Thursday, February 11, 2010

"PRESERVATION" Preview #19: Appearing with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band on their upcoming benefit album - MR. MERLE HAGGARD!

February 16, 2010 - PRESERVATION: an album benefiting Preservation Hall & The Preservation Hall Music Outreach Program hits the streets! (Best Mardi Gras Ever?) While we wait with baited breath, we share with you these previews of the 19 amazing tracks and special guests that make this latest offering from the Preservation Hall Jazz Band so very special. In this installment...

MERLE HAGGARD
from answers.com
Fiercely independent and loaded with down-home credibility, Merle Haggard has been a country music star since the mid-1960s. His upbringing in Bakersfield, California as a post-Depression, Oklahoma transplant is the stuff of legends: Raised in a boxcar (his dad worked for the railroad), he spent his youth getting into trouble and running away from home. His unruly behavior eventually ended with a stint in San Quentin prison for burglary (1958-60). Haggard worked on his music in jail, and after his release he landed jobs performing in night clubs and playing bass for Wynn Stewart. He then became part of Bakersfield's growing music scene and began his recording career singing duets with Bonnie Owens (the ex-wife of country star Buck Owens). In 1965 he released his first big label album, The Strangers, the title taken from his hit single, "(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers" (The Strangers is also the name of his long-time backing band). In the last half of the 1960s Haggard emerged as one of country music's biggest stars, recording ballads and honky-tonk hits including "The Fugitive," "Mama Tried" and "Workin' Man Blues." His 1969 single "Okie From Muskogee," a good-natured slap at hippie-influenced pop culture, was a crossover hit and Haggard made headlines as a symbol for love-it-or-leave-it America (the attention helped get him an invitation to play for Richard Nixon at the White House).

"Hag" has established himself in the country music world as a talented musician (fiddle and guitar), a gifted vocalist and an influential songwriter -- all capped off by a turbulent personal life that adds to his reputation as an ornery individualist. He's known for paying tribute to traditional country music (1970's A Tribute to the Best Damn Fiddle Player in the World: Bob Wills), as well as appealing to crowds beyond country music's typical audience (in 2005 he announced a tour with Bob Dylan). His recordings include: "The Fightin' Side of Me"; Poncho and Lefty, an album of duets with Willie Nelson; "The Way I Am" (from the Clint Eastwood movie Bronco Billy); "I Think I'll Stay Here and Drink"; and "That's the News," a commentary on the media's coverage of war in Iraq.

In 1972 the governor of California, Ronald Reagan, granted Haggard a full pardon.
THE SONG:
"Basin Street Blues"
Merle Haggard with The Preservation Hall Jazz Band
(Spencer Williams) MPL Music Publishing, Inc.

Merle Haggard - vocal
Mark Braud - trumpet
Clint Maedgen - tenor sax
Rickie Monie - piano
Ben Jaffe - string bass
Joe Lastie - drums

Merle Haggard appears courtesy of Hag Records

AS PERFORMED BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG IN 1959:

HAG PERFORMS HIS HIT "MAMA TRIED" in 1968:

MERLE HAGGARD - OFFICIAL WEBSITE

PRESERVATION HALL - OFFICIAL WEBSITE

LEARN MORE ABOUT "PRESERVATION"

No comments: