It was the moment WHEN THE KING BOWED TO THE OUTLAW, a story of respect that runs deeper than any chart position. George Strait was the polished “King of Country,” a quiet cowboy who rose to fame with grace. His hero was Merle Haggard, the hard-living poet from Bakersfield who had the grit of a prison yard in his voice. On the surface, they were night and day, but they shared an unbreakable bond over the soul of real country music. During his 2014 farewell tour, Strait didn’t just invite Haggard to sing; he brought his idol on stage in a symbolic passing of the torch, a public acknowledgment of the debt he owed. And after Haggard’s passing, the tribute never stopped, as the King continues to weave the Outlaw’s classics into his own shows, proving that even royalty knows who built the kingdom they rule.
The Outlaw Before the King: Merle Haggard’s Influence on George Strait Before George Strait earned the title “King of Country,”…