DUANE ALLMAN REMEMBER


Guitar Player 10/1981


 

 

During an amazingly fertile five-year recording career, Duane Allman metamorphosed from an teenager struggling for a psychedelic sound to the foremost slide guitarist of his day. Ten years later, the importance of his greatest work - the Allman Brothers Band's classic At Fillmore East and Eat a Peach, Derek & The Dominos' Layla, and a handful of studio R&B and rock tracks - remains undiminished. Duane mastered bottleneck guitar as no one had before, applying it to the blues and taking it to a very melodic, freeform context. He brought the style new freedom and elegance, and for many he is still considered THE sources for blues/rock slide.

...Duane became the figurehead of a musical style known as "the sound of the South." ...he carried a deep-felt love for his native music - especially that of black bluesmen - to a rock audience, just as British guitarists had a few years earlier. Having learned his blues-based playing first-hand in the South, Duane had a more authentic feel than many contemporaries who had learned only through records. With co-lead Dickey Betts, Allman also helped popularize the use of melodic twin-guitar harmony and counterpoint lines.

...As a sideman, Allman added a compelling, natural feel and distinctiveness to whatever he played on...According to Jerry Wexler, who as VP for Atlantic Records used Duane on many sessions, "He was a complete guitar player. He could give you whatever you needed. He could do everything- play rhythm, lead, blues, slide, bossa-nova, with a jazz feeling, beautiful light acoustic - and on slide he got THE touch. A lot of slide players sound sour. To get clear intonation with the right overtones - that's the mark of genius. Duane is one of the greatest guitar players I ever knew. He was one of the very few who could hold his own with the best of the black blues players, and there are very few - you can count them on the fingers of one hand if you've got three fingers missing."

..{He was a proud, likable man whose presence immediately drew attention and whose artistry profoundly influenced those who worked with him. He was an original, as unafraid to take chances onstage as he was in other sides of his life. By all accounts, he lived for music and the pleasure his playing brought people. During the ten years since his tragic death at 24, Duane has become one of the legends of guitar.

 

Duane's birth and first guitar

Duane quit high school to stay home and practice on his new Gibson Les Paul Junior, often jamming with his pal Jim Shepley. By then, Allman was sure that playing would be his life. ...He once stated "There's a lot of different forms of communication, but music is absolutely the purest one, man. You can't hurt anybody with music. You can maybe offend somebody with songs and words, but you can't offend anybody with music - it's all just good. There's nothing at all that could ever be bad about music, about playing it. It's a wonderful thing, a grace."

Duane listened to Robert Johnson, Kenny Burrell, and Chuck Berry albums.. and R&B. He was influenced by Jeff Beck's playing with the Yardbirds, and always had a special affinity for B.B. King....He told an interviewer that Eric Clapton "wrote the book, man - The Contemporary White Blues Guitar, Volume I. His style and technique is what's really amazing. He's got a lot to say, and the way he says it just knocks me out." Later Duane came to especially appreciate jazz horn players, claiming: "Miles Davis does the best job, to me, of portraying the innermost, subtlest, softest feelings in the human psyche. He does it beautifully. John Coltrane, probably one of the finest, most accomplished tenor players, took his music farther than anybody I believe I ever heard."

 

The early gigs.

The Allman Brothers' first gigs were at a local YMCA, covering Chuck Berry and Hank Ballard & The Midnighters tunes. Although it was uncommon at that time for white and black musicians in Florida to mix, Duane and Gregg then joined the House Rockers, the rhythm section for a black group called the Untils. Duane remembered, "We were a smokin' band! Boy, I mean, we would set fire to a building in a second. We were just up there blowing as funky as we pleased; 16 years old, $41 a week - big time. And all we wanted was to hear that damn music bein' stomped out. That's what I love man, to hear that backbeat POPPING, that damn bass plonkin' down, man, Jesus God!"

..The brothers formed a band called the Allman Joys. They loaded up a station wagon and began touring the southern roadhouse and bar circuit. At best, things were stormy at first as they threatened to break up several times. Then the Joys began getting all the work they could handle.. and discovered they loved the energy of the stage. ...The Allman Joys ...recorded a pulsing version of "Spoonful," complete with organ and reverb-heavy, psychedelic guitar licks..It was released as a 45 and sold well regionally. Other tracks...were issued in 1973 by Dial Records as Early Allman....Even on these first recordings Gregg sang with a smoky, black-sounding voice that the liner notes declared "anguished, world weary."

The original Allman Joys fell apart in St. Louis in 1967, and Duane and Gregg formed a lineup with drummer Johnny Sandlin and keyboardist Paul Hornsby. At first they used the name Allman Joys, then Almanac. ...They were spotted by a manager who told them they could make it nationally if they went to California. The group moved to LA and signed with Liberty Records, who renamed them Hour Glass. By Gregg's account, this was one of the low points of the brothers' careers. ..The musicians had little income.

For the cover photo of their debut HOUR GLASS album, the group was taken to a costume shop and dressed in fancy, pre-20th century outfits. The liner notes described the music within as "Psychotic phenomenon, from rhythm and blues to driving psychedelic beats. And soul...reeking of soul." The album consisted of over-produced, pop-vocal tunes, complete with overpowering horns and backup singers...."A good damn band of misled cats was what it was," Duane told Tony Glover. "They'd send in a box of demos and say, 'Okay, pick out your next LP.' We tried to tell them that wasn't where we were at, but then they got tough:'You gotta have an album, man. Don't buck the system - just pick it out! We....figured maybe we could squeeze and ounce or two of good out of this crap. ...We were squeezing rock....It's cats tryin' to get off on things that cannot be gotten off on."

Their next album was Power of Love...Duane began to step out with supple, rhythm grooves and several interesting, fuzz-heavy solos. He added B.B. King-style licks to "I'm Hanging Up my Heart For You," and appeared on electric sitar on "Norwegian Wood."

