In California's Central Valley, two thousand miles away from country
music's hit machine, the hard edge of the Bakersfield Sound transformed
American music in the latter half of the twentieth century. It turned
displaced Oklahomans like Buck Owens and Merle Haggard into household
names, and it aggressively pushed style, instrumentation, and attitude
that countered the orchestral country pop churned out from Nashville. In
this compelling book, Robert E. Price traces the Sound's roots from the
Dust Bowl and World War II migrations through the heyday of Owens,
Haggard, and Hee Haw, and into the twenty-first century. Outlaw
country demands good storytelling, and Price obliges: to fully
understand the Sound and its musicians we dip into honky-tonks, dives,
and radio stations playing the songs of sun-parched days spent on oil
rigs and in cotton fields, the melodies of hardship and kinship, a
soundtrack for dancing and brawling. In other words, The Bakersfield
Sound immerses us in the unique cultural convergence that gave rise to
a visceral and distinctly California country music.