Merle Haggard - I'm a Lonesome Fugitive/Branded Man
Facts
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I'm a Lonesome Fugitive/Branded Man
Music Price: You save 42%! As of Dec 5 1:32 EST (details)
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| Artist(s) | Merle Haggard |
| Studio | Capitol |
| Release Date | February 21, 2006 |
| UPC Code | 094634479424 |
| Buy this item | $10.97 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 1:32 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- I'm A Lonesome Fugitive
- All Of Me Belongs To You
- House Of Memories
- Life In Prison
- Whatever Happened To Me
- Drink Up And Be Somebody
- Someone Told My Story
- If You Want To Be My Woman
- Mary's Mine
- Skid Row
- My Rough And Rowdy Ways
- Mixed Up Mess Of A Heart
- Life In Prison (Alternate Take - bonus track)
- Someone Told My Story (Alternate Take - bonus track)
- Branded Man
- Loneliness Is Eating Me Alive
- Don't Get Married
- Somewhere Between
- You Don't Have Very Far To Go
- Gone crazy
- I Threw Away The Rose
- My Hands Are Tied
- Some Of Us Never Learn
- Long Black Limousine
- Go Home
- I Made The Prison Band
- I Threw Away The Rose (Alternate Take - bonus track)
- Loneliness Is Eating Me Alive (Alternate Take - bonus track)
Similar CDs
| Strangers/Swinging Doors & The Bottle Let Me Down | Mama Tried/Pride in What I Am | Sing Me Back Home/Legend Of Bonnie & Clyde | Hag/Someday We'll Look Back | Serving 190 Proof |
User Reviews
Average user review:| The Hag at the Top of his Game |
| The Best Introduction to Merle! |
| Third and fourth LPs continue Haggard's streak |
"I'm a Lonesome Fugitive" was recorded with Haggard's band in transition. Guitarist Roy Nichols had left, and was replaced for these sessions by studio hotshots James Burton and Glen Campbell. Surprisingly, the loss of Nichols' signature licks isn't all that noticeable. Liz Anderson's title track (and Haggard's first #1 single) is the perfect opener, parlaying a fugitive's rootlessness into a metaphor for Haggard's continual run from romantic turmoil. Haggard's a drowning man, and whether it's the nostalgia of "My House of Memories," the loneliness of "Life in Prison," or the bottle of "Drink Up and Be Somebody," he's always struggling to keep from going under.
Haggard's debt to Bakersfield is heard in the Don Rich-styled harmony (provided by Glen Campbell) on "Mixed Up Mess of a Heart," and his favor for Jimmie Rodgers made its first appearance here with "My Rough and Rowdy Ways." Bonus tracks include a tougher pre-Capitol version of "Life in Prison" (recorded for Tally, but unreleased at the time), and a more straight-forward take of "Someone Told My Story" culled from discarded 1966 album sessions.
"Branded Man" continued Haggard's roll. With Roy Nichols returned to the fold, the title track complements "I'm a Lonesome Fugitive" by showing that the parolee wears a scarlet mark as damning as the stripes of the escapee. Haggard offers several new originals, including the signature "I Threw Away the Rose," but he also takes on co-writers (Bakersfield legend Red Simpson for "You Don't Have Far to Go," and Bonnie Owens for "Gone Crazy"), and picks up songs from others, including a trio of tunes from Tommy Collins.
Collins' "Don't Get Married" is more hopeful in its longing than Haggard's typical songs of incarceration, and "I Made the Prison Band" actually feels pragmatic and light. Mexicali-styled guitars add a dramatic flair to several tunes, including the prisoner's romantic lament, "My Hands Are Tied." The album's most recognizable cover, the funereal classic "Long Black Limousine," is fine, but surprisingly underwhelming in contrast to Haggard's originals. Extras include early takes of "I Threw Away the Rose" and "Loneliness is Eating Me Alive," each of which lack the delicacy of the final album takes.
"Lonesome Fugitive" is the slightly more satisfying spin, but the beauty of Capitol's reissue series is that you don't have to choose. These two-fers include both original album covers (one on each side of the booklet), color photo reproductions, and newly struck liner notes. Though Haggard fans are likely to have a lot of this material on previous single-CD reissues or box sets, the logical album pairings and remastered 24-bit sound make these sets especially attractive. The only real nits one could pick is the absence of session credits, master numbering and chart positioning, as well as a lack of detail on some of the bonus tracks. These are minor issues for such a stellar series of five-star reissues. [©2006 hyperbolium dot com] May 2, 2006
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