In April '68, the band went to Fame Recording Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, where ...they could lay down blues tracks. With Jimmy Johnson at the controls, Duane opened up as never before - fluid, raw-toned, and emotional. HourGlass' "B.B.King Medley"...contained the first prime examples of his expressive blues style. The unmistakable Allman touch had finally been captured on tape. The group took the demos to their West Coast manager, who said they were "terrible and useless".

Hour Glass returned to the South and drited apart...Duane and Gregg...worked as paid sidemen on an album their drummer friend Butch Trucks was cutting with 31st of February. ..Nine poorly-recorded 31st of February outtakes with Gregg singing were released by Bold Records as DUANE and GREGG ALLMAN. Of special interest here is the only legally-released version of "Melissa" featuring Duane, one of his earliest recordings with a bottleneck. Even then his slide parts were lyrical, clearly enunciated, and sophisticated.

In the next installment: Dickey Betts, Muscle Shoals, Aretha. The producer who called their stuff "terrible and useless" winds up being night shift manager at a Wendy's in Dubuque, Iowa. Duane acknowledges his musical debt to Jim Stewart. ;-}

Gregg went back to LA in 1968 to fulfill contractual agreements with Liberty, and Duane started jamming in Jacksonville with bassist Berry Oakley, who was in a lineup with Dickey Betts called The Second Coming. ...Fame owner Rick Hall, remembering the Hour Glass dates, sent Duane a telegram inviting him to participate in Wilson Pickett's November '68 sessions. Allman came up, and suggested that Pickett sing "Hey Jude." which eventually became the LP's title track and sold a million singles. ...Duane's contributions to the tune were a dazzling departure from the usual R&B sound.

The Muscle Shoals rhythm section loved Allman's authentic country funk and blues playing, and invited him to become their staff lead guitarist. Duane ...moved up to Muscle Shoals, then a conservative town of 4000 where you couldn't even buy a beer. ...He was a striking sight with his long read hair, tie-dye shirts, jeans and red-white-and blue tennis shoes. ...Duane said "I rented a cabin and lived alone on this lake....I just sat and played to myself and got used to living without a bunch of that jive Hollywood crap in my head. It's like I brought myself back to earth and came to life again, through that, and the sessions with good R&B players."

In January '69 Duane joined singer Aretha Franklin.. to record "This Girl's in Love with You"...His opening slide glissando established the whole tone of "The Weight"....He accompanied his friend King Curtis on the saxophonist's Instant Groove album...He was back on electric sitar for Curtis' "The Weight" and "Games People Play," which won a Grammy that year for best R&B instrumental....

...Allman was asked by Hall if he wanted to try recording as a front man. In February, backed by Berry Oakley, Paul Hornsby, and Sandlin, he recorded several tracks. He performed "Goin' Down Slow," and others. The album was never completed , and Hall sold Duane's contract to Atlantic VP Jerry Wexler. Later Wexler sold it to Otis Redding's manager Phil Walden, who was assembling a roster for a new Atlantic specialty label called Capricorn Records.

Duane was becoming disenchanted with studio life. "Studios - that's a terrible thing, man! You just lay around and get your money. All of those studio cats I know, like one of them gets a color TV, see, and then the next day, man, they're all down to Sears or wherever - 'Hey' I'd like to look at some color TVs.'...They're just keeping up with the Joneses and not playing their music. ...The sessions I do now, I just go in there and do it and leave."

During one of his occasional visits back to Jacksonville, Duane jammed with Betts, Oakley, Butch Trucks, and Jai Johanny Johanson, a drummer he met at Fame. ..."We set up the equipment and whipped into a little jam," Duane remembered. "It lasted two-and-a-half hours. When we finally quit, nobody ever said a word, man. Everybody was speechless. Nobody'd ever done anything like that before - it really frightened the shit out of everybody. Right then I knew - I said, 'Man, here it is!' I told Rick I didn't want to do session work full-time anymore. I had found what I really wanted to do." On March 26, 1969, Duane called Gregg back from California. After years of disappointments, one-night stands, and studios, the Allman Brothers Band was born.

 

ABB early years

Despite the fact that he was the group's founder and had a prior reputation, Duane insisted from the start that they were to be equals. They pooled their money and rented a house at 309 College Street in Macon, Georgia. They slept on six mattresses Walden provided, and plowed all of their money back into the band. The musicians jammed together a lot, occasionally going to nearby Rose Hill Cemetery to play acoustic guitar and write songs. In fact, reported Twiggs Lyndon, the band's original road manager, most of the songs on the first Allman Brothers album were written at Rose Hill.

...Duane returned to Muscle Shoals.. while the Allman Brothers were still rehearsing. "Boz Scaggs", recorded in May '69, was one of his finest early studio efforts. "Finding Her," which contains some sophisticated slide, climaxes with Duane using his Coricidin bottle to produce the far-away bird sounds that later show up in "Layla," "Mountain Jam," and several other cuts. Other standout Allman tracks include the raw, long-building solo in "Loan Me A Dime".... Duane's other projects at that time included work with Clarence Carter and Arthur Conley.

Back on College Street, Betts and Allman were discovering that they brought out the best in each other as they worked delicate harmony and counterpoint lines into their jams. In September '69 the band traveled to New York City and cut "The Allman Brothers Band" in two weeks. The album signaled a new direction in American rock and roll. Tight, danceable, and loaded with rhythm changes, the music clearly resulted from days of inspired jamming. ...Betts and Allman exploded the two-guitar band tradition of having one player relegated to rhythm while the other played lead. Instead, guitars were used for unison and counterpoint lines, and there was plenty of slide and innovative blues, with special attention to tone. Duane soared through "Dreams" with a lovely, melodic slide solo remarkable in its control and shifting tones....

