The Allman Brothers Band - In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed (REACTION)
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- Опубликовано: 11 дек 2022
- @AirplayBeats reacts to In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed by The Allman Brothers Band
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Y’all got great taste in music. This song is such a vibe.
It sure is!!
We were not expecting this when we pressed play
Even towards the end, and a lot of the bandmembers had changed, Gregg Allman still had great music coming out of the Allman Brothers band
@@AirplayBeats See the "Tom Dowd and the Language of Music" documentary. He recorded this and most of their stuff and was a big influence on their career. He called ABB a blues/jazz band, and called Marshall Tucker a country/jazz band. He put Clapton and Duane together and recorded Layla.
Wait'll you see just who all he recorded, before he even met these guys. A Whos-Who of great artists. Fascinating man. Fascinating doc.
@@AirplayBeatsThere are video clips of them playing this and other classics at the Capitol Theater ruclips.net/video/IwjCOXT3ka8/видео.htmlsi=xM5Z7lDTzUSOlgSL
The scary thing is, these guys are in their early 20’s, and playing like this. They humble me.
Greg Allman once said, "There are jam bands, and there are bands that can jam. We are a band that can jam."
Thank You Guys. Yes it’s Dickey & Dwayne trading licks throughout the song. This Song Is The DNA of The Allman Brothers Band. And I remind you this is recorded live at The Fillmore 1971. Theirs no auto tune. Just some righteous brothers plugging in and playing their hearts out. And to answer who is Elizabeth Read. Dickey was at the cemetery. Paying his respects. And passed a head stone that said In Memory of Elizabeth Read. I’m 61 guys I’ve been up and down all the music you guys are discovering. Yes the music from my generations much better than anything that’s put out today . I Thank You Both ❤
*Duane
Dickie et al was doing more than paying their respects. It was what they did.
From Wikipedia
"In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" was inspired by a woman Betts was involved with in the group's hometown of Macon, Georgia. She was the girlfriend of musician Boz Scaggs, with Betts later saying she "was Hispanic and somewhat dark and mysterious-and she really used it to her advantage and played it to the hilt."[4] To cloak her identity, the composition is named after a headstone Betts saw at the Rose Hill Cemetery, where band members often ventured in their early days to relax and write songs.[4]
Perhaps the greatest double lead guitar band ever 😊😂
THIS is The Allman Brothers Band. They were built and designed to be a live band; two drummers, two lead guitarists, Greggs haunting vocals. . . . awesome band
amen!
And Dickey sang pretty dang well when he got the chance.
Hats off to Berry Oakley, he was the driving thumping force behind so much of their amazing sound
I asked my dad one time what type of music he liked. His answer: “Good music”. That’s the genre you’re hearing with this. No need for any other names or categories or definitions. This is simply Good Music
These guys played blues, jazz, rock, country, and gospel; sometimes all in the same song. They've been my favorites for 50 years. You'll enjoy the trip through their catalog.
Elizabeth Reed was a women from Macon Ga who died in the 1930's and had a tombstone in the cemetery that the band hung out and practiced. This is actually in memory of Boz Scaggs' girlfriend whom Dickey was in love with. But Boz was friends with the band and they didn't want to hurt the relationship so Dickey named it after a lady on a tombstone.
RoseHill Cemetery on Riverside Dr.
"The tombstone where Dickey effed Boz Skaggs' wife," as they used to razz him.
This song was written by Dickey Betts. He wrote it in a graveyard in Macon, Georgia. On one ofthe tombstones was written "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed". That is how the song got it's title. Elizabeth Reed was a woman who was born in the 1840s, I believe. She died long ago, but she was real person. Today Gregg Allman, Duane Allman, Berry Oakley, and Butch Trucks are all buried in this same cemetery in Macon, Georgia. It is called Rose Hill Cemetery.
Man this song gives me chills. 1st guitar solo is Dickey Betts and 2nd, after organ solo, is Duane Allman. Phenomenal
It's my opinion that the reason music after the eighties began to lag can be attributed to technology. Folks went from being musicians to being technicians. 75 next month and I do miss it. Sooo glad you and others will carry on and keep it alive! Thanks!!!
Partly true though their was still very good musical technology back in the day.
auto- tune anyone...?
