10 Years After Merle Haggard’s Death, His Legacy Looms Large … Yet Elusive

It was ten years ago today—April 6th, 2016—that word came down that one of the greatest singers, songwriters, and entertainers to ever grace the medium of country music, Merle Haggard, had passed away due to pneumonia.
It was Charlie Daniels who ended up alerting the world to the news. At about 10:20 a.m. Central time that morning, Daniels said on social media, “Country music has suffered one of the greatest losses it will ever experience. Rest in peace Merle Haggard.” It was a very poignant and accurate assessment from Daniels. A strong case can be made for Merle as a “Mt. Rushmore” artist in the country music universe.
Merle Haggard passed away on his 79th birthday—something he’d predicted to his family and close friends previously as he’d been suffering from pneumonia and breathing issues, canceling shows and playing some others leading up to his final days. Merle Haggard was born April 6th, 1937 in Oildale, California, near Bakersfield. He was raised in a house converted out of a train boxcar.
Just like friends Willie Nelson and George Jones, Merle Haggard wanted to play shows right up to his death, and go out doing what he wanted to do, and what he did best. Toby Keith helped Merle Haggard through one of his final shows at the Mandalay Bay Casino in Las Vegas on February 6th, 2016. Merle played his official final public show at the Paramount Theatre in Oakland, CA on February 13th.
A decade on from that tragic day, and the influence of Merle Haggard still lingers thick in the air all around country music. And how could it not? “Mama Tried” is now a part of standard Americana parlance, all over T-Shirts and bumper stickers. “Okie From Muskogee,” “Swinging Doors,” “Silver Wings,” his duet with Willie Nelson on “Pancho and Lefty,” they all loom large in the country music catalog.
To mark the 10th Anniversary of Merle Haggard’s passing, mainstream country traditionalist Cody Johnson released a version of the classic Merle Haggard song “Footlights” in tribute—a song that in many respects encapsulates the raw spirit of Haggard, who never played a part, never bit his tongue, and never was anything less than his true authentic self, on or off stage. Of course Cody could never match the iconic voice and moments of Merle. Nobody could. But Cody did his part to make sure Merle was remembered.
So has Jamey Johnson, who released a version of “Pretty When It’s New” in honor of Merle Haggard’s 89th birthday.
It is inarguable that Merle Haggard and his memory have a continued presence in the country space, and his influence and legacy remains strong. But it does feel fair to wonder if enough is being done to chronicle, archive, preserve, and pay forward that legacy for present and future generations, including the fans who might know of Merle’s legacy, but never got to experience it in the present tense, or have never heard of Merle Haggard at all.
A few days after Merle’s death, a quote from Haggard resurfaced where he claimed, “I’ve probably got 300 to 400 songs that I haven’t released that I collected over the years. We call it ‘The Archive.’ And we haven’t released anything from that. When I get unable to record or sing anymore, or get killed or something, well they’ll probably put it out.”
Merle’s son Ben Haggard confirmed in 2025 the presence of “never been heard, new songs and stuff.” But 10 years on, we’ve not heard anything about any of these songs being made ready for release, even as resurfaced songs that were accidentally overlooked from artists like Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash, and Don Williams make their way to the public. The 10th Anniversary of Merle’s death might have made for a good opportunity to surface some of this stuff.
Meanwhile, multiple biopic films about Merle Haggard have been in the works for years, but seem to have stalled for one reason or another. One called Done It All written by screenwriter Cliff Hollingsworth, and developed in part by a man named Carl Cooper who was hand-selected by Haggard seems to have been mothballed after first being announced days after Merle’s death.
Another separate biopic based on the Merle Haggard memoir Sing Me Back Home written by Robin Bissell and Merle Haggard’s widow Theresa Haggard was announced in 2020, with Amazon acquiring the rights to it. Actor Sam Rockwell was initially slated to play Merle in the film. Six years on though, and we’ve heard nothing further.