"The Allman Brothers Band" sold only moderately well. ..Over the next two years they played over 500 dates, usually traveling with 11 people in a Ford Econoline van. Johnny Sandlin reflected, "Duane was very well-known throughout the South as THE guitar player. Every band had seen him; guitar players all watched him. He influenced a lot of people into playing their own thing instead of just being copy R&B bands. If he met other guitar players that he thought were promising, he'd either loan or give 'em a guitar, anything he could to help."

Johnny Jenkin's "Ton-Ton Macoute!" sessions produced "Walk on Gilded Splinters" and "Dimples" which contained ...twin lead guitars. ..Allman also played...on John Hammond's "Southern Fried." Of note here is the well-controlled bottleneck on "Shake for Me" and a swinging blues lead on "Cryin' for my Baby," during which Duane used the theatrical technique of reaching behind his fretting hand to raise and lower the pitch of the string...Duane also appeared on Otis Rush's "Mourning in the Morning" and albums by Barry Goldberg and Percy Sledge.

..."Idlewild South...marked the beginning of the band's association with Tom Dowd, who also produced "At Fillmore East", "Eat a Peach," and "Layla". Dickey and Duane continued to explore the use of guitars in harmony on "Revival," "Leave my Blues at Home," and Betts' magnificent "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed," which is surely one of their best studio performances. Using long-sustaining sweeping tones, Duane turned in a masterful bottleneck performance in "Don't Keep Me Wonderin;" and the second side of the LP found the guitarists outshooting each other in a blues jam on Willie Dixon's "Hoochie Coochie Man."

 

Fillmore East, Layla

After "Idlewild South's" release, Duane told a radio interviewer that their strategy for the next recording would be different:" The stage is really our natural element. When bands start to play, they just play live. We haven't got a lot of experience in making records. I do, a little bit, from doing sessions, but not like a polished session man or anything. We get kind of frustrated doing the records, so consequently our next album will be for the most part a live recording to get some of that natural fire on it. We have rough arrangements, layouts of the songs, and then the solos are entirely up to each member of the band. Some nights we are really good, and some nights ain't too hot, you know. But the naturalness of a spur-of-the-moment type of thing is what I consider the most valuable asset of our band. When you make records, you can't just do it over and over if somebody makes a mistake. Plus, the pressure of machines and stuff in the studio makes you kind of nervous. So a live album, I'm sure, would probably be the best thing."

The Allman Brothers were recorded live in April '70 at Cincinatti's Ludlow Garage, and a rare track of Duane singing "Dimples" is preserved on "An Anthology, Vol. II". The Allman Brothers' reputation for high-powered live shows began drawing larger and larger audiences, as did their free concerts on days off. As Duane philosophized, "Anytime you're getting paid for something, you feel like you're obligated to do so much. That's why playing the park is such a good thing, because people don't even expect you to be there. About the nicest way you can play is just for nothing. And it's not really for nothing - it's for your own personal satisfaction and other people's, rather than for any kind of financial thing. A lot of bread hangs people up; they try too hard. You can either do something or you can TRY to do something. Whenever you're trying to do something, you ain't doing nothing."

Over 1970's Fourth of July weekend, the Allman Brothers played a two-hour set for more than 200,000 wildly receptive spectators at the Second Annual Atlanta International Pop Festival. ..."Statesboro Blues" and "Whipping Post" were chosen for Columbia's "Isle of Wight/Atlanta Pop Festival" anthology. ...Duane later sat in on "Ronnie Hawkins" and played on "Matchbox" and "Who do You Love" and other tunes. He also added lead to the track "Beads of Sweat" for Laura Nyro and worked on Lulu's! "New Routes".

....Duane began his three-album association with Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett. He played an incendiary electric slide solo on "Living on the Open Road"..and added fine, old-timey acoustic to their "Medley"... Duane recorded "Come On In My Kitchen" with them in 1971 for their "Motel Shot" album..."Motel Shot" also featured some high-pitched electric slide on "Sing My Way Home," and several fine acoustic slide solos in "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad."....

In the last 13 months of his life Duane recorded his most important work, including ..."Layla", "At Fillmore East",...and "Eat a Peach." and various studio projects. Derek and the Dominos was probably his favorite and most important studio project. He was invited to participate after Tom Dowd brought Eric Clapton to an Allman Brothers gig. As Duane later described, "I went down there to listen to them cut Layla, that's what I went for. And well, like he'd heard my playing and stuff, and he just greeted me like an old partner or something. He says, 'Yeah, man, get out your guitar. We got to play!" So I was just going to play on one or two, and then as we kept on going, it kept developing. Incidentally, on sides 1,2,3, and 4, all the songs are right in the order they were cut from the first day through to 'Layla' and then 'Thorn Tree'. I'm as proud of that as any albums that I've ever been on. I'm as satisfied with my work on that as I could possibly be."

"Layla" proved to be the meeting of two kindred minds and 20 amazing fingers. Duane and Eric pushed each other to new levels, and Allman played the unbelievable slide solos in "Key to the Highway" and "Have you Ever Loved a Woman." At the conclusion of "Layla," he tracked a kind of bottleneck symphony that concluded with imitation bird sounds. Later Duane noted that Eric played some slide on the cut, too: "He gets more of an open, slidey sound. But here's the way to really tell: He played the Fender, and I played the Gibson. The Fender is a little bit thinner and brighter, a sparkling sound, while the Gibson is just a full-tilt screech."

...On other cuts the guitarists jammed or played in harmony, reaching their highest peak in "Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad." In addition, a lovely Clapton-Allman acoustic slide duet of the old blues tune "Mean Old World" is on "An Anthology". ...Duane toured with Derek & the Dominos for a few weeks. ...Clapton credited Duane with getting him interested in electric slide: "There were very few people playing electric slide that were doing anything new; it was just the Elmore James licks, and everyone knows those. No one was opening it up until Duane showed up and played in a completely different way. That sort of made me think about taking it up."

