Anti was released
in late 2000; titled If I Could Only Fly, the gentle acoustic album was
greeted with strong reviews. Haggard released one more album for Anti,
2001's Roots, Vol. 1, before departing. After 2003's Like Never Before,
Haggard returned to his old home, EMI, the following year, releasing a
collection of American pop standards called Unforgettable at the end of
that year. Chicago Wind appeared in the summer of 2005.
Even when success eluded him, Haggard's music remained some of the most
consistently interesting and inventive in country music. Not only have
his recordings remained fresh, but each subsequent generation of
country singers shows a great debt to his work. That fact stands as a
testament to his great talent even more than his induction to the
Country Music Hall of Fame. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Written by Stephen Thomas Erlewine