Yup fake beat machines and vocals by machines
My favorite recording from my favorite band from my favorite album. Duane's solo, the second solo, after Gregg's organ solo, is also my favorite guitar solo. You hit on all cylinders for this reaction. At Fillmore East is easily the best live album ever recorded with every cut being an amazing journey. Thank you for reacting to this, it made my day.
The BEST ERA THE 70s thank you my ERA! I am reliving it at 76yrs Old!
Amen brother I’m with you on every point
Legend has it that when Duane got the lineup he wanted he locked the door and told them anyone that didn't want to be in the band had to fight him to leave..
Every song on this album is the best rendition you'll ever hear.
This recording stands the test of time does it not? The most amazing thing is when you realize the band members are in their early twenties! Simply astounding level of musicianship for any age. I have seen this band since their inception in various incarnations and I have never seen a bad show.
The Allman Brothers-Six musicians in a theater made this masterpiece recording the breathtaking tone of the guitarist were performed on Gibson Les Paul through Marshall amplifiers. nothing more and the band’s equipment and instruments-no army of producers or overdubs. Shear genius’s -six men on stage in a theater in the wee hours of the night!!
Duane playing the 2nd lead parts. Duane is throwing in some Coltrane licks that just KILL IT!! ❤
ABB incorporated elements of jazz, blues, funk, soul, etc. into a lot their music. This song is a pretty obvious example, but there are many more. Like y'all said, you just can't pigeon hole these guys into a particular genre, they played whatever they wanted, however they wanted...absolute one of a kind.
Hey guys, Ned from Spain here using my wife's account. Thanks for this video. These guys were not only deeply into blues and R n B but Jazz, like Coltrane , Miles , Horace Silver Sonny Rollins, Hancock among others. They were high level musicians who loved the feeling and sound of music, didn't trap themselves in a category and could play anything. One more important thing was their ears, they really heard what their partners were playing, where they were going always ready to support. The biggest problem now is the obsession with fame and money instead of treating music and art like a blessing to be enjoyed and shared.
Well said. Sadly technology and the worship of money has changed society, sometimes for better but just as often for worse.
AMEN
That just about sums up what these guys keep saying each time they react to a video of the Allman Brothers. ❤
I feel that this era had an explosion of creativity and talent as it was a huge generation of kids, baby boomers, that lived in a time where learning music part of their lives in a more natural way. Playing music in ones home was a way that people entertained themselves, most public schools had free music programs, and more people played music or sang in church.
Literally the greatest song ever
In the early 70s, we road around all night listening to bands like the Allman Brothers. Derek and the Dominos, Van Morrison, Pink Floyd, Bowie, Hendrix. And now you're just discovering this? Why only now? We all knew our parents' music, Glenn Miller, Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Harry James, Gene Krupa. How'd these new generations get so musically illiterate? You don't know what you don't know. Maybe that's changing. But mostly we in our 60s, 70s, are tuning in to these reaction videos to see what you think.
Once, during an interview when Dickie Betts was asked, "Who was Elizabeth Reed?" He replied, "A Beautiful Woman".... You can hear the beauty and feel it deep into your soul!!
She was just a tombstone that Dickey Betts saw one day at a cemetery.
One of the reasons this era is so great, is because everything hadn't been done yet, there was still room for pioneers and experimentation.
I'm glad you guys heard this one because the all comments were right, you can't really put them into a single category. From here it's easy to imagine how and why Duane worked with so many artists from other genres, especially Jazz.
Totally agree but would add that it was set in a time of great political and social experimentation. The very nature of experimentation allows for less concern about mistakes so the approach to things can be more free. I’m 65 years old--it was a great time to be alive.
Yes, the Allman Brothers sang Country, Blues, and Ballads. Not familiar with the jazz aspect, but you may be correct there also. "Layla" with Duane was the version I always heard. Later I heard the other version, and it was not the same.
Oh so many socio-polical-industrial reasons, 70s vs today, agree with this and below. Let’s not fail to mention the ascendancy of FM radio during that time: such an important medium for DJs at all levels to *play what they dug*...thereby letting us hear the whole glorious spectrum of talent and style.
@@annbeguity5932 exactly and especially late at night and on college radio stations 💿
Exactly
Yes, this is the Allman Bros. I know, I was at this concert back in March 1971 just before my 21st birthday. Most incredible. Hot Lanta is another instrumental they played. My friend and I would run in place to this one before we played tennis. Thanks for posting!
