Merle onstage during his shades-and-hat era, looking, well, haggard. In a new biography, Marc Eliot documents the life and career of the man who, he says, saved country music. Credit: Photo by Republic Country Club, licensed under CC BY 2.0

Some years ago, a radio station was about to switch its format. Management decided to, as they say in the business, โ€œstuntโ€ for a week or so prior to the debut of their new programming lineup. Then someone came up with the idea of playing nothing but Merle Haggard all day and all night. This type of strategy was sometimes used to keep competitors guessing while simultaneously โ€œsanitizingโ€ the station, easing the transition from one style of music to another.

The public was intrigued by the new approach, figuring that you could do much worse than listening to Haggard by the ton. The industry was captivated by the radio stationโ€™s new (bogus) slogan, inspired by all-news station WINS in New York City: โ€œYou give us 22 minutes, and weโ€™ll give you the Merle.โ€

Credit: Book cover

In his new biography, The Hag:ย ย The Life, Times, and Music of Merle Haggardย (445 pp. $30, Hachette Books) author Marc Eliot doesnโ€™t get the job done in 22 minutes. More like 400 pages, plus a hefty section of notes and references. But it is an enlightening read, particularly for those who only know Haggard from his song โ€œOkie from Muskogee.โ€ Eliot contends that Haggard and his band, the Strangers, effectively saved country music when it was in danger of descending into formulaic pablum.

Eliot โ€” a celebrity biographer who has written books about Cary Grant, Barry White, Bruce Springsteen, and Walt Disney โ€” takes on the legend of Haggard with an approach befitting the subjectโ€™s stature. There is some material that might be classified as salacious, though Eliot certainly could have piled it on if he had wanted to. Itโ€™s not like there isnโ€™t plenty to work with.

Instead, Haggardโ€™s life is presented chronologically, with an emphasis on his formative years and the damage that was done to his psyche during this period. Poverty, the death of his father, and multiple incarcerations gave Haggard a personality that was, to say the least, self-destructive. Repeatedly โ€“ in both his youth and his later years โ€“ he would get in the way of his own success.

Haggard was, politely speaking, a maladjusted child. His father died after suffering a stroke when Merle was nine years old, and the boy blamed himself, believing, as children who have endured a family tragedy sometimes do, that it was his fault. The boy had contracted a respiratory disease found in agricultural workers known as โ€œValley Feverโ€ a number of weeks before his fatherโ€™s death, and in his young mind, there was a definite connection.

This theme of misplaced responsibility runs throughout Haggardโ€™s story. Frequently, Eliot details his subjectโ€™s โ€œenormous capacity for feeling guilty about things he shouldnโ€™t and feeling no guilt for things he should.โ€

During his teenage years, Haggard became a chronic truant and eventually a petty criminal. In multiple instances, Haggard would do his time, earn his release, and then promptly do something to get himself back in court. This pattern led to a series of stays in juvenile correction facilities and, later, prison. Specifically, San Quentin, the oldest prison in California and a facility that justifiably had a reputation as a place where convicts did โ€œhard time.โ€ When asked by a judge why he kept sabotaging his future, Haggard said, โ€œI donโ€™t like being told what to do.โ€

Merle Haggard on Gram Parsons: “He was a pussy.”

The young prisoner had an epiphany after seeing Johnny Cash perform on New Yearโ€™s Day in 1960. Unfortunately, this occurred while Haggard was still in jail. He was captivated by Cashโ€™s presence (โ€œhe had the right attitudeโ€) and resolved to become a model prisoner, with the aim of securing his parole and resuming his music career.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=ksw1PlbwchM

When Haggard was a guest on Cashโ€™s television program in 1969, the two spoke during rehearsals, discussing Haggardโ€™s fear of his fans finding out about his time in prison. Almost a decade after his release, Haggard still felt profound shame. Cash encouraged Haggard to โ€œcome cleanโ€ about his time behind bars, and when the show aired, viewers witnessed the following exchange:

Cash: Here is a man who writes about his own life and has had a life to write about.
Haggard: Funny you mention that, Johnny.
Cash: What?
Haggard: San Quentin.
Cash: Whyโ€™s that?
Haggard: The first time I ever saw you perform, it was at San Quentin.
Cash: I donโ€™t remember your being in that show, Merle.
Haggard: I was in the audience, Johnny.