 

More about Fillmore East. And one of the saddest days in R n'R history

On March 12 and 13, 1971, the Allman Brothers recorded live at Fillmore East. When you combine "At Fillmore East" with the other tracks recorded those nights,...the Allman Brothers emerge as one of the finest live bands of rock and roll. There were no wasted words, no pointless jams. Duane's performances on "Statesboro Blues," "Done Somebody Wrong," "One Way Out," "Trouble No More," "Mountain Jam," and "Don't Keep Me Wonderin'" - set a still-unsurpassed standard for electric slide. His collaborations with Dickey Betts roared to life onstage with incredible power and emotion as they challenged and inspired each other. They gave commanding blues performances in "You Don't Love Me" and "Stormy Monday," and harmony guitar parts abounded in "Hot 'Lanta," "Mountain Jam," and "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed." Duane's no-holds-barred solos in these latter two cuts are among the most inventive and creative of his recorded work. The band recorded at the Fillmore East again on June 27, 1971, and the cut "Midnight Rider" was issued on "An Anthology, Vol. II".

Next to the two ABB LP's, Herbie Mann's "Push Push" contains Duane's finest electric performances of 1971. The flautist's easy, jazzy grooves and open spaces allowed Duane to create freeform, well-thought-out solos. ...He also added some excellent acoustic slide to Ronnie Hawkins' "The Hawk"...and also played Dobro on Sam Samudio's "Sam - Hard & Heavy", and reportedly appeared on the Everly Brothers' "The Stories We Could Tell." His last session as a sideman was with ...Cowboy.

In addition to the Fillmore material, Duane completed three studio cuts for "Eat a Peach:" a slide tune called "Stand Back," a touching acoustic duet with Dickey Betts called "Little Martha" the only original tune Duane recorded with the Allman Brothers), and "Blue Sky," the rippling guitar harmonies of which are among the best the group ever recorded.

...Duane expressed his thoughts on rock and roll: "Everybody is expending all this energy in various ways to get the same old feeling out of it that Little Richard can get in five minutes. And people are finally waking up to the fact that you can get as much of a good feeling out of a simple thing as you can out of something that's hard. A lot of people who would have you believe they are intelligent musicians are playing bullshit. Music's become so intellectualized. Man, music is FUN. It's not supposed to be any heavy, deep intense thing - especially not rock music, man. That's to set you free! Anybody that ever listened to Chuck Berry or any of them cats knows that. Rock is like a newspaper for people that can't read. Rock and roll will tell you where everything is at. It's something to move your feet and move your heart and make you feel good inside. You know, forget about all the bullshit that's going on for a while, fill up some of the dead spaces.

With "At Fillmore East" rapidly becoming a hit album and two years of touring behind them, the Allman Brothers Band decided in late October to take a few weeks' vacation. Duane journeyed from Miami to New York City, where he visited his friend John Hammond. He then returned home to Macon, where, on October 29, 1971, he went to Berry Oakley's house to wish the bassist's wife a happy birthday. After leaving the house about 5:45 PM, he swerved his motorcycle to avoid hitting a truck that pulled out in front of him. The cycle skidded and turned, pinning him underneath. He died after three hours of emergency surgery at Macon Medical Center. Duane was 24.

The rest of the Allman Brothers Band played at the funeral in Macon, with Dickey filling in Duane's parts. Delaney Bramlett then led everyone in "Will the Circle Be Unbroken," and Gregg Allman sang a final tribute. The band concluded the day with "Statesboro Blues." Duane was buried at Macon's Rose Hill Cemetery, where he had often gone to meditate and play acoustic guitar during the early days of the band. Berry Oakley, who died a year later in a remarkably similar accident, is buried nearby.

Some say that the best music Duane created was never recorded; it was born onstage and forever given away. Or it was the old country blues songs he sang by himself in the still of the night. For those who missed those occasions, Duane will always live on in his records. In talking about records near the end of his life, Duane shared some last advice with his brother musicians: "Develop your talent, man, and leave the world something. Records are really gifts from people. To think that an artist would love you enough to share his music with anyone is a beautiful thing."

 

Gregg speaks

What follows is Gregg Allman's version of events re Duane and growing up:

Duane was a year and 18 days older than me. My father died in '49; I was two and Duane was three. He had just come back from the Korean War and was shot by a hitchhiker. My father sang - not professionally; but he sang pretty well. ... We didn't have any instruments around the house when we were young. When we started school, we both wanted to get into the school band. We both wanted to play trumpet and we lost interest in it. ...

I began playing guitar first. ...Every summer we would go back to Nashville to visit my grandmother and stay there for the summer....There was a guy across the street that had an old Belltone guitar... He was a real country dude - Jimmy Bain, that was his name. ...I walked over there and asked if I could pick it up, and he said sure. The strings were about an inch and a half off the neck - one of those bleeders, you know...This was like '59, and so when I got back home, I thought, well, I'm going to get me one of those guitars. ...

So I got me a paper route...and cleared all of $21. I rode my bicycle over to Sears, and there was a Silvertone acoustic there that I wanted. It was $21.95. The guy wouldn't trust me for the 95c, so I had to go home and borrow it from my mother. ...I got one of those Mel Bay books, and I didn't eat or sleep - didn't do nothin' but play that guitar. I just was crazy about it! I learned how to make a barre chord, and that really started it.

A friend of mine turned me on to some Jimmy Reed albums, and taught me that lick. And so then my brother said, "What do we have here?" So I taught him what I knew, and he picked it up real quick. I mean, he was real sharp. I got my first electric guitar that November 1960)...It was a fender Musicmaster. ..I got turned on to Chuck Berry and Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis and Presley...By this time Duane had to have one, so to keep us from fighting, Mom got him an electric. It was a Les Paul Junior, one of those old purple ones with a real thin body and just one pickup. And so we started playing together, and we really became friends at that time. We were like typical brothers before that - fight every day, you know. He was a rascal.