One bright spot could be an Ethan Hawke-directed documentary on Merle Haggard called Highway 99: A Double Album that debuted at the Telluride Film Festival in September of 2025. No word when it might receive wide distribution, but it did stimulate the release of Workin’ Man – Willie Sings Merle by Willie Nelson full of Merle Haggard sons recorded in the lat 2010s.
Then there was the planned Merle Haggard Museum set to go in at the same location as the Johnny Cash Museum on Lower Broadway in Nashville. First announced in 2017 with great fanfare, it eventually was scrubbed to make room for a Johnny Cash-themed restaurant that opened in the space in 2019.
Three of Merle Haggard’s sons have done a good job keeping their father’s legacy alive, while contributing music of their own. Marty Haggard and Noel Haggard from Merle’s first marriage are both performers, while Ben Haggard from Merle’s last marriage might be the ultimate torch bearer into the future. But the long-awaited debut album from Ben has yet to come about, even if he remains a popular and beloved live performer.
Sturgill Simpson had become very close to Merle Haggard right before his death, and Merle once intimated to Simpson that once he passed, they would open his chest up and make it into a gift shop. That’s not how Merle Haggard wanted to be remembered. It also must be hard for Merle’s widow Theresa to sift through archive material and make plans while the memory of the loss remains present, while also trying to weigh Merle’s wishes of how he would want to be remembered.
But a decade on from Merle Haggard’s death, you do get these sense that there is a struggle to get these various protects, archive recordings, and other efforts to preserve Merle’s legacy green lit, for whatever reason. There is no rush, necessarily. We have eternity for these things to finally make it to the public, however impatient a public hungry for anything Merle Haggard might be.
The good news is Merle Haggard’s legacy remains loved and supported through the lasting impact of his music. The thing about Mt. Rushmore is that it’s forever. And it’s difficult to impossible to imagine a country music universe without Merle Haggard’s visage looming large in it.
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April 6, 2026 @ 11:44 am
Thanks for writing this, Trigger. No doubt he’d be on a country Rushmore. Just not sure how valuable some little museum or biopic starring Sam Rockwell would be, compared to the artistry he left us. I’ll commemorate the 10th by listening to “The Farmer’s Daughter.”
April 6, 2026 @ 11:47 am
Thank you for these eloquent words.
As one who knows both their musics more than passingly, I maintain that while Hank will always be a towering figure, Merle is the greater artist. Let’s hope we live to see the release of the unissued material.
April 6, 2026 @ 11:51 am
Jamey Johnson released a version of “Pretty When it’s New” to mark the anniversary.
While it was a newer Haggard song, it’s still very good
April 6, 2026 @ 12:17 pm
Merle still sounds confident and real.
April 6, 2026 @ 1:11 pm
I blame Theresa.
And; Merle’s last decades, musically, wasn’t much to brag about considering what he had already done. It’s fair to say that he never reached the level of artistry he had with Capitol. Yes, lots of great songs post-Capitol, and a few good albums, but too many fillers, unfocused production and a throwaway attitude toward recordings in general.
The 70’s was hard on a lot of the greats, very, very few of them maintained a healthy career, often fueled by bad living and other misguided choices. The circuit of county fairs, rodeos, army bases and oldies shows became their lifeline, while lesser talented dudes with a photogenic look and a pop attitude rose to the heights of the charts.
Even when we consider all this, Merle is the greatest country artist we ever had. Never a musical maverick or inventor, but a refiner of his chosen form of art.
April 6, 2026 @ 2:40 pm
You blame Theresa for WHAT?
After saying that, you expostulate on a bunch of things that she had zero to do with.
A new generation comes in and the old one goes out. That’s how it’s always been. (Merle was actually in that small percentage of stars who do have long careers that span generations.)
Some people say that there’s a woman to blame, but it’s nobody’s fault.
Or it was his own damn fault.
