I'm a Lonesome Fugitive
(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers
Branded Man
Swinging Doors
Sing Me Back Home
The Bottle Let Me Down
The Legend of Bonnie and Clyde
I Threw Away the Rose
Mama Tried
I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am
Hungry Eyes
Street Singer
Workin' Man Blues
Jesus, Take a Hold
Okie From Muskogee
I Can't Be Myself
The Fightin' Side of Me
Sidewalks of Chicago
Daddy Frank (The Guitar Man)
Soldier's Last Letter
Carolyn
Someday We'll Look Back
Grandma Harp
The Emptiest Arms in the World
It's Not Love (But It's Not Bad)
Here Comes the Freedom Train
I Wonder If They Ever Think of Me
Sing a Sad Song
Everybody's Had the Blues
Just Between the Two of Us
If We Make It Through December
I'm Gonna Break Every Heart I Can
Things Aren't Funny Anymore
What Have You Got Planned Tonight, Diana
Old Man from the Mountain
A Working Man Can't Get Nowhere Today
Kentucky Gambler
The Running Kind
Always Wanting You
Making Believe
Movin' On
The Way It Was in '51
It's All in the Movies
High on a Hilltop
The Roots of My Raising
I'll Leave the Bottle on the Bar
Cherokee Maiden
Silver Wings
Most popular songs of Merle Haggard
Okie From Muskogee
1968 • The Legend Of Bonnie & Clyde
Mama Tried
1968 • The Legend Of Bonnie & Clyde
A Better Love Next Time
1989 • 5:01 Blues
Wouldn't That Be Something
1989 • 5:01 Blues
Thanking the Good Lord
1987 • Chill Factor
We Never Touch at All
1987 • Chill Factor
Man from Another Time
1987 • Chill Factor
Chill Factor
1987 • Chill Factor
The Old Rugged Cross
1971 • The Land Of Many Churches
This Song Is Mine
Stop the World and Let Me Off
Texas Fiddle Song
Trivia about the album The Very Best Of Merle Haggard by Merle Haggard
- In what year was the album “The Very Best Of Merle Haggard” released by Merle Haggard?
- The album “The Very Best Of Merle Haggard” was released in 2007 by Merle Haggard, featuring 48 tracks.
- What is the most successful song from the album “The Very Best Of Merle Haggard” by Merle Haggard?
- “Okie From Muskogee” is the biggest hit from the album “The Very Best Of Merle Haggard” by Merle Haggard.