Thank you to our Japanese correspondent Philip McLean for sending me these very nice pieces from Japan. A simple thing such as a cinema ticket is made to look like something very special when it comes from Japan, as does the souvenir booklet. The booklet is approx B5 in size (6.9"x9.8"). Many thanks Philip.
Sunday, 24 April 2016
Wednesday, 6 April 2016
Merle Haggard dies aged 79
I've just been informed of the sad passing of Country
singing legend Merle Haggard. For the Eastwood family of friends, Haggard will
be remembered for his contribution during Bronco Billy and his track Bar Room
Buddies.
Merle Haggard has died after a series of recent health
struggles. The legendary singer passed away on April 6, 2016, which was also
his 79th birthday.
Haggard canceled tour dates in December of 2015 after he
checked into a hospital and learned he had double pneumonia. In an interview
later with Willie’s Roadhouse on Sirius XM, he said he was “nearly dead” when
he was hospitalized for two weeks. He canceled shows scheduled for Jan. 30 and
31 after his double pneumonia returned. At the end of March, the legend
announced he was canceling all of his scheduled shows for April on doctor’s
orders.
According to Country Aircheck, Haggard had been in hospice
care recently. The country icon’s manager, Frank Mull, reveals that he died of
pneumonia at 9:20AM on Wednesday (April 6) in Palo Cedro, California.
Haggard was born Merle Ronald Haggard in 1937 just outside
of Bakersfield, Calif., a town that he would help make famous with his
revolutionary sound. His family struggled financially throughout his childhood,
living in an old converted boxcar after their home burned down. After Haggard’s
father died when he was 9, he turned rebellious, hopping a freight train to
Fresno and getting picked up by the authorities when he was just 10, according
to his official biography. He was in and out of reform schools and deemed
“incorrigible,” and ended up in and out of jail as a young adult, culminating
in a stretch in prison when he was 20 years old.
Haggard began to take music seriously while in prison at San
Quentin, where he was on hand for the Johnny Cash performance that was captured
for the iconic live album At San Quentin.
He began to make a name for himself in the club scene around
Bakersfield after his release, developing a hard-charging approach to country
music that prominently featured twangy electric guitars. He released his first
single, a cover of Wynn Stewart’s “Sing a Sad Song,” in 1964, but it was
Haggard’s own compositions that launched him as one of the most important and
influential country hitmakers of his generation. He released a long string of
deeply personal songs including “The Bottle Let Me Down,” “Branded Man,” “Sing
Me Back Home,” “Mama Tried” and many more, developing a reputation as one of
the most serious, hard-hitting artists in the genre.
Haggard maintained that successful streak through the 1970s
and into the 1980s, scoring more hits including “If We Make It Through
December,” “Ramblin’ Fever,” “I Think I’ll Just Stay Here and Drink” and
“That’s the Way Love Goes.” He stayed active in his later years, touring
regularly and releasing a new album, Django & Jimmie, with Willie Nelson in
2015, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard‘s Country Albums chart.
The legend’s personal life and health were frequently less
stable than his career. He was married and divorced four times before marrying
his fifth wife, Theresa Ann Lane, in 1993. He underwent angioplasty in 1995 to
unblock clogged arteries, and in 2008 Haggard had part of his lung removed
after he was diagnosed with non-small-cell lung cancer. He returned to the
stage just months after that surgery, and remained active in performing until
right before the end of his life.
Haggard was honored as BMI Icon in 1996, and recognized at
the Kennedy Center Honors in 2010. He won a slew of ACM, CMA and Grammy awards,
and was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1977. Haggard
was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1994.
RIP Sir.
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