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ON THIS DATE (49 YEARS AGO) November 4, 1969 – Allman Brothers Band: The Allman Brothers Band is released.

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The Allman Brothers Band is the eponymous debut album, released on November 4, 1969. It reached #188 on the Billboard 200 Top LP’s chart. The song “Whipping Post” is part of the The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll list.

The band didn’t record this debut until after they’d worked their sound out on the road, playing heavily around Florida and Georgia. “The Allman Brothers” received good reviews and a cult following with its mix of assured dual lead guitars by Duane Allman and Dickey Betts, soulful singing by Gregg Allman, and a rhythm section that was nearly as busy as the lead instruments, between Oakley’s rock-hard bass and the dual drumming of Trucks and Johanson.

The self-titled debut album was a solid blues-rock album and one of the better showcases for guitar pyrotechnics in a year with more than its share, amid albums by Cream, Blind Faith, the Jeff Beck Group, and Led Zeppelin. It didn’t sell 50,000 copies on its initial release, but The Allman Brothers Band impressed everyone who heard it and nearly everyone who reviewed it. Coming out at the end of the 1960s, it could have passed for a follow-up to the kind of blues-rock coming out of England from acts like Cream, except that it had a sharper edge — the Allmans were American and Southern, and their understanding of blues (not to mention elements of jazz, mostly courtesy of Jaimoe) was as natural as breathing. The album also introduced one of the band’s most popular concert numbers, “Whipping Post.” This is true, enduring American music.

ORIGINAL ROLLING STONE REVIEW
The Allman Brothers are a rather heavy white blues group out of Muscle Shoals. They look like the post-teen punk band rehearsing next door, and there is little in their music that we haven’t heard before. And both they and their album are a gas.

For all the white blooze bands proliferating today, it’s still inspiring when the real article comes along, a white group who’ve transcended their schooling to produce a volatile blues-rock sound of pure energy, inspiration and love. The Allmans have learned their lessons well, and they play with the same drive and conviction as their mentors. When I first put this album on the driving instrumental that opens it began the clean, ringing guitar riffs in “It’s Not My Cross to Bear” made that battered 12-bar blues form seem fresh again. The Allmans know what they’re doing, and feel it deeply as well, and they communicate immediately.

One of the virtues of a simple, standardized form like the blues is that when played right it’s such a comfortable place to return to. The whole album is like that. You’ve been here a thousand times before, and it feels like home instead of mind-numbing banality because the Allmans have mastered the form with rare subtlety, and also because their blues keep you vibrating from one brilliant hardrock interpolation to the next.

That’s why the album’s pinnacle for me is “Dreams,” a beautiful, aching lament in waltz-time. It begins with softly pulsing organ and throaty, movingly understated vocal all about a man whose world is crumbling because “I’m hung up/On Dreams.” A familiar story, but the way it’s written and delivered by the Allmans makes it poignantly realistic and universal.

It might seem strange to apply the adjective “lovely” to a heavy-white-blues album, but that is what this record so paradoxically is. Sometimes it sounds like what Led Zeppelin might have been if they weren’t hung up on gymnastics. Sometimes it sounds like the more-lyrical Louisiana cousins of Johnny Winter. But what it is consistently is subtle, and honest, and moving.
~ Lester Bangs (February 21, 1970)

TRACKS:
All songs by Gregg Allman except as noted.
Side one
“Don’t Want You No More” (Spencer Davis, Eddie Hardin) – 2:29
“It’s Not My Cross to Bear” – 4:48
“Black Hearted Woman” – 5:20
“Trouble No More” (McKinley Morganfield) – 3:47

Side two
“Every Hungry Woman” – 4:16
“Dreams” – 7:19
“Whipping Post” – 5:19

 

 


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