If you thought you knew who Merle Haggard was, Marc Eliot, author of the bestselling “The Hag,” the definitive biography of the country music legend assures you, you don’t. Marc, who got his start contributing to magazines while enmeshed in New York’s famous Greenwich Village scene in the 1960s, has written about such 20th-century icons as James Dean, Walt Disney and Ronald Reagan. On today’s show, he offers a glimpse of the man behind the indelible image of a hard-living, chart-topping “Lonesome Fugitive.”
Merle, along with fellow musicians Buck and Bonnie Owens, defined the Bakersfield Sound, which rebelled against the mainstream country sound coming out of Nashville. Marc discusses Merle and Buck’s contentious relationship, and the cunning way Buck got his revenge after Merle married Bonnie.
Profoundly affected by the early death of his father, Merle became an ambitious if not overly strategic juvenile delinquent, and was eventually sentenced to 30 years in California’s infamous San Quentin prison. Hear how he managed to be creative and enterprising even while behind bars and what his driving force was to becoming a musician.
Marc, who himself got his start as a child actor, would eventually go on to tutor child star Danny Bonaduce. Marc shares his views on the problems with the entertainment industry and why the shock-jock era led by Howard Stern will be hard to replicate.
Meet the man whose own life has proven to be as interesting as those of his many subjects.
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Connect with Marc Eliot:
Website: https://www.marceliot.net/
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