First we joined a band that was already together; it was called the House Rockers & the Untils. ....They only needed one guitar player, so we switched off every other night. This was like 1963. The first band that we put together ourselves was called the Shufflers, and I played lead guitar and Duane sang. Then Duane quit school. He didn't like it, but he loved to read - he was always reading something. He read books like Papillon, The Trilogy - all kinds of stuff...He'd stay home, and man, he learned guitar fast! He played all the time, copied off records and made it up himself. He loved B.B. King. Over the years he liked all kinds - he loved everybody from Chuck Berry to Kenny Burrell, you name it. Back then he liked Johnny Guitar Watson, and he got into that real old blues stuff - he loved Robert Johnson. He just loved any kind of guitar playing.

The only lessons Duane had was us sitting around the house - trial and error. And then he had a friend named Jim Shepley, who was a couple of years older and had started a couple of years before. He's the one that turned us on to all the Jimmy Reed records. ...I thought, "Man, this guy is something else!"...Shepley and Duane would skip classes and shoot pool and play guitars. ...

After I got out of high school in '65 we had a band called the Allman Joys. We did what you call the chitterlin' circuit. You know, Mobile, Alabama, at the Stork Club. We worked like seven nights a week, six sets a night, 45 minutes a set....We recorded one 45, recorded it at Bradley's Barn in Nashville, which is now burnt down. The song was "Spoonful" by Willie Dixon, and I sang it. It was a TERRIBLE recording. Later Duane and I met up with Johnny Sandlin, Paul Hornsby, and Pete Carr.....{After renaming themselves Almanac, Bill McEuen, the older brother of Johnny McEuen of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band...made a proposition to take us out to LA. I said, "No, let's don't go." And Duane said, "Yeah, let's go and do it!" And so we went, and they came up with the name Hour Glass.

 

The lost LA years, Duane sessions.

Gregg speaks:

That period with Hour Glass was pretty scary because I had never been past the Mississipi. It just seemed like it was forever away. And we didn't play much, for some reason. Our first gig was with the Doors at the Hullabaloo Club. And that scared me to death - I could barely sing! My knees were knocking together. There must have been 2,000 people in that place. The whole Hour Glass thing just turned kind of sour. Both albums came out. They'd hand us a washtub full of demos and say, "Pick out your new album." And all of this time I was songwriting: I did get a few on those albums, but...

I guess we were there from part of '66 until '68, and Duane finally said, "Man, I've had it with this bullshit! I'm leaving. Why don't we take the band and go back home where we belong, back down South." Gregg stayed to work off a debt to the record company. The rest of them didn't really like it; they were all cussing me on the way out the door. They thought I wanted to stay out there, which I did not. So there was no lawsuit, and I cut two records with their 20-piece orchestra. I hope you never heard those.

...Duane was working as a session player...He LOVED King Curtis - they were real tight. He liked all of his session stuff, and I think "Layla,"...was probably his favorite. The way that session came about was were playing in town and Clapton came out to the gig. It scared Duane to death! He came and sat down in front, right on the grass...Tommy Dowd was with him, and Duane asked Tommy if it would be alright if he came and watched part of the session. Clapton said, "Watch? Hell, come on and play!" At one point towards the end both bands got in there and did a real long jam...Duane liked playing with Clapton. He always said, "I like somebody onstage kickin' me in the ass so I do better," ..

Anyway, I stayed in LA 11 months... I was playing with this chick who really wrung me around. That's when I wrote "Cross to Bear" and "Black-Hearted Woman."...Duane called and said he had this band together with two lead guitar players and I thought, "Well, that's weird." Then he says, "And two drummers." And I said, "That's real weird."..Then Duane said "why don't you come on down here and round this thing out and send it somewhere," which is probably the finest compliment he ever gave me in my life. I said, "Let me hang up this phone, man! I've got to get going."...That was March 26, 1969.

Gregg speaks:

It would be real accurate to say that Duane was the father of the band. He had a lot to do with the spontaneity of the whole thing. He was like the mother ship. Somehow he had this real magic about him that would lock us all in, and we'd all take off. He really had that quality about him. Those were very happy days. We didn't have much money. Duane had a substantial amount from sessions, but nobody was rich. But we didn't care because we were playing our music...

When it came time to do the first album, they said, "You all got two weeks - get in there and do it and get out." And we cut it in that time. Duane always felt - and I learned this from him - that if you lay down a sound that's a hit in your heart, it's a hit. I don't care how many it sells, who likes it, or whatever - play what you want to play and stick to your guns....Duane was really that way about it: He did his thing, and if you like it, fine; and if you don't fine.

I liked all of what Duane played with the Allman Brothers Band. He did some incredible things on "Mountain Jam," and played some good slide on "Please Don't Keep Me Wonderin'." I also like "Revival" and things like "Leave my Blues at Home." "Dreams" - he did one hell of a job on the solo on that! In that solo and at the end of "Layla" he did a real high sound that was supposed to be birds in the distance. He put the bottle way up there by the bridge pickup to do that.

..Down at Muscle Shoals he'd take a Fender Princeton amp and turn it on full blast...He threw away his Fuzz Faces and got the right amps for the right sort of thing. ..When he started working with Marshalls, he found out that a 100-watts was not it, so he used 50s. He played real loud and usually stood up in the studio.

...A lot of times he'd go into a bathroom with tiles. ...I've got a picture of him leaning against the sink...He's sittin' there with a Les Paul - I can hear it!..For a long time Duane played a Telecaster with a Stratocaster neck. ..In the Allman Joys he played a Gibson ES-335, and then he got a Les Paul...I traded the Les Paul to Twiggs Lyndon for a car. See, the guitars I play have to have a wide neck on them, and that particular Les Paul had a narrow neck. ..Duane also had an old Gibson acoustic with an oval hole and an arch-top. I've got that one. Dickey has Duane's National in his living room.