This song was written by Dickey Betts, who just passed away today. RIP Dickey
Best american group ever,rock,blues,country,soul,jazz
I first heard this live in1970. They played in place on Pensacola Beach Florida. My wedding party traveled from Mobile to hear them. To make a long story short, the place was empty so we sat on the dance floor next to the low stage. We asked Duane if we could sit there and he said sure "this ain't dancing music". They played the entire album including "one way out". GREAT night!!
What a great night is right! That would be the dream of almost everyone, a private show by the Allman Brothers Band👏👏👏👏❤❤❤❤
Fun fact..they'd go to the cemetery in Macon Georgia where they're from and Dickey wrote that next to a tombstone of a woman named Elizabeth Reed. The brothers are all buried in that same Rose Hill cemetery together..it's gated off and there waiting for the 2 that are still alive..Dickey and drummer Jaimoe who is still out there playing..they'll all be brothers again..RIP to them all 💙 💙💙💙
favorite comment: "Everybody's soloing!" so true, but not over each other, together WITH each other. So awesome!
Perfectly put Jim....
Now jump in the Time Machine and check out live versions of this this same song by the 1990s and 2010s Allman Bros lineups and introduce yourselves to the magnificent Warren Haynes, Allen Woody, Derek Trucks and Otiel Burbridge.
Don't forget Jack Pearson!
Ok, the band used to hangout in Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon, Ga. There is a headstone in the cemetery that says In Memory of Elizabeth Reed. Dickey Betts saw the headstone and used it as the song title. Dickey also played the first solo and Duane played the second solo.
And now Duane, Berry, and Gregg are buried there too
Wow, didn't know that. Thanks.
Butch too, and there’s room there for Jaimoe and Dickie to be laid to rest with the rest of the boys. So awesome that they were such a family in life, living together as a full band and whatnot, and now will all rest together side by side forever.
For more Allman Brothers blues, please try Not My Cross To Bear...you all have great taste in music💞✌️
Again guys in my opinion the greatest band. I wore out the vinyl, then tapes then CDs of their music
This is all about their musicianship. They were more musically sophisticated than most people realized. And it is more than a jam. It's a composition.
They evolved, developed and performed as a band, a unit. It takes utter individual talent but also years of hard work to form a common musical landscape and synchronicity. People don’t do that nowadays.
The difference between musicians of this era and today is the music they grew up listening to. These guys learned from the sources of American music; blues, jazz, country, gospel, soul etc. It opened their minds and the music came flooding out.
The Marshall Tucker Band and their song 24 hours at time live .with Charlie Daniels is another jam of this era you would like. They were closets friends of the members of the Allmans.
I have this album I bought back then and some others. all fantastic. Duane and Dickey Betts on guitar. Berry Oakley on Bass
Berry was a force of nature..
I’ve been loving your Zeppelin journey, and, I agree- greatest rock band ever! GOATS. But, the greatest band ever for outright jams- The Allman Bros. - I listen to something from Live at Filmore East all the time for 40 years-greatest live album ever.
Saw them with Duane, summer 1971-I can't describe the musicality of this band. Set list: Don't Keep Me Wondering; Done Somebody Wrong; One Way Out (that would be a great one to hear from this album); In Memory of Elizabeth Reed; You Don't Love Me; Whippin Post; Revival and Dimples. You can tell who is playing the solo on this album because Duane is in the left ear (he is left on stage as you look) and Dickey in in the right ear-assuming you have your headphones on correctly.
@@christinerobinson9372 lighten up Chris
Let’s go 🔥 btw the 1970 version does have live footage. Now you gotta Watch don’t keep me wondering 1970 live footage version❤️
When it comes to live bands, the original six were the benchmark!
Their children are carrying the torch, making some damn fine music.
I DON'T KNOW HOW MANY TIMES I WOULD LISTEN TO THE ALLMAN'S ON ROAD TRIPS !!🚗 🛣️PERFECT MUSIC TO LISTEN TO DRIVING! 🚙😍😁🎸🔥
They are a rock/blues band. They jam in person (this album is a live album) but they know basically what the song sounds like. This is what rock music used to sound like guys!!! And yes, Duane was still alive at this time. If you would like to hear another jam band with 2 drummers try The Grateful Dead live as well.
