Merle Haggard - Legends of American Music: The Original Outlaw [3CD Box Set] (2007)
BAND/ARTIST: Merle Haggard
- Title: Legends of American Music: The Original Outlaw
- Year Of Release: 2007
- Label: Time Life [09463-92092-2-4]
- Genre: Country, Folk
- Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log)
- Total Time: 3:04:15
- Total Size: 436 mb / 1.02 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
The only career-spanning collection ever afforded this American icon-in fact, it's the ONLY set that contains tracks from every label of note that's recorded Merle during his 45 years in the music business! A 40-page booklet includes an extensive biography and rare photos from his family and friends. The set begins with his first hit, Sing a Sad Song , followed by (My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers; The Fugitive; Okie from Muskogee; The Fightin' Side of Me; Daddy Frank (The Guitar Man); Natural High (with Janie Fricke); Pancho and Lefty (with Willie Nelson); Haggard (Like I've Never Been Before) , and much more. 60 tracks!
A number of Merle Haggard box sets preceded this one to fruition, among them 1996's four-disc,100-track Down Every Road, as comprehensive and essential a collection of country music as you're ever likely to hear. At three discs and 60 tracks, Time Life's Legends of American Music: The Original Outlaw admittedly doesn't offer as much Hag, but in its own way it's just as valuable as the earlier release, and might be preferable for those who don't want their Hag spread quite so thin but who would still like a bit more than the 40 tracks offered by Razor & Tie's 1995, 40-track The Lonesome Fugitive: The Merle Haggard Anthology (1963-1977). Like Down Every Road, The Original Outlaw takes a look not only at the biggest hits of Haggard's career, although those are all of course accounted for. It launches with two pre-fame singles Haggard cut for the small Tally label in 1964-1965, before signing to Capitol, "Sing a Sad Song" and "(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers." From there it devotes roughly half of its contents to those Capitol sides before moving on to Haggard's MCA output of the late '70s and his recordings for Epic, Anti and his own Hag Records in the subsequent decades. All that's absent -- and no one will really miss it -- is some representation of Haggard's early-'90s stint with Curb, a period that produced no memorable hits whose omission would cause a red flag to be raised only by completists. Haggard's post-Capitol recordings would, for any other artist, still amount to a body of work to be praised and envied: MCA and Epic singles such as "Big City," "Pancho and Lefty" (with Willie Nelson) and "Yesterday's Wine" (with George Jones) are formidable, and the samplings of his rootsy 21st century releases should send those unfamiliar with them scurrying to catch up with what Haggard's been up to, as they've all been excellent additions to his canon. In the end, though, it'll still be those Capitol recordings that will define Merle Haggard and, to some extent, the direction in which country music turned once he arrived -- even the most die-hard fan will never tire of hearing that string of more than 20 number one hits Haggard gave the label. All of them are here -- the landmarks like "Okie from Muskogee," "Working Man's Blues," "The Fightin' Side of Me," "Mama Tried," "Daddy Frank," "If We Make It Through December" -- as well as a couple that "only" scraped into the Top Five: "I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am" and "Someday We'll Look Back." Arranged in rough, but not strict, chronological order, the set amply demonstrates Hag's evolution as both songwriter and interpreter of those songs, and restates the case for him as one of country music's greatest contributions to the American musical lexicon -- not that that wasn't obvious already.