In relating the story of Haggardโ€™s life, Eliot gives the reader insight into the machinations of the music business. By presenting this information, Eliot makes it easier to understand why Haggard made choices regarding his career that might be characterized as counterintuitive.

Particularly instructive is Eliotโ€™s account of Haggardโ€™s struggles with Capitol Records (in particular Ken Nelson, the head of the labelโ€™s county division) during his ascent to fame during the 1960s. Haggard stubbornly fought to maintain his artistic integrity and stave off pressure to conform to the then-popular โ€œCountrypolitanโ€ sound that was prevalent in Nashville.

Merle Haggard at the height of his fame in 1971, when he was named Performer of the Year by the Country Music Association. Credit: Public domain

Also instructive are the pages devoted to Haggardโ€™s longtime relationship with Buck Owens, whom Eliot describes as possessing โ€œthe face of a hound dog and the voice of a hiccupping angel.โ€ The two musicians had a largely cordial relationship, but they often functioned as frenemies. One can imagine that things were awkward when Haggard was married (for a time) to Owensโ€™ ex-wife, Bonnie.

Eliot describes a negotiation session between the two musicians, in which the savvy Owens bought Haggardโ€™s song โ€œSing Me Back Home.โ€ Owens could be a ruthless businessman. โ€œAs a publisher, he enjoyed making artists beg for money,โ€ Eliot explains. Haggard asked for $15,000, which was the amount he owed in gambling debts to the Horseshoe Casino in Las Vegas. Owens agreed, not telling Haggard that he had been prepared to give him a check made out for $35,000 that was waiting in his desk drawer.

Eliot, who has written about the Eagles and the country-rock sound that blossomed in California during the early 1970s, explores Haggardโ€™s influence on the genre. His music was beloved by the Grateful Dead, who frequently performed โ€œMama Triedโ€ and โ€œSing Me Back Home.โ€ Gram Parsons of the Flying Burrito Brothers introduced the Rolling Stones to the Haggard songbook, and the lessons learned are obvious in songs like โ€œTorn and Frayedโ€ and โ€œSweet Virginia.โ€

Though some rockers loved Haggard, both for his music and his persona, Eliot says that the high regard was generally not mutual. When Parsons asked Haggard to produce a record for him, the older man considered the project but ultimately bowed out. Haggard on Parsons: โ€œHe was a pussy.โ€

Nevertheless, the rockersโ€™ love for Merle continued to flow, as exemplified by the Pure Prairie League song โ€œIโ€™ll Fix Your Flat Tire, Merle,โ€ in which the narrator spies Haggard stuck on the side of the road. Itโ€™s a two-minute blast of fanboy lust, featuring a chorus containing a unique couplet: โ€œIโ€™ll fix your flat tire, Merle / Donโ€™t get your sweet country picking finger all covered with erl / Youโ€™re a honky, I know, but Merle, you got soul / And Iโ€™ll fix your flat tire, Merle.โ€

YouTube video

Eliot writes with authority in The Hag. The text evinces a high degree of knowledge, and his insights into Haggardโ€™s character are illuminating. Significantly, Eliot conducted over 100 new interviews in the course of writing the book. However, a reader might wonder if Eliot has ever penned scripts for true-crime television shows, or maybe MTVโ€™s โ€œBehind the Music.โ€

Numerous chapters end in one-sentence paragraphs, lines that beg to be delivered by a stentorian announcer and then punctuated with a dramatic โ€œbum-bum-BUUUMโ€ musical flourish. Case in point: โ€œMerleโ€™s life was about to take a deep downward plunge, and for a while, he would no longer see the light.โ€ Or this one: โ€œHe hadnโ€™t counted on the brick wall of self-destruction that stood in his way.โ€ Not to mention: โ€œAnd it only got worse from there.โ€

Literary melodrama aside, The Hag makes a solid case for Haggardโ€™s status as a musical icon, an artist who exerted a powerful and lasting influence. By steadfastly returning to the inspiration provided by pioneers like Lefty Frizzell and Bob Wills, Haggard managed to stem the tide of blandness and mediocrity that, at one point, threatened to overtake the music that he loved. Or, as Eliot described Haggardโ€™s achievement in recording the 1966 album Swinging Doors and The Bottle Let Me Down, โ€œMerle Haggard and the Strangers had given country music back its balls.โ€

Contributor Tom Richards is a broadcaster, writer, and musician. He has an unseemly fondness for the Rolling Stones and bands of their ilk.