If We Make It Through December (album) explained

If We Make It Through December
Type:Studio album
Artist:Merle Haggard and The Strangers
Cover:If We Make It Through December.jpg
Released:February 1974
Recorded:April, November 1971, September 1972, January, July 1973
Studio:Columbia (Nashville, Tennessee)
Genre:Country
Length:30:13
Label:Capitol
Producer:Ken Nelson, Fuzzy Owen
Prev Title:It's Not Love (But It's Not Bad)
Prev Year:1973
Next Title:Merle Haggard Presents His 30th Album
Next Year:1974

If We Make It Through December is the sixteenth studio album by American country music singer Merle Haggard and The Strangers, released in 1974. It reached number 4 on the Billboard country album charts.[1] The title track was previously released on Haggard's Christmas release of 1973, A Christmas Present. The single spent four weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles chart in December 1973 and January 1974, and cracked the Top 30 of the Billboard Hot 100. "If We Make It Through December" was the No. 2 song of the year on Billboard's Hot Country Singles 1974 year-end chart.[2]

History

Haggard's 1973 Christmas single "If We Make It Through December" proved to be so popular that it became the title track for this February 1974 release. The song explores the feelings of an unemployed father struggling to make ends meet and provide a happy Christmas for his daughter. As Daniel Cooper observes in the liner notes to the 1994 Haggard box set Down Every Road, "That it's one of the most heartbreaking Christmas songs ever recorded didn't matter to people who prefer honestly rendered pain to false merriment."[3] In his book Merle Haggard: The Running Kind, David Cantwell notes that "If We Make It Through December" is a Christmas song, but "it feels like an anti-Christmas song. The character he plays isn't just feeling blue this holiday season like we've seen in hundreds of other Christmas numbers. He hates Christmas, hates the whole idea of it, at least this year."[4] The song reached number one on the country singles chart and crossed over to number 28 on the pop charts, becoming Haggard's biggest hit.

Although Haggard had been writing the majority of the songs on his LPs for years, outside contributions dominate this album. As he later recalled in his 1981 autobiography Sing Me Back Home, Haggard and wife Bonnie Owens were splitting up at the time.[5]

Critical reception

Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic writes, "Usually, Merle Haggard's musical eclecticism is a virtue, but on If We Make It Through December it hurts the overall impact of the album. Many of the individual tracks—particularly the gentle, yearning title track and good versions of Lefty Frizzell's 'I'm An Old, Old Man (Tryin' To Live While I Can)' and the country standard 'To Each His Own'- work well on their own, but often the straight-up country, western swing, Dixieland experiments and pop-tinged ballads seem at odds with each other." Music critic Robert Christgau wrote "Last time it was good to hear him go contemporary again. This time one of the two contemporary standouts sounds mysteriously like Bob Wills. The Lefty Frizzell and Floyd Tillman remakes come across fresh and clean. The Ink Spots remake doesn't."

Personnel

The Strangers

with

and

Charts

Year-end charts

Notes and References

  1. Allmusic entry for If We Make It Through December.
  2. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/charts/yearend_chart_display.jsp?f=Hot+Country+Songs&g=Year-end+Singles&year=1974 Billboard charts 1974
  3. Down Every Road 1962–1994 compilation album. Liner notes by Daniel Cooper
  4. Book: Cantwell, David . Merle Haggard: The Running Kind. University of Texas Press . 2013. 978-0-292-71771-8.
  5. Book: Haggard, Merle . Russell, Peggy . Sing Me Back Home: My Story. Simon & Schuster. 1983. 978-0-671-45275-9.
  6. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 132.
  7. Top Country Albums – Year-End 1974. Billboard. July 21, 2021.