ALLMAN BROTHERS : JACKSONVILLE 1969 : DON'T WANT YOU NO MORE .
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
- The Allman Brothers performing their first official gig together just 4 days after forming after their legendary March 26, 1969 "Jacksonville Jam" .
March 30th 1969 . Don't Want You No More .
Richard Hombre Price says about this video: "The youtube post above Allman Brothers, Jacksonville 1969 is not the ABB. It is Dickey and Berry's version of The Second Coming recorded live by Alan Facemier. Reese is on keys, no Duane present, no Gregg present, John Meeks on drums, Dale Betts singing in unison with Dickey's guitar part. After all that's been said and all that will be said, You can hear that Dickey Betts is already kicking ass on guitar and tone without Duane's help. Duane himself spoke highly about Dickey's guitar work and never saw him as an underling. You can already hear what started happening in all the jams when Duane started sitting in later. There was already a heavy blues, rock, jazz fusion going on with all of us who lived it before that actual formation of the ABB."
I was there. I also had been to a few of The Second Coming shows before this." Don't want you no more" was a Spencer Davis Group song. When Dickie's band The second Coming covered the song, they sang the words. When I saw this show I had the odd feeling....I know words to this. It was years later before I put it all together. Incidentally, there were only a few hundred people at this show. I was 17 tears old.
There was another jam a few weeks later at the Jacksonville Civic Auditorium. On Easter Sunday April 15. It was the Second Coming with the load and Crazy Elephant. I have the poster. It was a few years later that I realized I had seen the Allman Bros before they were the Allman Bros
I was there!
I am from JAX too - love these guys!
hearing Duane's solo, you know he wanted to play this tune at a higher tempo. but this laid back version is awesome. origins of a great band!
Matthew Clemente this is the tempo of the original SDG record.
Number one band
The organ player is most likely Reese Wynans,who played with SRV and Double Trouble.....just a guess.
This was on the 57 gold top, Duane later traded with $200 and a marshal 1/2 stack, but keep the 57's pickups, for the 59 cherryburst he laid down the best part of Laya and Filmore East album on, the Gold top is in Macon's Ga. Music Hall of Fame and the Cherryburst is in the Ohio Music Hall of Fame, lucky enough to have touched them both when the gave free sunday concerts in Macon's central city park and i hung out with them at Idle Wild South a few times
*GooglesCrew101 I thought Duane & Dickey eventually swapped, Duane taking the red SG (better for slide) & Dickey taking the Cherryburst. Duane still had a Tobaccoburst for lead. I saw Dickey playing the Cherryburst as late as 1974, probably later. Witness Chaz Daniels in '74 on 'The South's Gonna Do It Again': People down in GA come from near & far/ To hear Richard Betts pickin' on that red guitar. I think Dickey used the Cherry on his "Highway Call" solo LP before the humbuckers went bad. Greatest sounding ax in history.
wholey crap ! one of the earliest gigs ? Wow love it :)
So could you tell me if this was unrehearsed? Didn't they just "start" jamming together and thank God someone had tapes rolling and got "THIS"..???? Am I right?
thank you now that's guitar work that I love,thanks for posting
Thank you for posting
Duane had to be a gentleman about Reese as I read. He sounds great here but Gregg is Blood man........Reese is out and Gregory is in and when he came back to Macon ole Duane had a brand new Hammond Btree (3) waitin' for him with 3 newly rolled joints on top! What a gift eh? Gregg almost chickened out after hearing Berry sing Hoochie Coochie Man and Duane stomped all over his ass. But later Gregg sang and the band was thrilled. Thank God
Indeed. Duane had the vision and the ABB is the result of that vision. What a talented bunch of ppl, and what a genius Duane was...If only music were this good today as it was then.
Yep....he's the Pete Best of the ABB....They needed a singer and someone who could write songs so Reese was out and Gregg was in. We wouldn't have Whipping Post or Dreams....etc without that decision being made
I get what you’re saying but he’s hardly a Pete Best.
Reese played a concert with the ABB in May of 1970 when Gregg was out sick and Duane was singing. You can hear it at The Allman Brothers Band: Live at Fort Homer W. Hesterly Armory, Tampa, FL (1970/05/??) Great version of "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" at 21:50".
Reese Wynans is a superb keyboard player, as evidenced by the fact that both Stevie Ray Vaughan and Joe Bonomassa made him a permanent member of their bands. He was asked to leave what became The Allman Brothers because they needed a good lead singer and a songwriter. Gregg did both, and Reese did neither. There were no hard feelings.
@McSauer2738 damnn, you right on man!
greg was in la at the time go figure
as other have pointed out, Duane is NOT on this. Dicky Betts only, on guitar, playing nicely. Track lacks the energy, excitement and level of playing of the ABB version created not much later
This keyboard player is good, but it just did not flow, the way it did with Duane and Greg in the band. A totally different thing here.