IN 1959, MERLE HAGGARD GOT THROWN INTO SOLITARY AT SAN QUENTIN. HIS CELL WAS NEXT TO DEATH ROW. HE COULD HEAR THE MEN THEY WERE GETTING READY TO KILL. “I realized what a mess I made out of my life. I got out of there and stayed out of there.” At the time, Merle was 21. He’d been in trouble since age 11, when his own mother turned him over to juvenile authorities as “incorrigible.” Burglary at 19. Failed escape from a Bakersfield jail. Fifteen-year sentence at San Quentin. Then a bootleg booze operation inside the walls that landed him in the hole, right beside the row. He listened. Some of those men walked out and never came back. Merle came out of solitary a different person. He went to every man he’d ever wronged or stolen from and paid them back — took him until age 31 to finish, including his own mother. Two years later he was out on parole. Four years after that, his first single. Thirty-eight number ones. “Sing Me Back Home” was about a man he knew on death row who asked for one last song before they took him. But Merle never talked much about those nights in solitary. About what it sounded like when the row went quiet before a date. About what a man hears in the dark when he’s young enough to still get out…
When San Quentin Went Quiet: The Night Merle Haggard Began To Change In 1959, Merle Haggard was only 21 years…