A number of Merle Haggard box sets preceded this one to fruition, among them 1996's four-disc,100-track Down Every Road, as comprehensive and essential a collection of country music as you're ever likely to hear. At three discs and 60 tracks, Time Life's Legends of American Music: The Original Outlaw admittedly doesn't offer as much Hag, but in its own way it's just as valuable as the earlier release, and might be preferable for those who don't want their Hag spread quite so thin but who would still like a bit more than the 40 tracks offered by Razor & Tie's 1995, 40-track The Lonesome Fugitive: The Merle Haggard Anthology (1963-1977). Like Down Every Road, The Original Outlaw takes a look not only at the biggest hits of Haggard's career, although those are all of course accounted for. It launches with two pre-fame singles Haggard cut for the small Tally label in 1964-1965, before signing to Capitol, "Sing a Sad Song" and "(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers." From there it devotes roughly half of its contents to those Capitol sides before moving on to Haggard's MCA output of the late '70s and his recordings for Epic, Anti and his own Hag Records in the subsequent decades. All that's absent -- and no one will really miss it -- is some representation of Haggard's early-'90s stint with Curb, a period that produced no memorable hits whose omission would cause a red flag to be raised only by completists. Haggard's post-Capitol recordings would, for any other artist, still amount to a body of work to be praised and envied: MCA and Epic singles such as "Big City," "Pancho and Lefty" (with Willie Nelson) and "Yesterday's Wine" (with George Jones) are formidable, and the samplings of his rootsy 21st century releases should send those unfamiliar with them scurrying to catch up with what Haggard's been up to, as they've all been excellent additions to his canon. In the end, though, it'll still be those Capitol recordings that will define Merle Haggard and, to some extent, the direction in which country music turned once he arrived -- even the most die-hard fan will never tire of hearing that string of more than 20 number one hits Haggard gave the label. All of them are here -- the landmarks like "Okie from Muskogee," "Working Man's Blues," "The Fightin' Side of Me," "Mama Tried," "Daddy Frank," "If We Make It Through December" -- as well as a couple that "only" scraped into the Top Five: "I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am" and "Someday We'll Look Back." Arranged in rough, but not strict, chronological order, the set amply demonstrates Hag's evolution as both songwriter and interpreter of those songs, and restates the case for him as one of country music's greatest contributions to the American musical lexicon -- not that that wasn't obvious already.
:: TRACKLIST ::
1-1 Sing A Sad Song
1-2 (My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers
1-3 The Fugitive
1-4 Swinging Doors
1-5 I Threw Away The Rose
1-6 The Bottle Let Me Down
1-7 Branded Man
1-8 Today, I Started Loving You Again
1-9 Sing Me Back Home
1-10 The Legend Of Bonnie And Clyde
1-11 Mama Tried
1-12 I Take A Lot Of Pride In What I Am
1-13 Workin' Man Blues
1-14 Hungry Eyes
1-15 Okie From Muskogee
1-16 Someday We'll Look Back
1-17 Daddy Frank (The Guitar Man)
1-18 Carolyn
1-19 Grandma Harp
1-20 Its Not Love (But It's Not Bad)
2-1 The Fightin' Side Of Me
2-2 I Wonder If They Ever Think Of Me
2-3 Kentucky Gambler
2-4 Everybody's Had The Blues
2-5 If We Make It Through December
2-6 Old Man From The Mountain
2-7 Things Aren't Funny Anymore
2-8 Movin' On
2-9 Always Wanting You
2-10 The Roots Of My Raising
2-11 It's All In The Movies
2-12 Cherokee Maiden
2-13 If We're Not Back In Love By Monday
2-14 Ramblin' Fever
2-15 I'm Always On A Mountain When I Fall
2-16 It's Been A Great Afternoon
2-17 The Way I Am
2-18 I Think I'll Just Stay Here And Drink
2-19 Misery And Gin
2-20 When My Blue Moon Turns To Gold Again
3-1 Big City
3-2 My Favorite Memory
3-3 Yesterday's Wine [Vocals – George Jones]
3-4 Going Where The Lonely Go
3-5 You Take Me For Granted
3-6 Pancho And Lefty [Vocals – Willie Nelson]
3-7 That's The Way Love Goes
3-8 Let's Chase Each Other Around The Room
3-9 Somday When Things Are Good
3-10 Twinkle, Twinkle Lucky Star
3-11 What Am I Gonna Do (With The Rest Of My Life)
3-12 Are The Good Times Really Over (I Wish A Buck Was Still Silver)
3-13 Natural High [Vocals – Janie Fricke]
3-14 Out Among The Stars
3-15 A Place To Fall Apart [Vocals – Janie Fricke]
3-16 Lonesome Day
3-17 Wishing All These Old Things Were New
3-18 America First
3-19 Some Of Us Fly [Vocals – Toby Keith]
3-20 Haggard (Like I've Never Been Before)
Country | Folk | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | CD-Rip
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