Merle Haggard, RIP
A great American voice has died.

Fifty-nine years ago, two men and a woman sat around a table in Bakersfield, drinking red wine and cursing the state of the union. "Ain't no jobs to be had," one man said.
"I know it, I know it," said the other. "An honest man might's well quit trying." And then he added: "I know where there's a bunch of money. It wouldn't be no trouble to get it."
The trio, now thoroughly drunk, decided to break into a restaurant on Highway 99. No one would catch them, they reasoned, because it was 3 in the morning. And so they headed out to the roadhouse with a baby in tow, and they started trying to pry their way in through the back door.
Unfortunately for the crooks, they had been too drunk to read the clock correctly: It was actually around 10 p.m., and the joint was still open. And that was how Merle Haggard, who had already spent more than a little time locked up for a variety of petty offenses, got a ticket to San Quentin.
It was in that prison, inspired by one of Johnny Cash's concerts-behind-bars, that Haggard the inept burglar decided to turn his life around. We're all fortunate that he did. In the time since he left San Quentin in 1960, Haggard—who died today on his 79th birthday—built one of the richest bodies of work in the history of American popular music. A country singer, Haggard was always happy to draw as well from other genres: blues, rock, gospel, and especially jazz. (The next time you watch that famous clip of Bing Crosby and David Bowie singing an odd-couple duet, remind yourself that Haggard was a professed fan of both.) He was an excellent vocalist, a capable guitarist and fiddler, and the leader of an expert band. But he wasn't just a musical giant. His finest songs are tightly compressed stories and character sketches that belong in the canon of American literature.
How much do his best records stand out? Country music is full of songs about truck drivers, but I can't think of any as world-weary and bleak as "White Line Fever," with its aging narrator's lament: "I've been from coast to coast a hundred times or more/And I ain't found one single place where I ain't been before."
The song treats truck driving as an addiction, and when you combine that with the phrase "white line" you may suspect the verses have a hidden second subject. Decades later, Haggard would begin another world-weary song—"Wishing All These Old Things Were New"—with an explicit reference to that other sort of white line: "Watching while some old friends do a line/Holding back the want-to in my own addicted mind." And then, in the second verse, a moment with more than a hint of autobiography: "Watching while some young men go to jail/And they show it all on TV, just to see somebody fail." Listen:
It's both nostalgic and anti-nostalgic—a song for someone who misses the old times but also knows damn well they weren't as good as he remembers them. This was a recurring theme for Haggard. (It should be no surprise that he recorded a version of Dolly Parton's "In the Good Old Days When Times Were Bad.") His most poetic expression of the idea may be a line from "They're Tearing the Labor Camps Down," a song about a man returning to his hometown and seeing that the camp where he used to work isn't there anymore. "I feel a little sentimental shame," he sings.

Haggard's most famous record—or infamous, in some circles—is "Okie from Muskogee," the Silent Majority's great culture-war anthem of 1969. At the time, people took it as a song for hardhats who hated hippies: Spiro Agnew mashed up with the Grand Ole Opry. Years later, it became common to claim the tune was intended as a joke. Haggard's latter-day lifestyle certainly made it easy to take it that way: When a man who smokes pot starts a song with the words "We don't smoke marijuana in Muskogee," you have to wonder whether he's speaking for himself. And Haggard undeniably enjoyed his pot. "Son," he supposedly said once, "the only place I don't smoke it is Muskogee!"
Haggard himself was always cagey about what he meant by the song, and the answers he gave to interviewers weren't always consistent with one another. But the best way to understand the record, I've long thought, is to take it as a dramatic monologue. "Okie" reports how a conservative character feels about the counterculture, and whether you take his views as inspiring or hilarious is up to you. The fact that it can work either way is a tribute to Haggard's skills.
It could be hard to get a bead on Haggard's politics. After "Okie from Muskogee" was a smash hit, Haggard wanted his next single to be "Irma Jackson," an anti-racist story about interracial love. His label rejected the idea—indeed, it refused to release the song at all for several years—and his follow-up instead was "The Fightin' Side of Me," a ditty about wanting to beat up anti-American protesters. That one could've been the soundtrack to the Hard Hat Riot of 1970, when rampaging construction workers in New York attacked hippies and demanded that City Hall raise the American flag. (Though even here, the politics aren't as simple as you might assume: The singer stresses that "I don't mind them switching sides and standing up for things that they believe in" before explaining that it's "when they're running down our country" that "they're walking on the fighting side of me.")