April 6, 2026 @ 3:46 pm
Yep, I blame Theresa for the crappy handling of Merle’s legacy. She’s the one juridically in charge, not Merle’s surving offsprings.
Considering how she handled Merle (and his business) ever since they became a couple in the 80’s, I stand firm on my accusement.
(Raymond McDonald, Biff Adams (and literally everybody who played with the Strangers post-Theresa), Jason Fine, Marty Haggard, David Cantwell etc. all brought up bits of how she controlled Merle, even telling him that nobody had called as he laid dying – a plain lie, this according to McDonald and Scott Joss).
She might have tamed him and given him a few extra years, but it came with a creative cost.
April 6, 2026 @ 6:27 pm
You’re still all over the map. You say Hag was fading since the end of his Capitol years and had a throwaway attitude toward recordings in general. And then you blame Theresa for the “creative cost” that she imposed on him.
Merle left Capitol for MCA and “I’m Always on a Mountain When I Fall” in 1978, And he left MCA for Epic and “Big City” in 1981. He left Epic in 1990 and was fighting with Mike Curb at Curb records when he married Theresa in 1993.
To say that Haggard’s fifth wife is to blame for him not having a creative resurgence in the ’90s and beyond is bizarre.
Haggard was moody and probably hard to get along with. Heck, Leona Williams speaks more warmly of her five years with Ferlin Husky, when she helped him through with what seemed to be dementia and kept him active and even performing, when he could, than of her years married to Merle.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VG-91hvLDXE&t=214s
April 6, 2026 @ 4:04 pm
I recently read a Merle biography and Theresa comes off an Alice Perrers, commandeering and dominating over an aged warrior, uninterested in his legacy but extremely driven in feathering her nest.
Trigger has mentioned multiple times that an artist’s legacy depends on the family. Conway Twitty’s heirs fell into endless squabbling.
Merle’s vault needs to be released. It has been a decade.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:48 pm
Ancient greek saying; we get the spouses we deserve.
So, whatever shit Merle did in his life, he surely paid for it during the last 30 years or so.
April 6, 2026 @ 5:10 pm
I love Merle, he was extremely generous and loyal to his friends, but his treatment of Bonnie and other wives was detestable and his beatdown of that poor mentally disabled kid (and he really didn’t apologize for it) was hard to read.
April 6, 2026 @ 1:17 pm
In my opinion the greatest singer songwriter in country history.
April 6, 2026 @ 1:33 pm
Ditto
April 6, 2026 @ 1:48 pm
One more yeah
April 6, 2026 @ 2:28 pm
Merle was amazing. I always felt, and still feel, that Merle and Loretta are the male and female of all time. And their careers were mostly parallel (Loretta hit in 1960) and both of them were so dramatically successful and true to the music.
A Merle Haggard movie would be amazing – for hardcore fans. I cannot see it being a hit in today’s commercial market. That market hasn’t been too kind to country music vehicles – other than Coal Miner’s Daughter and Walk The Line, which both won Oscars. I would say that a deep dive into his legend, within an intelligent and historical documentary, aimed for, say, Netflix, could be a success.
April 6, 2026 @ 2:41 pm
Forgot to mention, there is a documentary directed by Ethan Hawke that premiered last year in Telluride, Colorado. Haven’t heard anything yet about when it might be released or distributed. But it is something to look forward to.
April 6, 2026 @ 3:54 pm
As Merle himself said; a movie would’nt even scratch the surface, his rap sheet alone is proof of that.
And; that movie (or tv show) would be enormously inaccurate, just like every other movie or series about a famous person.
Merle was never a star in the way Cash or Kenny or Dolly was, his appeal isn’t the same as Willie’s or Elvis’.
And for that, we should be grateful. Instead of a showbizzy sellout, he was always his own man.
That’s his legacy.
April 6, 2026 @ 3:05 pm
I’ve always thought of Merle Haggard as the greatest country artist of all time. I grew up in the 80s with my dad playing nothing but country radio, and Merle was always there. Now every time I hear him, it takes me right back to those days and to my dad, who’s been gone for over 20 years.