Duane was pretty shy about stardom...He thought about it the same way that I do - you're just another person. Outside of the band he was pretty quiet, a homebody. He liked to bass fish, and he listened to music all the time...Towards the end of his life his best friends were John Hammond - who is a beautiful man - Johnny Sandlin, and all of us...

Duane wasn't hard to work with at all...He really respected what I did and I respected what he did. He used to lean right against the organ, and he hardly ever looked down at his guitar when he played live. How he did it, I don't know. He just knew where he was going, I guess.. Man, I loved it. Every time I walk up on the stage, I still feel like he's standing right there next to me. Not a day goes by that I don't think of brother Duane. He never talked much about dying, and he was one hell of a cat. I think his music will live on for a long, long time., and I'll support it as long as I'm around. I loved him.

 

Dickey Betts on working with Duane

Dickey Betts speaks:

The first time I met Duane was in '67, when he and Gregg had a band called Hour Glass. They were playing around the state of Florida, and we ran into each other in a club over in Orlando. We jammed, and that's when I met Gregg, too. ...The band I was working with and Duane's group at that time weren't in the position to do completely original material like we were later.

We were both playing lead, but at that point I don't think Duane was playing slide. He started really getting seriously into it....just about the time the Allman Brothers got together. ...Robert Johnson - you've heard that name a million times, and I guess he was probably one of the biggest influences on Duane. He got really into Elmore James a lot for the electric part of it. ...But he didn't try to copy the artists note-for-note. He just kind of absorbed it.

...Duane was planning on going to Capricorn with a trio. It was going to be Duane and Berry Oakley and Jaimo. Duane started showing up in Jacksonville to sit in with Berry Oakley and myself, with our band Second Coming. ..As we started jamming, we realized that Duane and I playing harmony guitars together was something that we weren't expecting to hear. Western swing bands from the '30's always used that twin-harmony guitar... That influence was probably what I offered Duane. Like when we did things like "Blue Sky," which is one of the last things Duane played on, he's playing that kind of western swing. Jerry Garcia is into that kind of playing, too. I, of course, learned an immense amount about playing slide from Duane. I guess my whole thing with the electric slide guitar comes from him.

Duane played slide guitar more like a harmonica than he did a guitar. ...He also listened to all the harp players - Sonny Boy Williamson and all that. He played a lot of harmonica licks on slide guitar. He used a glass Coricidin bottle - that's before you could buy glass slides in music stores. He wore it on his ring finger, which is so unorthodox - most people who play slide either wear it on their middle or little finger so they can fret the guitar...He also didn't use a pick. He just used the thumb and first and second fingers, fingerpicking style, which is the same style I've adopted. Then he damped with his other fingers behind the slide.

...At first, Duane used to just tune his regular Les Paul onstage. When we got ready to do a slide tune, he'd just tune to a straight E chord and play slide right on the guitar that he'd been playing all night, rather than switching. After a couple of years went by and he became more advanced, he started using a Gibson SG. He liked that because of the long neck and the fact that you can get way down in the bottom frets of it without any trouble.

In the early days, we almost lived together. The main reason was nobody had the money to have an apartment, so we'd just rent a big house and everybody would chip in. A lot of ideas for the arrangements for the songs would come together through jamming. Someone would say "Hey, let's put this part of the jam we did the other night in this song." For "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed," I'd written the melody and the very basic chords and brought it to the band, and we played it for a week or so before we even taped it, just seeing what we could do with the tune.

It was hard not to try and have this complete contest with Duane all the time, trying to out-do each other because we were both playing lead. The only way that can work is if somebody lays back a little bit. The position Danny Toler and myself are in right now is the same position I was in with Duane. If I had let jealousy or whatever get involved in it too much, it just wouldn't have worked. So in that sense, it was kind of hard being in a band with Duane. But hell, I learned more through those years than probably any other period in my playing career.

....I don't know what Duane's favorite songs with the band were. "Dreams" was one of the best performances he did on record, as far as the Allman Brothers Band. He was really proud of the slide thing he did on the recorded version of that, and he had a lot of fun playing it live. On the record, I don't think I'm even playing a solo on that song.

The first album was basically a live album done in the studio. There were very little overdubs on it....All the solos and that sort of thing were done right when the tracks were being played. We still do it that way, as a matter of fact. The next time you listen to the album, you'll notice I always appear left and Duane always appears right, or vice-versa, whichever way you've got your wires hooked up. ...In "Black-Hearted Woman," Duane was playing slide, so I was playing the regular guitar. Duane made up the bolero-like ending of that song. I played electric on "Trouble No More," and I think Duane overdubbed acoustic on it. And then he played electric slide on it. Duane played the intro to the studio version of "Whipping Post," and maybe they put an echo on it or something and twisted it back.

 

FE, Idlewild, EAP.

Dickey Betts:

"Idlewild South" was a little more studio-oriented than the first album, but it was still pretty live. Instead of baffling all the amps, we'd set them up in the studio just like we did onstage and run the producers crazy! We'd even stand like we did onstage on a lot of those tunes. "Midnight Rider" was more of a studio cut, and that was probably me playing the pedal-steel effects. Duane played most of the acoustic guitar on that album.

"Live at the Fillmore" was an accurate representation of our sound at the time. ..There were no overdubs whatsoever on Fillmore. There were some edits in some of the jams to try to get it on the record, but other than that, there was nothing done to it. It was just a pure performance. Duane introduced most of the songs. Onstage, I usually played the first solo and Duane played the second. In the Fillmore version of "Whipping Post," I played the volume swells. The solos in "You Don't Love Me" switch back and forth. Actually, on that particular cut I played the last, real long solo that goes on with the drums, and then Duane came back in after I finished that and put his signature on it - that sort of "Joy to the World" lick.