This is off their album "Idlewild South" and there are two well-known songs on this album, which is one of my favorite albums (lol) this song "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" and "Midnight Rider" which is 🔥fire also. Dickey Betts was the oldest member of the band when they formed in 1969. He shared lead guitar duties with band founder and leader Duane Allman, he went on to have a successful solo career. Dickey and Gregg Allman had a very bad falling out, I believe it was something like 15 years or more. But thankfully they patched things up right before Gregg passed away. Duane Allman became heavily influenced by Miles Davis, earlier in his career, Duane was part of the band like the "Hourglass" and "The Allman Joys." some blues artists that Duane was inspired by were T-Bone Walker (The classic Stormy Monday Live at Fillmore East is a T-Bone Walker song from 1948), BB King (He inspired every single blues guitarist you've ever heard of) 😏 and "Taj Mahal" (His recordings inspired Duane to pick up the slide) and of course the legendary Albert King (who also was SRV's mentor too.) I truly enjoyed that one guy's, thanks so much for the memories🎸💖🎶👍🤗
Guys, this is the recording that defined them, I'm 73 and saw them 2 weeks before Duane died in Springfield, Ma and never heard the Studio material on top of it... Awesome, Mesmerized!
Soulshine with Allman brothers and Government Mule... you'll never be the same. Peace.... enjoy your channel.
There are several concerts available but the ones in 1971 like this one were the ultimate.
The best live album in rock history. Period.
March 26 1969 , "Anyone in this room who ain't gonna be in my band is gonna have to fight their way out of here !" ~ Duane Allman
I attended the Allman Brothers benefit for Jimmy Carter Nov 25, 1975. Being in that civic center felt like a drug high, such a great party band. Greg's keyboard had pictures of magic mushrooms on it. The guitars were party wild, yet so pure.
It’s a pleasure meeting you guys discovering my favorite band. Just to answer one of your questions 21:29 : Dicky’a guitar tends to have more of bite to it. You notice it more in their kind of call and response conversations. Duane is smooth , slick. Together, chart new territory. I’m glad you found your way to the Allman Brothers. Check out Dreams from the first album for some more Gregg’s soulful vocals.
AMEN on the musicianship of artists from the 60's and 70's!!!!!!!! On point!!!!!
I named my daughter after this song. Such beautiful music.
Dickie brought the jazzy modal playing into the soulful blues rock of the brothers and this is a shining example. Listen close to their other songs and you hear him throw in those lines and chords that made them sound so unique.
Thanks for another great reaction! I'm 72 years old and I really enjoy your perspective on the music I grew up with. The Allman Brothers Band was and still is one of my all time favorite bands. You are right. The music in the sixties and seventies was just different. Real, raw talent. I think you would really enjoy checking out some more great artists from that era. In 1964, I was a 14 year old kid listening to Wolfman Jack's radio show. Please watch these sometime: Roy Orbison's Pretty Woman 1964. Here's the link: ruclips.net/video/gy9CtTYMwAo/видео.html. Santana's Soul Sacrifice, live at Woodstock 1969. Amazing, legendary live performance. Here's the link: ruclips.net/video/sSp05euvRNU/видео.html. The Edgar Winter Group with Johnny Winter, Tobacco Road, live 1973. You have to see this live version to really understand what incredible musicians and singers these guys were. As you guys said, this was before auto tune. Thanks and keep the great reactions coming!
OOPs! I forgot to include the link for Tobacco Road. Here it is: ruclips.net/video/af0rV6dli_o/видео.html
Have a great day!
Forrest Richard Betts aka Dickey
May your wings fill with air and reach heaven above and see the brothers again. Just a fan of great music that grew up in the 70s in Florida. RIP 12/12/43 4/18/24 For the new fans enjoy the great music of that time it really was a great time for all music around. Great video enjoyed the reaction. I've listened to them before but they don't sound the same. I believe is the best response about the Allman Brothers I've ever heard.
The greatest live album ever ❤
These guys earned their legendary status by doing this right here…….great stuff.🔥🔥🔥🔥❤️
ABB had a strong jazz and soul side. A photo of Dickey Betts and his son later in life showed them each wearing a t-shirt with an image of Miles Davis's Sketches of Spain album on it.
Most bands can't claim they had one of the best guitarists of all time, the Allman Brothers have had four.