Haggard's politics got only more unpredictable as he grew older. By the late '90s he was spouting militia-style conspiracy theories and calling for the legalization of weed. In the Bush years he took to denouncing the president as one of "the top three assholes of all time" (along with Nixon and Hitler) and harshly criticizing the Iraq war. ("Why don't we liberate/These United States?/We're the ones who need it the worst," he sang in 2005. The track was called "America First.") In 2008, he wrote a number endorsing Hillary Clinton for president—not one of his most accomplished compositions, though I can't help admiring his ability to fit the line "What we need's a big switch of genders" into a country song. Or maybe I should say he seemed to endorse Hillary: Not long after he wrote it, he went on the Bill Maher show and defied common sense by denying that the song—which builds to the line "let's put a woman in charge"—had been an endorsement. ("I simply wrote a song that said she would be the best buy," he grinned, prompting Maher to comment that Haggard was "parsing it closer than Bill.") Haggard was large. He contained multitudes.
And so did his catalog. It's not just that he wrote so many wonderful hits, from "Mama Tried" to "Silver Wings" to "Big City." Even his obscure compositions could be gems, from the delicate, Blackbirdesque beauty of "The Day the Rains Came" to the blunt paranoia of "Lonesome Day." He was a master interpreter of other people's words too: It was Hank Cochran and Red Lane who wrote "I'll Be a Hero When I Strike," a haunting portrait of an assassin, but the skittish, apprehensive delivery here is all Haggard:
With so many brilliant entries in the Haggard songbook, I'm not sure I could pick a single favorite. But if I had to choose one, it would probably be "Sing Me Back Home," a superficially simple account of a prisoner singing one last song to another convict before the latter is led to the executioner. There are no inspired metaphors or bursts of clever wordplay here, but the song feels infinitely complex; we hear a memory within another memory, and somehow, in the spaces between the chorus and the song's two verses, we feel the weight of a man's entire life. If it isn't Haggard's best song, it's surely the one with which to mourn him:
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Lord, look at that picture. He looks like a cross between Elvis and Warren Beatty.
Well, I suppose we still have Lou Reed.
Has David Bowie weighed in yet?
Too soon, bro. Too soon.
My personal favorite has always been "Misery and Gin". Lots of great songs though, so I can hardly fault people for preferring others.
I mentioned this in the PM lynx but Haggard was supposed to be on the Buddy Holly plane but "lost" the coin flip with Holly and had to ride to Moorhead Minnesota on the freezing bus instead of a quick flight there.
I thought (and a quick google search appears to back it up) that it was Waylon Jennings who was supposed to be on that plane.
See below. Sorry.
Sorry - wrong country singer. It was ol' Waylon.
That was Waylon Jennings not Merle.
Haggard's politics got only more unpredictable as he grew older. By the late '90s he was spouting militia-style conspiracy theories and calling for the legalization of weed.
Because only racists...
Possibly relevant to "Sing Me Back Home":
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merle_Haggard
This was a great memorialization of a legendary artist.
I agree. So impressive was it, one almost believes Jesse Walker actually listened to Merle Haggard.
There are plenty of terrible writers currently youtubing Merle who will do an awful job of memorializing him throughout the rest of the week, which will make Jesse's work stand out even more.
The moment I heard Merle Haggard had died, literally the second thought in my head was "I look forward to reading Jesse Walker's blog post on him".
Next we can hear about how offensive and Problematic Merle was. I mean, "I'm a White Boy" has to be the Trump campaign song.
(Good article, I'm glad I got to see him a few years ago.)
At least we still have Taylor Swift
If you strike her down, she will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
There is a part of the Country Music Hall of Fame Museum called, and I shit you not, the "Taylor Swift Education Center".
Nashville, Nashville, Nashville...
Makes me wish I had followed his work more closely.
RIP
OT - Meanwhile, at Duke University, a two-year-old incident between an administrator and a parking officer - currently the subject of a lawsuit - has inspired some students to illegally occupy the administration building. Supposedly, they're acting for a group called Duke Students and Workers in Solidarity (DSWS).