Duane was killed during the middle of "Eat a Peach." We did all those songs in about three weeks in a studio down in Miami, then we decided to take a break because Tommy Dowd had something else to do. And then Duane was killed. After everybody had a chance to get over what had happened, we came back in and finished it a few months later. I think "Blue Sky: and "Little Martha" were the last things he did. He wrote "Little Martha" for his wife, Donna. He also had a little girl, Galadriel, who was a year old when he was killed. Duane named that album "Eat a Peach."

Duane was ALWAYS on when he played. He really enjoyed sitting around a hotel room or around the house and playing old Robert Johnson or Blind Willie McTell tunes on acoustic and singing - you know, real personal stuff. He never put any of it on tape.

Ten years have gone by, and the band is still unique in the way we play, but it's not the same band that it was at all. We don't try to be. As a matter of fact, it took a long time before we'd even think about playing with two guitars again. Finally after a few years went by, we decided it might be nice to try it. But it's a different thing.

Duane will probably be known as the best electric slide guitar player of that time period. I guess it's about time for him to be documented for what he did. He was a great guitar player all the way around., but I think he's probably more famous for being the foremost electric slide player than anything else. And I guess he'll always be known for being the leader, the guy that made the whole Allman Brothers happen. I enjoyed knowing him, being around him the whole time. I'm just glad that I got a chance to work with him.

 

Jimmy Johnson of Muscle Shoals.

Still to come: John Hammond, Billy Gibbons.

Jimmy Johnson engineered Duane's Hour Glass sessions at Fame Recording Studios in April '68. As staff guitarist fo the Muscle Shoals rhythm section, he accompanied Allman on several studio projects afterwards.

The first time I met Duane he was in a group called the Hour Glass and had an unsuccessful album. ...They stopped by Muscle Shoals to record - this is somewhere in '68. And while Duane was there, everybody fell in love with his playing. It was extremely blues efficient, like nothing we had encountered with any of the players in the South before. He would play long, flowing lines, with such feeling...

We brought Duane back up in '68. He was kind of at a place in his life where he had nothing to do, so he was thinking about maybe coming to the area to live, which he did. That first session he had with Wilson Pickett - the "Hey Jude" session - was a really important one because it brought him to the attention of Jerry Wexler. Jerry Wexler was completely freaked out by him! He LOVED his playing. ...

Wilson Pickett named Duane "Sky Man." Duane already had the nickname Dog, and through evolution it became Sky Dog. I mean, back then anybody that had long hair and played that good had to be high, right? And he played what I guess back then was called "high music." The way he would throw his hair down when he was playing, you couldn't see his face or eyes or anything - it gave him the appearance of a shaggy dog.

Duane played with us ... for about a year. When I first worked with him, he was already extremely good. ...At the beginning a chart meant nothing to him. He didn't know music school-wise, but he had some basic knowledge. ..Even with the Allman Joys he was ahead of his time. He was well-suited for studio work. He got into what we were doing; he adapted very well. His playing was so fluid, and most of his solos were first takes or real early takes. ...Duane had it! It was there. With the exception of Pete Carr, who came out of the Duane Allman school, I never really knew anyone that had the magic like that.

..He was an extremely loud player...He had to realize he couldn't bring water to the eyes of every producer that walked in. But he still had to keep a certain amount of level. ...He learned the conformity that you have to have to become a session player. And he became super successful at it - I mean immediately. ..Most people have to work their way in. When Duane did that date with Pickett, he was in. That's never happened before or since, and I don't think it ever will happen again. The players that had been playing lead, we just didn't use them anymore.

Mainly at that time Duane used a Strat and a Fender Twin amp with JBLs. He had one gadget - a Fuzz Face - and that was it. ..He used a lot of feedback solos between the pickups and speakers...Sustain for the world. ...When he'd pop that 9-volt battery in there, a new one wouldn't suit him. ...He was into weak batteries....

Here at Muscle Shoals our whole life is music...We eat, sleep and breathe music. ..Duane had that intenseness, and a dedication to his instrument. He was in love with that guitar - it was a beautiful, lavish woman. ..He lived music as much and more than we even did.

 

More Jimmy Johnson

Jimmy Johnson:

Duane's slide playing was the best I've ever heard, and I think he brought in a whole new concept for bending strings. Some people go to different schools - there's the puller, and then there's the pusher. I think he pushed more, but he could pull, too. Watching him play was like seeing poetry in motion, especially the way he would shake a note. He had the smoothest way of bringing the pitch up and down. He would use his ring and middle finger, almost like they were perpendicular to the neck. His thumb would be going up and down, and his little finger would be extended.

I remember a specific incident when we were in New York, doing Aretha. ..This was around late '68, maybe the first of the year. He says, "Hey, let's run over to the Fillmore East to hear this new guy." Johnny Winter was playing his premiere performance in New York, and the publicity was unreal. ...Duane had never really expressed that he wanted to go back to live performing. But that night it just go too much fot him. I'll never forget what he said..."Johnny is really good but I can cut him."

Of course, I knew what he meant. Johnny was great - this ain't belittlin' Johnny - but I think he was giving Duane the confidence that HE could make it because he knew he could play, he could cut it. He looked over at me. "Jimmy," he said. "Do you see that stage down there? Next year by this time I'm going to be down there." I looked at him and kind of did one of them double-takes, and I said, "You know, I think you will." And he was. I get chills when I think of that night.

..Duane went to Macon. Phil Walden had a void - Otis had died, and he was looking for that superstar. He found it in Duane and the Allman Brothers. We were always very close after that, and he came and did sessions with us - Boz Scaggs. The last time I saw Duane was when he came up and played a few cuts on a Cowboy album. He was quite a player.