Duane Allman 69-71
Dickie Betts 69-76, 78-82, 89-00
Warren Haynes 89-97, 01-14
Derek Trucks 99-14 (Maybe the best slide player alive today)
Add Jack Pearson to the mix 😎
And Dan Toler
Dwayne Allman played the famous riff for Eric Clapton on the song LAYLA. Clapton said that he called Dwayne because he knew he was the only one that he wanted.
Our 3 boys took music lessons when they were younger. I was talking to my son's guitar teacher about music. He was early 20's. I said he should listen to this song. He said he heard it for the first time 3 weeks prior and hasn't stopped listening to it over and over and over. That was 10 years ago. Wonder if he's still listening to it? Lol. GREAT SONG!!!!
Their masterpiece, a blend of rock, blues, fusion and freeform. Jim
How can a band play so smooth and intense at the same time, usually those two things don't go together but they make it happen
The mid-60s through the late 70s was a uniquely creative time that was made by an incredible confluence of influences. The parents of us Boomers had been through the Great Depression and WW II. Then we had the somewhat severe repression of the 50s and a concurrent economic boom. The Civil Rights Movement hit its stride and then there was the Vietnam War. Rock n Roll music was born in the late 50s and became more and more popular with my generation, even though ‘adults’ tried to discourage and repress it. The way to be a cool cat was to learn to play guitar or drums and start a garage band. In the mid-60s the counter culture/hippie movement started.
This music exploded out of all those influences and then helped feed the movements pushing for civil rights (farmworkers, gay, Hispanic, anti-colonialism and feminism civil rights movements followed the Black movement) and to end that dang war in SE Asia.
It was a remarkable stew that birthed this music and these musicians. We weren’t as stuck on what genre was being played. "It’s all rock n roll to me" sort of embodied the attitude. If it grooved, we moved. If it spoke to us, we listened and asked for more.
I don’t know the answer to why today’s music seems to be so much lesser, although there still are some excellent musiciians making damn good music out there, but technology seems to be partitioning people off into separate tribes of "oh, I only listen to K-POP or hip hop or hard rock or country or R&B or, or, or". There was less separation and more cross-pollination back then. That’s part of why there was more creativity. Diversity *does* make a positive difference.
This is perhaps the finest live recorded composition ever in history. This being the original members of the band they took you on a journey through the stratosphere . This was live -one take-No band ever had this level of collective musical prowess as this ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND did -Look no further !
You guys must hear the ultimate encore jam, THE MOUNTAIN JAM. It was just about as musically perfect as could be.
During a 1971 radio interview, a listener called in and asked if Duane was going to continue playing twin guitar leads. Duane answered:
"That's Dickey Betts playing the other guitar, that's not me," Duane said. "See, I'm the famous one, Dickey's the good one."
Duane also said about his collaboration with Derek and the Dominos that Clapton had nothing on Dickey Betts.
Reposted from dickeybettsofficial --- There are few musicians who have had the career that Dickey has. Not only a great guitar player, but accomplished singer/songwriter and band leader. He made a name for himself on the Florida club circuit, playing with The Jokers, The Soul Children, The Blues Messengers and The Second Coming. Dickey and Duane Allman jammed together when Duane was trying to recruit Berry Oakley into his new band. During those sessions, twin guitar parts began to emerge. In addition to the harmonies, Dickey's melodic country style contrasted perfectly with Duane's fiery, jazzy blues style. When the ABB was formed in March 1969, Dickey was 25. He penned some of the band's most recognized early songs, including Revival, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed and Blue Sky. After Duane's death in 1971, Dickey shouldered more of the load going forward, delivering the band's first #1 album, Brothers and Sisters. It included Ramblin' Man, Southbound, Jessica and Pony Boy, all written by Betts. The band's resurgence in the 90's would again feature some of Dickey's timeless songwriting, penning classics Seven Turns, Nobody Knows, Back Where It All Begins and No One To Run With. Over the course of his career, he founded, toured and recorded with Dickey Betts & Great Southern, and the Dickey Betts Band. Inducted into the Rock & Roll HOF (1995), and a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient (2012). There are only a handful of musicians who have ever accomplished this.
