On his return to England at the age of 18, Hague soon started singing with various bands. At this stage it was mostly
rock and roll with some
country and western. He decided that the latter was his main interest. In 1964 he formed his own country trio called The Westernaires. In 1966, Hague turned professional and made his first recording, called "Mule Train", and married Ivy. They now have two children. "Mule Train" carried three tracks: the title song, a
Hank Williams song and a self-penned song called "
Don't Say a Word". Since then Hague has made 15 albums and a video. He has won numerous music and song writing awards at both club and national level. His most important award was as Country Music Entertainer of the Year in the 1981
Aria/
Daily Mirror Golden Guitar Awards. In his act he covered Hank Williams,
Johnny Cash,
Jim Reeves,
Don Williams,
Waylon Jennings,
Bobby Bare,
Randy Travis,
Alan Jackson,
Confederate Railroad,
The Tractors and
The Mavericks. Hague's last public performance was on 9 July 2004. He was suffering from pain through the gig and in the following days things got worse. He was diagnosed as having a problem with four of his
intervertebral discs. He was told that it would be a long road to recovery, so he decided to retire from musical performance. Doctors were not confident that he would walk again given his cerebral palsy, but he has made significant progress and is now able to get around using walking sticks. ==Writing and broadcasting==