"Protesters are asking the administration to grovel to several of their demands, including the immediate termination of Trask, that he pay for Underwood's medical bills and issue a public apology, an outside investigation into Underwood's case approved by a board of students, and a $15 minimum wage for all Duke workers.
"Students also demanded that they be granted immunity from looming trespassing charges, which the university initially rejected but later complied with, saying it would help "move to towards a peaceful resolution.""
The protesters at the administration building (Allen Building) flew a sheet reading
"Occupied
No Justice
No Peace"
But when the university closed the building in response to the occupation, the demonstrators got all huffy: ""The decision to close the Allen Building was made by Duke. At no time did DSWS request, suggest, or demand that the Allen Building be shut down for any purpose or reason."
.
Duke sucks
My Porn Name: Duke Lacrosse
Because your accused of a crime then found that the DA was cooking evidence?
But when the university closed the building in response to the occupation, the demonstrators got all huffy: ""The decision to close the Allen Building was made by Duke. At no time did DSWS request, suggest, or demand that the Allen Building be shut down for any purpose or reason."
Why did they get huffy? They threw a protest and then no one was there to see it?
it's in campusreform.org, so *someone* is seeing it.
Just look at the photo of these kids. They're having fun. This is a game. Other students have keggers and hook up, they want to pretend it's the 60s and they're crusading for civil rights. They're playing pretend.
Duke is a hotbed of retardedness.
What kind of lame ass student radicals side with the pigs?
Anyone else find it a little dubious that even in the dim annals of social justice warrioring of two years ago the VP of a prestigious American university would use a racial epithet in any context?
Monday morning, Trask broke his silence and issued a public apology, bending to the protesters demands.
Apparently none of these administrators have learned a goddamn thing from recent history, so maybe.
Trask and Underwood are both characters from the novel 'The Stand' by Stephen King.
Wonder if they smoke marijuana where he os headed...he's proud to be an Okie that just croak-ied.
misery and gin
he didn't write it, but he made it
Haggard was large. He contained multitudes
Warty was Merle Haggard all along!?
It's a Walt Whitman quote.
Well now I feel like an uneducated boob.
I was going to say, "Didn't you read that copy of *Leaves of Grass* Bill Clinton gave you?" but then I realized you might interpret such a joke as insulting and demeaning, so I decided not to say it.
Little-known fact:
As a tyke, I had a pet springer spaniel named Buck. He ran away one day, and was gone for about a week. Suddenly, he shows up with his springer spaniel girlfriend in tow.
A litter of pups soon followed, and I named one "Merle", and another "Haggard". 'Cause, that's how I rolled, as a kid.
So.....yeah.
A quick check of the security questions to your personal accounts tell me that you are in fact telling the truth.
Oh, outstanding!!!
Maybe in truth he was just a "Hippy From Olema."
Booo. Go away.
RIP Merle, I'm smoking some reefer and listening to some George Jones
OT [except Haggard might have had something to say about it] -
When a mayor says
"The City was founded more than three decades ago with a spirit of community activism based on ideals of inclusion ? not exclusion ? and respect for the dignity of all persons."
Does it mean
(a) that people of all points of view are free to speak and assemble in the city
OR
(b) that the city is thinking of banning someone in the name of tolerance?
(TRUMPER WARNING)
See Marcuse re "repressive tolerance."
http://www.askamanager.org/201.....oices.html
About as inclusive as the workforce in this little article.
They're inclusive and love diversity - and those aren't just buzzwords to them!
But they're horribly, horribly upset that one of their vendors includes religious passages and phrases on their invoices. They don't tolerate *that shit*.
Sometimes I hate my fellow atheists, we can be bigger pussies than the Christians about this shit but don't have the balls to cut of balls like the Muslims.
Nicely done Jesse
But can they make Kathy Griffin look like Selma Hayek
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com.....in-camera/
Can it turn anybody into F.A. Hayek?
This can
This can
Fine. I get it. No need to repeat yourself.
4 fucking paragraphs on Merle Haggard's politics?
Okie From Muskogee is just an answer song.
Ot: Hey Alabama, Japan need your help: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/w.....ng-7705006
I've seen this movie.
"With a purposeful grimace and a terrible sound"
I always thought Okee was supposed to be a song sung from his father's point of view.
I came across this bit in the San Diego paper's article on him:
"It was a different time period. 'Okie' was written out of a feeling towards people that were demonstrating against America, and I'd just got out of prison and was very, very happy with America, in comparison with these kids running around putting down America, when I was happy to be free. That's where I was coming from."
