FOR 37 YEARS, BUCK OWENS AND MERLE HAGGARD HELPED DEFINE THE SAME TOWN — BUT BAKERSFIELD COULD NOT GET THEM ON THE SAME STAGE. Buck Owens had the business machine, the bright suits, the television face, the empire. Merle Haggard had the prison scar, the workingman ache, the deeper shadow in the voice. Together, they helped make Bakersfield sound like the opposite of polished Nashville. But for decades, they stood apart. Merle had once worked as one of Buck’s Buckaroos. Then life twisted the story tighter: Merle married Bonnie Owens, Buck’s former wife. Rumors of tension followed them — personal pride, professional jealousy, two giants measuring themselves against the same California dust. The Los Angeles Times reported that for 37 years the two Bakersfield legends never stood together on the same stage. Then, in 1995, Bakersfield got the scene it had been waiting for. Kern County Fairgrounds. Home soil. Not Nashville. Not Hollywood. The town that had made both men matter. Whatever had kept them apart did not fully need to be explained. Country music has always known that pride can last longer than anger. But for one night, two men who had carried the same city in different ways finally stood close enough for Bakersfield to see its own reflection whole again.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” FOR 37 YEARS, MERLE HAGGARD AND BUCK OWENS…