AT THE HEIGHT OF HIS FAME, MERLE HAGGARD STOPPED CHASING THE NEXT HIT AND MADE A WHOLE RECORD FOR BOB WILLS. In 1970, Merle Haggard could have recorded almost anything and the country audience would have followed. “Okie from Muskogee” had already changed the scale of his fame. The commercial path was wide open. Instead, he made A Tribute to the Best Damn Fiddle Player in the World (or, My Salute to Bob Wills) — a full album devoted to Bob Wills, with surviving Texas Playboys brought in to help carry the sound. He even spent time relearning the fiddle before the sessions. It wasn’t the obvious move. It wasn’t the easiest one either. This was Merle Haggard, right in the years when his name could sell something newer, louder, and more immediately profitable. Instead, he turned toward an older language — Western swing, old arrangements, old loyalties, the music he had been listening to long before the charts started listening back. Bob Wills suffered a stroke after the first day of recording, and Merle arrived the next day knowing the man he was saluting would not be there the way he had hoped. The album reached No. 2 on the country chart. But the larger thing had already happened. At the peak of what the market wanted from Merle Haggard, he stopped to show what he still wanted from music.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” The Moment He Turned Away From What Would…