Sounds like he was happy to be tasting a little freedom after prison and thought hippie protesters were harshing his buzz.
"It was a different time period."
In the late 90's, while on a trip to Robber's Cave State Park to do some rock climbing, I made an overnight stop in Muskogee. From what I saw of it the only thing that seemed to have changed since the 60's was the addition of a Pizza Hut. Seriously, the clothes, automobiles, the rodeo, the people I interacted with, straight from central casting. Overall I felt a sense of hostility towards 'The Other'.
To be honest the place really fucking creeped me out.
The above Duke thing had a sidebar link to "Portland Community College's White History Month Program"....
...which, being an idiot, i clicked to learn more about.
let me be clear = i dont care what these people do. Its just a little sad.
I suppose this is answer to warty's sometime plea... WHYCOME THAR AINT NO WHITE HISTORY MONTH
He just had to ask.
I don't see "Black" as an option on the History pull-down menu. QED.
This is because Morpheus liberated all of them
Nuh uh.
Inceptrix.
Bwaaah!
Man, I forgot how dumb these movies were. Although I like the idea of diverting the "one percent of humanity" into a futile quest to round up other one-percenters and keeping them occupied rounding up still more one-percenters... that's a pretty compelling little theory. But it seems like someone would have figured out pretty quickly that the battery thing is horseshit.
I mean, all of our diet, let alone the tools we use to procure the things which comprise our diet, requires sunlight. Agriculture? Needs sun. Cattle? Needs agriculture. All of those other things humans have lived on from time to time? Well, shit, we had an event with enough shit was thrown up into the atmosphere to block out sunlight, and it killed off the bulk of life on the planet. So what is supposed to be feeding the humans who are supposed to be powering the machines? One of these tech-savvy Matrix survivors would have recognized that straight-off.
Fusion power.
AKA 'bottled sunlight'.
It apparent to most thinking people that the battery explanation was ridiculous. We have an infinite supply of fissile/fertile material in the crust of the earth/ocean and the machines waste their time growing and sustaining human life? Come on.
Goddamn corporate executives.
I blame executive meddling for the battery thing. The rest of it is on the Wachovski sisters.
Maybe they managed to get the cat and rat farm running.
I lost my life savings on that.
We feed the rats to the cats and the cats to the rats and get the cat skins for nothing. We feed the rats to the cats and the cats to the rats and get the cat skins for nothing. We feed the rats to the cats and the cats to the rats and get the cat skins for nothing. We feed the rats to the cats and the cats to the rats and get the cat skins for nothing. We feed the rats to the cats and the cats to the rats and get the cat skins for nothing.
Yeah, supposedly the original idea was to use the human brains as a massive neural network, with everybody's brains providing some processing power to the machines, which at least kind of makes sense. But the studio execs thought it was too complicated, and changed it into making people batteries, which was really damn silly.
Well, the theory in the video takes it as given that the battery idea is nonsense but it keeps the humans distracted from the fact that there exists another layer of the Matrix, which the unplugged humans inhabit. And it's an interesting idea... I mean, imagine you're trying to contain a bunch of would-be criminals, and you get them all trying to lure other would-be criminals into their criminal gang. Eventually you've got them doing your work for you, finding all the would-be criminals and making those would-be criminals find other would be criminals to enlist in the cause of tracking down would-be criminals. And behind it all you're pulling the strings and ensuring they don't actually bust up anything.
But in this case the battery thing kinda neuters his theory. No way they wouldn't see through it.
I refute you thusly.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8odnFywwp6Q
One squared is one.
Hey Webmaster! Sent you an e-mail. You kind of fucked me here. Anyways, it's been fun. Bye bye Reason.
Mind. Blown.
Have NO idea what any of that means. Just sounds racist.
"PowerPoint showing seven-point definition of fascism"
Do they not know that PowerPoint is the whitest of all MS Office products? For God sakes, it has Power right in the name.
Don't get Edward Tufte started on the subject of PowerPoint.
Too many cats in the world anyway.
(raises fist in solidarity) Word.
Excelent.
Perfect
i appreciate that you got the joke. I was afraid it would be missed.
You excelled.
Wait, that was used.
I appreciate your outlook on this issue.
