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Big City (Merle Haggard album)

1981 studio album by Merle Haggard From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big City (Merle Haggard album)
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Big City is the thirty-third studio album by American country music artist Merle Haggard backed by the Strangers, released in 1981. It was his debut on the Epic label after ending his association with MCA. Big City peaked at number three on the Billboard Country Album charts and number 161 on the Pop Album charts. It is an RIAA-certified Gold album.[1]

Quick Facts Studio album by Merle Haggard, Released ...
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Background

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After five years at MCA Records, Haggard jumped to Epic in 1982, and the move appeared to spark his creativity; he wrote or co-wrote eight of the LP's twelve tracks, including its two #1 singles, "Big City" and "My Favorite Memory." Haggard entered the studio with his band the Strangers and his mentor Lewis Talley and, in a two-day marathon recording session, produced enough songs for this release, plus Haggard’s 1982 LP, Going Where the Lonely Go. Many of the songs on Big City explore the struggle of the working man amid the complexities and challenges of urban life and aging.

The other single release, “Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver),” peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and also won the Academy of Country Music 1982 Song of the Year.[citation needed]

Big City also contains a rerecording of "You Don't Have Very Far to Go," which had originally appeared on Haggard's 1967 album Branded Man. "I Always Get Lucky With You" was later recorded by Haggard's friend George Jones for his 1983 album Shine On and became his last #1 single.

The CD reissue of Big City features two bonus tracks: "I Won't Give Up My Train," a duet with Roger Miller, and the uncredited "Call Me."

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Critical reception

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Thom Jurek of AllMusic believes the album "stands among his finest—and most lasting—recordings," adding, "Big City, both the cut and the album, revisits the seemingly eternal themes in Haggard's best work—the plight of the honest, decent working man amid the squalor, complication, and contradiction of urban life."[2] Music critic Robert Christgau wrote "This isn't just for his cult—it's for the whole damn country audience... you can only tell how much filler there is by listening till you're sick of it."[3]

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Track listing

All tracks composed by Merle Haggard; except where indicated:

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Personnel

  • Merle Haggard – vocals, guitar

The Strangers:

  • Roy Nichols – guitar, harmonica
  • Norm Hamlet – steel guitar, dobro
  • Tiny Moore – fiddle, mandolin
  • Bobby Wayne – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
  • Mark Yeary – piano
  • Jimmy Belken – fiddle
  • Dennis Hromek – bass
  • Biff Adam – drums
  • Don Markham – trumpet, saxophone

with:

and:

Production notes

  • Produced by Merle Haggard
  • Engineered by Lewis Talley
  • Mastered by Chris Athens
  • Cover Photography by Norman Seeff

Charts

More information Chart (1981–1982), Peak position ...

Singles

More information Single, Chart ...
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References

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