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Keep Movin' On

Keep Movin' On
Keep Movin On Merle Haggard.jpg
Studio album by Merle Haggard
Released April 1975
Recorded March, June, September and November 1974 at Columbia Recording Studio and Jack Clement Recording Studio, Nashville, TN
Genre Country
Label Capitol
Producer Ken Nelson, Fuzzy Owen
Merle Haggard chronology
Merle Haggard Presents His 30th Album
(1974)Merle Haggard Presents His 30th Album1974
Keep Movin' On
(1975)
It's All in the Movies
(1976)It's All in the Movies1976
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars

Keep Movin' On is the 21st studio album by American country singer Merle Haggard, released in 1975. It reached number one on the Billboard country albums chart. "Movin' On" was a full-length version of a song Haggard recorded as the theme song to the TV series Movin' On.

Keep Movin' On would be one of Haggard's most commercially successful albums, containing three #1 hits. The first of these, "Kentucky Gambler," had been written by fellow country star Dolly Parton (she also provides background vocals on Haggard's version). It stayed at number one for a single week and spent a total of eleven weeks on the chart. Haggard had first recorded one of Parton's compositions, "In the Good Old Days (When Things Were Bad)" on his 1968 album Mama Tried.

"Always Wanting You" followed "Kentucky Gambler" to the top of the Billboard country singles chart, adorned with an almost easy listening pop sound that producer Ken Nelson also employs on several of the album's other tracks. The sweetened sound that Nelson employed on Haggard's final Capitol LPs followed the fashionable countrypolitan sound that was dominating country radio in the mid-seventies.

The final #1 song from the album was its title track, which was the full-length version of a song that Haggard had recorded as the theme song to the TV series Movin' On starring Claude Akins and Frank Converse, which ran for two seasons on NBC. "Movin' On" became Haggard's seventh consecutive #1 hit and thirteenth since 1970.

Another song from the album is "Life’s like Poetry", which Haggard wrote for his friend Lefty Frizzell, who was trying to make a comeback. Frizzell recorded the song in January 1975, and his version peaked at No. 67 on the Billboard country charts, and was to be Frizzell’s second-to-last single to hit the charts (before "Falling"); Frizzell would suffer from a stroke and die in July that year.


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