They use to go to a cemetery & and talk music ideas...they'd usually sit next to a headstone and the name on it was Elizabeth Reed. 😊
I agreee with your comments about why children and teens today don't appear to be interested in learning to play an instrument. Most are not willing to put in the time it takes to learn and put in the hours and hours of time practicing. My husband, who is 65 yrs old started playing guitar at the age of 13 and has played in many local bands in the late 70's and still plays in a band now. Our son got a mini-Stratocaster from his dad when he was 3 years old. Our son also joined band in middle school and plays trumpet, keyboards, and guitar. He is 28 yrs old now and grew up in a very music loving home listening to a lot of the 70's music that my husband and I love. When our son was 4 yrs old I was playing a Stevie Ray Vaughn cassette tape in the car and he asked me if that was a tape of Dad playing...LOL If parents would encourage and nurture their children joining band at school and set aside practice times, who knows who the next great guitar player will be. Autotune and computer generated music is killing musical talents and skills. I love seeing you two react to the music of my teens!! Thank you.
The band was turned on to Miles Davis around this point in time, and it really shows.
Intro and first guitar solo is Dickie Betts, who also wrote this, second guitar solo after the organ break is Duane. This translates Miles Davies into rock. World Cultural Heritage. Play it on my funeral.
I believe the Allman Brothers used to hang out in Rosehill Cemetery and get high and get inspired. Dickey Betts wrote this song and named it after someone, Elizabeth Reed, who was buried there.
Duane died October of 1971 right after the release of live at the Fillmore east in a motorcycle crash. another tragic end to what would have been a great career. Greg died in 2017 from liver cancer. he was 69. In 1973 there was a concert in Watkins Glen NY with the Allan brothers, the band and Grateful Dead. there were 600 000 people and I had the pleasure to be there. I believe they only sold around 30 or 40 thousand tickets but they got more than they bargained for. it was truly amazing and the glen vowed to never have another event there.
It was sometimes difficult to tell which guitarist was playing but after years of listening to them I can usually tell. Dickie Betts wrote the tune. He is the first featured guitar lead. Greg does his organ lead. Then Duane blasts the walls open with the second guitar.
Dicky Betts named this song after a headstone he saw for Elizabeth Jones Reed Napier in Rose Hill Cemetery in the band's hometown of Macon, Georgia.
Glad to find you guys. 05:08 - YES... they are "jam masters". Much appreciation :) subscribed after 1 listen - keep it up
Fellas this is the original two virtuoso gun slingers delight guitar through the roof 1971 Best of em all Allman Brothers Band. Nothing compares!!!
You guys rock!! The Bros remind me of a Southern Santana. This band would play over their time limit and the Events would shut the power off. At one the crowd protested and they turned the power back on.
Man, there's no mistaking that Hammond B-3 organ!
Yes gents this was 1971 jus a cpl months b4 Duane died in a motorcycle accident jus dwn the road in Macon Ga. Oct 29 1971 my daughter's b-day I believe this was the last concert in the Fillmore East b4 Bill Graham shut it down for good ur listening to true American music history here u got the good shit here fella,s
Guys, just as a little tip when listening to the ABB. Every time you hear an amazing riff or phrase on the guitar that moves you, don't ask if it's Duane. It is Duane! He was the most melodically expressive instrumentalist of his time.
These guys were born to be on stage not in the studio, and another band that follows that same characteristic is Humble Pie. Both are 2 of the best jam bands ever. One other that can hang with them is Skynyrd. It is so cool that ABB and Pie both produced albums from the Filmore East that are iconic... Allman Brother Band at the Filmore East and Humble Pie Rockin' the Filmore.
Dickie is a master of playing solos that include minor and augmented tonalities over major chord progressions. Switching seamlessly between standard pentatonic scale licks and heavily extended "jazz" scales like it's just normal everyday $h1t. You're used to that with jazz horn players, Miles & Coltrane come to mind, but is not normal coming from hippie good ol' boys, especially in the 70's. And Gregg was one of the best "organist" in any genre. I put him up there with Winwood, Wakeman & Wright, not to mention his vocals sounding like a 60 year old Black Blues Journeyman when he was still in his teens. Allmans definitely one of my favorite bands to cover. Have played Sweet Melissa and One Way Out for decades. Was only in 1 band that had the skills and balls to cover this one though. Way back in 88-89. Same band also did Jessica. Both a blast to play but you GOTTA play them pretty much sober, because if 1 person gets lost, the whole sound is F'd.
Yes Duane was on this entire album. We lost him not long after this recording. The "Top level" solo you noted was Duane.
