Merle Haggard biography
b. 6 April 1937, Bakersfield,
California, USA. "Like a
razor's edge, Merle Haggard sings" is how John Stewart described his voice
in "Eighteen Wheels", and that razor has been honed by his rough and
rowdy ways. In the 30s Haggard's parents migrated from the Dustbowl to
"the land of milk and honey", California.
Life, however, was almost as bleak there and Haggard himself was born in a
converted boxcar. His father, who worked on the Santa Fe railway, died of a stroke when
Haggard was nine. Many of Haggard's songs are about those early years:
"Mama's Hungry Eyes", "California Cottonfields",
"They're Tearin' The Labour Camps Down" and "The Way It Was In
'51". Haggard became a tearaway who, despite the efforts of his Christian
mother ("Mama Tried"), spent many years in reform schools. When only
17, he married a waitress and they had four children during their 10 years
together. His wife showed disdain for his singing and Haggard says, "Any
listing of famous battlefields should include my marriage to Leona Hobbs".
Haggard provided for the children through manual labour and armed robbery. He
was sent to San Quentin in 1957, charged with burglary; a Johnny Cash concert
in January 1958 led to him joining the prison band. Songs from his prison
experiences include "Sing Me Back Home" and "Branded Man".
Back in Bakersfield
in 1960, Haggard started performing and found work accompanying Wynn Stewart. Only
200 copies were pressed of his first single, "Singing My Heart Out",
but he made the national charts with his second, Stewart's composition
"Sing A Sad Song", for the small Tally label. Capitol Records took
over his contract and reissued "(All My Friends Are Going To Be)
Strangers" in 1965. The record's success prompted him to call his band the
Strangers, its mainstays being Roy Nichols (b. 21 October 1932, Chandler, Arizona, USA, d. 3 July 2001, Bakersfield, California,
USA) on lead
guitar and Norm Hamlet on steel. When "I'm A Lonesome Fugitive"
became a country number 1 in 1966, it was clear that a country star with a prison
record was a very commercial proposition. Haggard recorded an album of love
songs with his second wife, Bonnie Owens, but, despite its success, they never
repeated it. In 1969 a chance remark on the tour bus led to him writing
"Okie From Muskogee", a conservative reply to draft-card burning and
flower power. President Nixon declared Haggard his favourite country singer,
while Ronald Reagan, then Governor of California, gave him a full pardon. Johnny
Cash refused to perform the song at the White House and Phil Ochs, a spearhead
of youth culture, sang it to annoy his own fans. Some suggest that the irony in
Haggard's song has been overlooked, but he has since confirmed his dislike of
hippies - though several rock bands, notably the Beach Boys, performed the song
as a piece of counter-culture irony. Haggard sang more specifically about
anti-Vietnam demonstrators in "The Fightin' Side Of Me", but his song
about an interracial love affair, "Irma Jackson", was not released at
first because Capitol thought it would harm his image.
Around this time, Haggard wrote and recorded several glorious singles
that rank with the best of country music and illustrate his personal credo:
"I Take A Lot Of Pride In What I Am", "Silver Wings",
"Today I Started Loving You Again" and "If We Make It Through
December". He also sang songs by other writers, notably Tommy Collins, and
recorded tributes to Jimmie Rodgers (a double album, Same Train, A Different
Time), Bob Wills (an album showing that Haggard is a fine fiddle player) and
Lefty Frizzell (the song "Goodbye Lefty"). Another of Haggard's
consuming passions was model trains and he recorded an album titled My Love
Affair With Trains. Like most successful country artists, he has also recorded
Christmas and religious albums, The Land Of Many Churches being partly recorded
at San Quentin jail (Haggard has not officially recorded a full prison album
because he does not want to copy Johnny Cash).
Between 1973 and 1976, Haggard achieved nine consecutive number 1
records on the US
country charts, with his tally of number 1 records surpassed only by Conway
Twitty. In 1977, shortly after moving to MCA, he recorded a touching tribute
album to Elvis Presley with the Jordanaires. In 1978 he divorced Bonnie Owens
and married a backing singer, Leona Williams. She wrote several songs for him
and also recorded a duet album, but in 1984, they too were divorced (Haggard
divorced his fourth wife in 1991). Haggard had often written about alcohol
("Swinging Doors", "The Bottle Let Me Down"), but his MCA
albums reveal an increasing concern about his own drinking habits. Less
introspective following a move to Epic in 1981, he had a major country hit with
a revival of "Poncho And Lefty" with Willie Nelson. He continued to
write prolifically ("I Wish Things Were Simple Again", "Let's
Chase Each Other Around The Room"), but also began reviving songs of
yesteryear, including "There! I've Said It Again" and "Sea Of Heartbreak".
Coming full circle, Amber Waves Of Grain showed his concern for the plight of
the American farmer.
By 1990, when he moved to the Curb Records label, Haggard had notched up
the incredible tally of 95 country hits on the Billboard chart, including a
remarkable 38 chart toppers, but only three years later was declared bankrupt. This
setback seemed to do nothing to dampen his enthusiasm for touring, but although
many of the new "hat acts' of the 90s owed much to Haggard, notably Randy
Travis and Clint Black, Haggard himself became old hat for a couple of years. The
reassessment of his work started with two tribute albums by contemporary
performers, Mama's Hungry Eyes and Tulare Dust, and some fine recent work by
the man himself on his own Hag label. He also began recording for Anti, a
subsidiary of the alternative label Epitaph Records, with 2000"s If I
Could Only Fly earning particular acclaim.
Haggard was inducted into the Country Music Hall Of Fame in 1996,
confirming his pioneering influence in the annals of country music. He remains
a consistently interesting and vital recording artist who refuses to rest on
his laurels, a stance which has endeared him to successive generations of
country singers.