What’s strange is realizing it’s been a full decade since Merle passed, and yet it feels like we’re still waiting. We keep hearing about unreleased songs, but nothing ever seems to surface. Even his son Ben, who was clearly carrying the torch several years back, still hasn’t put out that long-rumored album, especially the one that was supposedly tied to Sturgill.
For someone whose legacy looms this large, it’s just odd how quiet things have been. You’d think after ten years, we’d have heard a little more from the vault.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:22 pm
Outside of the country music community, ol’ Merle is almost unknown.
An example; his total album sales over 5 decades stands at a disapponting 6,4 million (1,1 million is the Pancho-album with Willie).
Reeves, Waylon, Willie, Cash, even Twain and Jackson, ranks high above Merle when it comes to the total sale. Garth Brooks’ Double Live album alone sold more than any of the aforementioned (23 millions).
Quality and talend seldom equals sale value.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:37 pm
Let’s face it, all of those singers, except Alan, resided on the fringe of the traditional country music sound. That is why they are popular with outside folks and you hear refrains of, “I don’t like country music but I like Dolly or Willie or Cash.”
The country artists that cross into mainstream popularity don’t sound super country.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:49 pm
Not to keep harping on it, but that’s why Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas” is so wild as it spends its fifth week as the #1 song in all of music. I know it’s not super country, but it’s most definitely super country for 2026.
April 6, 2026 @ 5:01 pm
You’re not wrong.
Even though Merle and Alan both strayed into the pop-field now and then – even bluegrass – their image was – and is – solid country boys.
(Thinking about it, the only genre Merle never dipped his toes into, was rock. He came close on “It’s Gonna Be Me” (complete with a classic Keef Richards riff via Reggie Young), but still, no cigar.)
April 6, 2026 @ 4:07 pm
Trigger,
Do you know why Merle quit doing call-outs to the Strangers in his albums? The recent biography I read had nothing on the topic. He quit the practice in 1989. I always loved how he carried on the Bob Wills tradition. I wish more country singers did it.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:46 pm
Well your question sent me down a rabbit hole. One of my favorite newer Merle Haggard songs is “Bareback” off his 2000 album “If I Could Only Fly.” I know it’s 25 years old now, but it’s “new” meaning it didn’t come from his classic era. It’s a Western Swing tune and he calls out the players. But I just went to Spotify to verify that, and the album is not there, nor is his other ANTI release “Roots, Vol. 1.” It’s also not on Amazon Music. But it IS on Apple music for some reason.
So I don’t have an answer for you, except to say that there are some newer songs where he did the call outs like “Bareback.”
April 6, 2026 @ 5:06 pm
Interesting.
The Strangers’ wikipedia page listed call-outs from the 60s to 1989 and implied the practice stopped.
I know Merle’s great album I love Dixie Blues isn’t on Spotify. A lot of his catalog is missing from streaming.
April 6, 2026 @ 5:12 pm
And thanks for mentioning “Bareback.”
It has a Don Markham call-out! Don is my favorite Stranger.
That Wikipedia page for the Strangers needs updated. I am glad Merle didn’t discontinue the practice.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:18 pm
I totally agree that his camp whoever controls that, hasnt done their job on keeping his legacy alive and going. Not that merle needs it but it would be cool for his fans. I dont know exactly where i put merle on that ladder of greats, there are a few acts on there but hes pretty high.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:35 pm
As much as I respect Merle and his legacy, I’m also aware of his short-comings; as I mentioned earlier, his output the last three decades of his life isn’t close to great, so logically it tells me that the left-overs must be even worse.
That is something to consider, too. I would love to hear some buried gold, but what I have heard, sprinkled over various official and un-official releases, isn’t great. Some of it is good, sure, especially the Cracker Barrel release “Working Man’s Journey”, but fate isn’t kind to Merle; his earlier recordings are so great that the latter offerings simply doesn’t hold up.
