LDH”Merle Haggard died at his home in California from complications of pneumonia.” LDH


About the song
Merle Haggard Died on His 79th Birthday — April 6, 2016
PALO CEDRO, CALIFORNIA — Country music lost one of its most iconic voices when Merle Haggard passed away on his 79th birthday, April 6, 2016. The man who gave the world Okie from Muskogee, Mama Tried, and The Fightin’ Side of Me died at his California home from complications of pneumonia — ending a remarkable life that embodied both the beauty and the heartbreak of American country music.
Born in Bakersfield, California, on April 6, 1937, Merle Ronald Haggard grew up in poverty during the Great Depression. His father, a railroad worker, died when Merle was just nine years old — a loss that sent his life spiraling. A restless and rebellious boy, he dropped out of school and soon found himself in and out of juvenile detention centers. “I was running wild,” Haggard once admitted. “I didn’t know where I was headed, but it wasn’t anywhere good.”
By the age of 20, he was serving time in San Quentin State Prison for burglary. It was there, behind bars, that Haggard found redemption through music. Inspired by Johnny Cash’s legendary prison concert, Haggard began to write songs about regret, freedom, and the struggle to find meaning in a broken world. “Music saved my life,” he later said. “It gave me a reason to keep going.”
When he was released in 1960, Haggard poured his heart into songwriting. Within a few years, his rough-edged honesty caught the attention of producers in Bakersfield — the birthplace of a new, gritty brand of country sound. With his trademark twang and plainspoken lyrics, Merle gave voice to the working man, to the ex-con trying to rebuild his life, and to the lost souls of America’s heartland.
Hits like Mama Tried, Sing Me Back Home, and Branded Man captured both his remorse and resilience. “He didn’t just sing songs — he lived them,” said his close friend and fellow artist Willie Nelson. “Merle could take a line and make you feel every mile he’d walked to get there.”
The late 1960s and ’70s brought Haggard immense fame. His defiant anthem Okie from Muskogee became both celebrated and controversial — hailed by some as a patriotic statement and criticized by others as conservative rebellion during the Vietnam era. Yet Haggard later clarified, “It was a fun song, not a political one. I was just proud of where I came from.”
Through the decades, he continued to write about real life — from heartbreak to hope, from loss to redemption. His voice grew rougher with age, but his storytelling only deepened. Songs like If We Make It Through December and Kern River revealed a poet’s soul inside a rebel’s body.
Despite health struggles in his later years, including multiple bouts with pneumonia, Haggard never stopped performing. Even after being hospitalized in 2015, he returned to the stage, saying, “As long as there’s breath in me, I’ll sing.” Fans admired his toughness, the way he faced illness the same way he faced life — with grit and grace.
His death on his birthday carried a poetic symmetry that friends found deeply moving. “He told us a few weeks earlier that he thought he’d die on his birthday,” recalled his son Ben Haggard. “We all thought he was joking. But that’s exactly what happened. He left the world the same day he came into it.”
Fellow musicians flooded social media with tributes. Dolly Parton called him “a true poet of the people.” Kris Kristofferson said, “Merle was the purest voice of country music — unfiltered, untamed, unforgettable.” Willie Nelson, his longtime friend and collaborator, simply wrote, “He was my brother.”
Merle’s passing also marked the end of an era — the fading of the Bakersfield sound, and the loss of one of the last great outlaw storytellers. His songs remain a blueprint for authenticity in country music. As George Strait once put it, “Every artist who sings from the heart owes something to Merle Haggard.”
Even in death, his music lives on — a soundtrack for dreamers, drifters, and the working-class souls who still find truth in his words.
“Life’s been good to me, I guess,” Merle once reflected in an interview. “I’ve had my ups and downs, but I got to sing about all of it. That’s a pretty good trade.”
On April 6, 2016, as the sun set over his California ranch, the world said goodbye to a legend who lived by his own rules and wrote the songs that told America’s story. His body may have rested that day, but Merle Haggard’s voice — that honest, aching, unmistakable voice — will never fade from the heart of country music.