It was pretty suite.
I took OneNote of it, and wish I had Access to your sense of humor.
These puns are terrible. I'm writing all your names down in my notepad for future reference.
Yeah, it's a real minefield.
So the "White History Month" events were apparently covered by some conservatrolls (because how could they NOT?)
They have all these events on video. I know, right?! You were probably thinking "HOW CAN I EXPERIENCE IT MYSELF?" Well...
...yeah, don't bother. The thing i found notable was that it seems like 90% of the attendees are women, 60% being older women (not college age), and the racial makeup seemed 'representative' of the diversity of our great nation (mostly white, with 20-30% minorities). Meaning, it seems that many fans of this stuff are often retirees, and i'd take a wild guess? that many are also school-teachers themselves participating in some 'sharing' of conventional-wisdom. Its like their version of a 'business conference' without the resort hotel & motivational speaker... well, ok, maybe they're ALL motivational speakers in a way.
The local news covered the event and provide some useful context.
I enjoyed this 'lecture on capitalism' here. Which sounds like a Mad Libs of historical details put into a blender and read by someone told to "talk like a professor". His opening line is, "After the civil war, the United States became the #1 industrial power in the Nation"
I actually like Travis Smiley, but notice how he doesn't come out and say African Americans shouldn't vote for Democrats.
http://www.realclearpolitics.c.....party.html
"Democrats can't take the black vote for granted."
That's a good one.
He'll be here all week.
Yes they can. They have and will continue to do so.
Wow seems i am getting old, a lot of talent I loved growing up is dying off.
http://www.Web-Privacy.tk
I see you in there, puppetmaster.
I see you baby, shakin' that ass
(one of Merle's lesser-known works)
RIP Merle. One of the greatest.
We still have Marty Stuart, for which I thank the lord. Sorry we're losing so many, but we all go eventually. RIP, Merle - vaya con Dios
A black belt in troll-fu
Not even close.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
So you're a young (?) artist who is passionately concerned with defending human dignity for everyone?
Why not express your support for human dignity by selling T-shirts referring to a politician you don't like as "Human Garbage".
So I finally got ahold of a copy of Hawk the Slayer recently and watched it with my eldest daughter. Now she role-plays and is into geeky stuff yet she did not appreciate the sublime perfection that is HtS.
I seem to have failed in passing on the proper mindset.
I have never seen it. It is as good as Beastmaster?
Pssssahg! The Beastmaster isn't fit to carry Hawks jock!
And may I be sufficiently bold to suggest that although "All Lives Matter!" has the sound of a noble inclusiveness, it more often betrays a covert, if not overt, white racism.
Yes, Mr. College Professor, we admire your boldness and daring in saying this, despite the risk that you might be high-fived to death in the faculty lounge.
I'm sorry, Mr. *Emeritus* Professor.
Crikey! Australian riot police fail to respect student protesters' safe spaces.
Wow-hit me hard. Spent lots of good times in HS and college listening to and seeing The Hag in concert. Blew off a few hrs of work today watching Hag videos on YouTube. I live in Central California and The Hag is pretty much a legend in these parts. All time favorite tune is "Big City" but he had a ton of all time classics. RIP Merle Haggard.
Remember the Berkeley student who rushed the stage at a campus event to punch a guy?
He's got supporters who stood in solidarity with him outside the courthouse.
I notice that the invited student guests who walked out of dinner at the university president's house seem to have taken the precaution of eating his food first. Don't oppress them by asking them to protest on an empty stomach.
Look at these brave Scottish students - if William Wallace had warriors like that, he'd have totally won.
"Doesn't this make you proud to be Scottish?"
"It's SHITE being Scottish!
We're the lowest of the low. The scum of the fucking Earth! The most wretched, miserable, servile, pathetic trash that was ever shat into civilization. Some people hate the English. I don't. They're just wankers.
We, on the other hand, are colonized by wankers. Can't even find a decent culture to be colonized by. We're ruled by effete arseholes. It's a SHITE state of affairs to be in, Tommy, and all the fresh air in the world won't make any fucking difference!"
Ooh, another student protest, this time about a university election.
The usual hijinks ensue - student rioters throw stones at motorist, angry cops beat prone and helpless students with heavy canes...
Wait, what?
motorists plural
Throwing stones at passing cars is a pretty clear violation of the NAP. And not a good way to win popular support.