That said; even the silliest song Merle ever wrote and/or recorded is better than the crap on the Billboard list today.
April 6, 2026 @ 5:10 pm
Disagree, chill factor came out during this time,very fine album. Also the song in my next life which is one of my favorites of his came out in 94. If i could only fly came out early 2000s, real good song. Does it compare in total to earlier years,no esp far as single success. But the fact that in my next life didnt even chart in top 40, tells me thats a bogus way to tell. The older i get is in alan jacksons top 5 songs all time and it didnt chart so chart success means zero really esp as stars get older. Also as older stars get put out to pasture far as charts or radio, they tend to do more personal stuff they like rather than chase hits.
April 6, 2026 @ 9:25 pm
If I Could Only Fly was written by Blaze Foley…not the Hag
April 6, 2026 @ 4:20 pm
My favorite Merle songs:
Rainbow Stew: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXAj8ASbP90&list=RDxXAj8ASbP90&start_radio=1
I’m White Boy: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYsp6fUyhaw&list=RDQYsp6fUyhaw&start_radio=1&pp=ygUdaSdtIGEgd2hpdGUgYm95IG1lcmxlIGhhZ2dhcmSgBwHSBwkJ2QoBhyohjO8%3D
I’ll Just Stay Here and Drink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1bRGH9eD5o&list=RDM1bRGH9eD5o&start_radio=1
Ramblin’ Fever: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lNX28cJvn8&list=RD9lNX28cJvn8&start_radio=1&pp=ygUbcmFtYmxpbiBmZXZlciBtZXJsZSBoYWdnYXJkoAcB
Workin’ Man Blues: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuaKBLENvfk&list=RDEuaKBLENvfk&start_radio=1&pp=oAcB
Okie from Muskogee’s Coming Home: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tn4XjH6-H4M&list=RDTn4XjH6-H4M&start_radio=1
Church Street Station Concert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=immHJ3aYxug&list=RDimmHJ3aYxug&start_radio=1&pp=ygUjbWVybGUgaGFnZ2FyZCBjaHVyY2ggc3RyZWV0IHN0YXRpb26gBwE%3D
His Bob Wills covers are great, especially the ones from the Austin ’85 concert.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:40 pm
His last truly great song, written by old pal Red Simpson;
Lucky Old Colorado https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9YGVnLZPlbE
One of his best vocal performances (on a record, that is, Merle bettered himself live all the time).
April 6, 2026 @ 7:21 pm
Yeah, I’d bet against “I’m White Boy” showing up on any new Hag compilations intended to introduce him to Gen Z audiences.
April 6, 2026 @ 10:21 pm
Merle wrote it partly tongue-in-cheek as an answer to James Brown’s “Say It Loud ( I’m Black and I’m Proud)”.
The un-released re-recording done in the 2000’s, produced by Merle Travis’ son Thom Bresh added an intentional funky beat.
The generation Z should be force-fed a marathon of 70’s/early 80’s comedies. Especially the Mel Brooks/Richard Pryor-written “Blazing Saddles”.
April 6, 2026 @ 4:28 pm
Merle and the Texas Playboys!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHJPHjb6WN4&list=RDeHJPHjb6WN4&start_radio=1
April 6, 2026 @ 5:26 pm
Merle was our nation’s finest singer/songwriter and musician.
April 6, 2026 @ 7:02 pm
Was brought up in a home rich with the voices of many stellar musicians playing on the stereo.
Everything from Mario Lanza, to, you name it.
Walking through the living room around the age of 14, stopped at the stereo to replay the record that was on.
The singer was Merle.
It’s tough grabbing the attention of a 14 year old, but he succeeded.
April 6, 2026 @ 8:08 pm
As much or more than anyone in the history of country music, Merle was an enigma. It should come as no surprise that his legacy is a reflection of that.