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Ramblin' Fever

Ramblin' Fever
Ramblin' Fever.jpg
Studio album by Merle Haggard
Released May 1977
Recorded March 1977
Genre Country
Length 28:51
Label MCA
Producer Ken Nelson, Hank Cochran
Merle Haggard chronology
Songs I'll Always Sing
(1977)Songs I'll Always Sing1977
Ramblin' Fever
(1977)
A Working Man Can't Get Nowhere Today
(1977)A Working Man Can't Get Nowhere Today1977
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars

Ramblin' Fever is the 25th studio album by American country singer Merle Haggard, released in 1977. It was his first on the MCA label after recording for Capitol Records since 1965. It reached Number 5 on the Country album chart.Ramblin' Fever was reissued on CD in 2002.

Haggard had enjoyed an immensely successful artistic and commercial run with Capitol and producer Ken Nelson, accumulating twenty-four #1 country singles since 1966. According to music journalist Daniel Cooper's essay for the 1994 Haggard retrospective Down Every Road, there was no animosity or disillusionment with the Capitol brass, and the change was made simply because MCA had made a better offer. In his 2013 Haggard biography The Running Kind, David Cantwell notes that by the latter half of the 1970s the singer had placed forty-three singles on Billboard's country charts, had won the Country Music Association's top prize, "Entertainer of the Year," had been pardoned by California governor Ronald Reagan, had performed for President Richard Nixon, and had made the cover of Time magazine, and in response, "He ran. As the Seventies wound to an end, he was more restless than usual.... He even moved to Nashville for a while, and in 1978, divorced Bonnie Owens and married Leona Williams. Then, in 1979, he announced he was quitting music entirely." Haggard's tenure with MCA would be far shorter than his stay at Capitol; he would sign with Epic Records in 1981.

Haggard's final two Capitol albums, My Love Affair with Trains and The Roots of My Raising, contained only two Haggard-written songs, a far cry from his earlier albums when he would routinely compose most of the songs himself. Ramblin' Fever only features a couple Haggard originals: the southern rock-tinged title track, which rose to #2 on the country charts, and "I Think It's Gone Forever," a co-write with Leona Williams. "I wrote it at Leona Williams' house in the Seventies there one afternoon," Haggard remembers in the 1987 concert video Poet of the Common Man. "I don't recall what in the hell caused me to write it." His first single at MCA, "If We're Not Back In Love By Monday," had also peaked at #2. According to Daniel Cooper's Down Every Road liner notes, Haggard hates his vocal on the Sonny Throckmorton tune.


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