Great live album Filmore East album Mountain Jam is 34 minutes long jam lol plug in headphones on and chill.
They were together 45 years 69 to 2014. For a country sound when guitarist Dickey Betts is lead singer you really get country rock.
Check out Blue Sky and Crazy Love
So glad you guys reacted to this one, I strongly recommended it, on one of your previous ABB videos.
There's something special about this song, I still get goosebumps every time I hear it...
ABB definitely can't be pigeonholed, stylistically. Another instrumental masterpiece of theirs is "Les Brer in A minor"..
I love Mountain Jam. Hi from Perth Australia 😎🎶🎵🎶
The 70's CRUSHED IT musically!!!
Jai Johnson played jazz before joining the Allman Brothers and brought that influence into the group. Another great tune that incorporates jazz influence is the fiery first cut from their first album, an instrumental cover of the Muddy Waters song Don't Want You No More. A great jazz blues rock time that blew everybody away right out of the gate, then blended smoothly right into the soulful blues Ain't My Cross to Bear. It was the perfect tune to launch their career. Also check Hotlanta a hot jazz tune penned by Dickie Betts and given the ABB treatment. BTW - Elizabeth Reed was simply a random name seen on a gravestone.
You guys would love Tedeschi Trucks Band considered the best jam band touring today. Derek Trucks nephew of Allman Brothers drummer Butch Trucks. He began opening for Allman Brothers at 11yrs old. Joined Allman Brothers around 14-15. Anything since 1995 Derek Trucks plays Duane's slide solo's. Eric Clapton has said he channels Duane into his guitar work. Derek met his wife Susan Tedeschi when she was opening for Allman Brothers she just a couple of days ago was given award by Smithsonian Institute.
Susan earned a Bachelor's degree from Berkeley University school of music @ 20 yrs old. Spent her 20's touring with BB King, Buddy Guy, Mellencamp and Allman Brothers. When Bob Dylan heard her as a teen he invited her to play during his set.
12 piece band that stays true to their root influences, mixed in with current jams. New release of 4 disc set, 24 new songs. "I AM THE MOON" 30 years of music history with Tedeschi Trucks Band. Grammy for Blue's album of the year 2012 "REVELATOR". Also greatly influenced by Stevie Ray, and Janis Joplin you will see that here. "I PITY THE FOOL" for Buddy Guy's birthday
ruclips.net/video/6DjtB0Vb90U/видео.html
Midnight in Harlem 😎🎼🎵🙏
@@888jimm agreed I am going to add a couple more TTB request including that one. Seen them live 4 times every performance is different.
@@kayh7982 - They are sooo awesome 👍
First lead is Dickey Betts second lead is Duane... this is an original composition by Dickey B. The guys would get high and cavort around Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon GA. There is a cemetery plot by the train tracks (close to where they are all now buried) that was a quite place and perfect height for sitting and playing acoustic guitar... Dickey wrote much of the song there. (there is a Boz Scaggs girlfriend side story) but he didn't have a name for it, so he turned his head and behind him was the grave stone of "Elizabeth Jones Reed" he named it in honor of his favorite little spot in Rose Hill,,, In memory of Elizabeth Reed
Greatest live band and Gregg was the best white blues singer. Their concerts were absolute fire. I saw them many times.
Dickey Betts was walking around an old cemetery in Macon, Georgia and came across a tombstone with that name on it. Sat down and the music came to him. It's a fascinating place. Graves from as far back as the Revolutionary War. I visit any time I'm near Macon.
What I think you may not realize, and is definitely missing today, is that these folks were totally dedicated to their music!! They lived together, partied together, traveled together, and played ALL THE TIME! Bands like the ABB, Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and so many more, lived for their music! These cats crammed one hell of a lot in their early years!
I am really glad you are musicians so you can properly enjoy all this great stuff!! 😁😁😁🎶🎵😆😆
Dickey betts wrote in memory of Elizabeth Reed sitting in a cemetery in Macon Georgia. He finished the song and didn’t know what call it. He saw the headstone that was that of a young girl that had died in the mid 1860’s her name was Elizabeth Reed.
Just had to revisit...RIP Dickey Betts...long live the brothers of airplay beats
Two lead guitars in this group, Duane Allman/Dickey Betts, they are both playing together in harmonization until they break out into their own solos.