And at Columbia, the students are protesting...a plan to put a giant ugly-ass modern "art" sculpture in a prominent place on campus.
""Everyone who visits looks at this," said Daniel Stone, 21, one of the [anti-sculpture] petition's creators.
"Paraphrasing the petition, Mr. Stone said the sculpture's planned location would throw off the lawn's Versailles-like symmetry. Ary Attie, 19, agreed, even though he appreciated the sculpture as art. "I just don't think this is the right place for it," he said. "It interrupts the architectural harmony.""
Weird, I actually agree with the protestors on this one.
A Xenomorph from the Alien series doesn't fit in with the overall aesthetic of a brick and mortar school. Stick it in a Modern Arts exhibition, but it is not something that should be parked in the front lawn..
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"Marina Herrera, a member of the [University of New Mexico] chapter of Young Americans for Freedom, said she and other students will bring Nerf guns, devices that launch foam projectiles, in protest of a lack of policy that allows students to carry stun guns or pepper spray. She said the Nerf guns represent the only self-defense device UNM allows students.
"The protest runs from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday in Smith Plaza. Herrera said student protesters will also be collecting signatures for a petition calling for the university to allow stun guns and pepper spray on campus. Students from the UNM chapters of the Young Americans for Freedom, Young Americans for Liberty and others will attend the protest, Herrera said."
Rape culture -
"Madeline Wilson has been raising eyebrows at St. Olaf College with her T-shirt: "Ask me how my college is protecting my rapist."...
"Wilson says the rape occurred last May, the week before finals, but she waited until September to report it to the college, and until December to report it to police.
"Why the delay? "At the time, I couldn't have coped with it," she said. "I just mentally smothered it as much as possible." She admits she was intoxicated at the time; so much so, she said, that she was in no condition to consent to sex. But she remembers telling the student "no."
"That summer, she said, when she finally told a friend what happened, "I realized, wow, if anyone else had described the situation to me, I would have said immediately, that's rape.""
Jesse: Where to begin? There's nothing remotely original about Haggard's music. He was a pandering hack. And maybe my being a bit older than you can forgive your naivete, but "Okie from Muskogee" was to my 10 year old ears the most unambiguously horrifying, hateful song I've ever heard -- and it still is! Yes, he's explained and excused and altered the meaning of it for the last 40 years, but that was all out of desperation. He wanted to be "cool." He smoked pot! Yet thanks to him countless potheads went to prison! Fuck him. May he rest in pieces.
The Hag sent potheads to prison? He was a legislator or a judge or a cop or something?
He was answered perfectly by the Youngbloods back then.
So you're saying he wasn't as awesome as Margaret Sanger?
This seems deliberately trollish and overly combative.
Could this be the second coming of Joe?
Seems to me that it's a form of grief poaching.
So Peter, are you saying that music will compel people to do things??? Like, Heavy Metal will make a person suicidal (ala Ozzy and Judas Priest)? Or Hip-hop turns people into gangsters? Or a country music song dictates drug policy? Because that is what you seem to be alluding to. I will have to say, that is the biggest bunch of bullshit I have heard in a long fucking time. Also, why did you puss out and take down your facebook post on this? This seems to be more about you than Merle Haggard.
While this is an obvious troll, I feel the need to clear up a couple points. First, Merle did not start smoking pot until he was about 40, after writing that song. Second, you are certainly entitled to your opinion, however his music was 'original', whatever that means, since all artists are standing on the shoulders of those who came before them. I will add a third point. If you think that is the most hateful song ever, you must not have listened to much music in the last couple decades...
And now my Pandora station is even more filled with dead artists...
RIP Merle.
I live in the same small town he did near Redding. You could find him frequently at LuLu's, a restaurant/bar in Redding, CA, where he would sometimes perform, always unannounced.
I had a friend's mom tell a story of meeting Merle when she was young and he was on tour. He was drunk with his crew and invited her and a couple friends to party with them on the bus and come on tour, so of course they accepted. Some miles down the road he sobered up and had no idea who they were. He was apparently irate that they were there and kicked them off the bus. They had to walk to the closest town and call someone to come pick them up.
"Poncho & Lefty". RIP, Merle.
My favourite Merle Haggard song isn't by him, it's about him.
That would be 'I'll fix your flat tire Merle', by Pure Prairie League.