According to Gregg Allman, John Hammond was one of Duane's closest friends. They met during a session in 1969, and Duane jammed with Hammond shortly before he died.

Duane Allman was one of the premier lead guitar players for rock and roll, blues, R&B stuff - any style. ..He was quite a prolific player, and his feeling and magnetism were unique. He was also a good friend, and the kind of guy that everybody looked up to.

..I was going to record with the band in Muscle Shoals. When I arrived, they thought I was going to be black, and I thought they were going to be black! So they got pretty cold to me, and I didn't know what to make of this. After two days we'd cut about four tunes or something, and it was not going well.

Then on the scene arrives this guy with long red hair down his back, eyebrows that crossed, and a moustache that went all the way into his sideburns...He pulled up in this abandoned milk truck, and everybody said, "Hey, Duane, how you doin', man?" He said, "Where's this John Hammond guy? I want to meet this guy - I really dig him." They said, "You DO?" And they all looked at me with new respect.

Duane said, "I sure dig your stuff, boy, and I sure would love to play on your record, if it's okay." I said, "Sure, I guess so." I had never heard him play before, but these guys worshipped him. As sooon as Duane gave me the okay, the session went fantastic! The album was "Southern Fried." When he did "Shake for Me," I was floored. There was a lot more that was edited out of that in order to fit the album; I mean he played on and on and on! He was just incredible.

This was in '69. Not long after that, he put together the Allman Brothers Band. ..I was on many shows with them, and I knew them all very well.

When Duane and I jammed together, it was always on acoustic. ..He was a fantastic slide player, but he usually played in a straight tuning, without tuning to an open chord. He played with a flatpick, as I recall. He just knew where to hit the notes with the slide so it would make the right sound. He played single-string stuff and a few chords....I don't think I ever heard him off. I said, "Man, how did you ever get to be that good?" He said, "By taking speed every night for three years and playing in rock bands."...

It was really sad when he was killed because he'd just gotten his health back. He'd been in the hospital up in Buffalo I think, and he was in VERY good shape. ..He was the real strength of that band - the absolute creative leader. It took them a long time to get it back together again after he died. He just had all this dynamic energy exploding all the time. And there was a magnetism about him that made it special. He was the leader and the catalyst of the whole Southern thing -- the Muscle Shoals sound, the Miami sound - and everybody looked up to him. He's what made it fantastic.

 

Pete Carr and Billy Gibbons

Pete Carr was Duane's roommate while they were in the Hour Glass together, and remembers the night Duane decided to learn slide guitar.

About 1968 I started playing bass with the Hour Glass...We came to Muscle Shoals in '68 and did two or three blues tunes that are on the "Duane Allman: An Anthology" albums.

When I started playing with Duane, I thought he was great. ..When I first met him in '65, he ..brought back a distortion box that he got from the guys in the Blues Magoos.

I know exactly how Duane got into bottleneck. We were in LA and saw Taj Mahal playing in a club. Jesse Ed Davis was with him, and they did "Statesboro Blues"...Jesse played slide guitar and really turned Duane on - bam! He started playing bottleneck..Anytime Duane would see something new, if he liked it, he'd get into it. Both Gregg and Duane were really, really influenced by any person that impressed them. ..

The band started doing "Statesboro Blues," and Duane started playing bottleneck about as much as anything. He'd sit around the apartment and practice. At first he played in regular tuning, and later on he played in different ones. ..

The Hour Glass just wasn't happening in LA. Me and Duane had an apartment in Hollywood, and Gregg lived next door...Me and Duane drove a van back to Florida and went down to Miami to do sessions. ..Duane agreed to let Phil Walden be his manager, and they started to put together the Allman Brothers together.

 

Billy gibbons (promise)

Billy Gibbons and his band ZZ TOP toured the South with the Allman Brothers.

We were down in New Orleans at the Warehouse Club, which was owned by an independent outfit that had hired a band from Texas and a band from Georgia, and it turned out to be the Allman Brothers and ZZ Top. When we got there, we found out that we had not only been hired for one night, but they wanted us to travel with a tour featuring Quicksilver Messenger Service. I'll never forget walking in the dressing room. There was Duane, and he had a silver dollar. He said, "Let's flip to see who goes first." So I grinned, and the Allman Brothers won the flip. Shoot, it worked out so well we ended up working together through the South.

...Several days later, ZZ was hired to play in Atlanta with Ike and Tina Turner. There were 15,000 people out there, all black, and three white guys opening the show. Real cool. Well, we did our little blues routine and had the first 200 rows laughing. Afterwards Ike said, "Say, why don't you guys take off those cowboy hats and really get where it's at?" He took me in the dressing room, and his entire band was wearing black velvet hot pants, panty hose, and knee-high, lace up leather boots. And he said, "Here's what you need to REALLY be cool! I'll tell you what, I've got some extra pair - you take a couple." The next night we were in Memphis back with the Allman Brothers, and I said, "What the heck - they won the flip, so I'll flip them out!" I slipped back into the dressing room and put on these clothes and some ridiculous little shirt and walked out. The most heartfelt memory I've got of that encounter was looking back over my shoulder as the entire auditorium was whistling, and Duane saying, "Play your ass off, Billy! It don't make no difference." And I did.

...We were friends from there on out. Billy ran into a couple of guitar dealers and said, "Duane is really interested in a vintage Les Paul - why don't you ring him up?" They called him up and said they had a '58 tobacco sunburst - it was absolutely gorgeous, with wide, fingery stripes. It ....belonged to Chris Cross, who recorded "Ride Like the Wind."

I never knew Duane to be off in his playing. I jammed with him, and there were some really delicate moments. He, of course, favored that slide guitar more so than standard. And it was a joy to hear just how one note could ring through a four-to-eight bar passage that would just curl your toes. He really had that soul.

At the time, Duane's playing was perfect. He was the perfect complement to suit what was to emerge as the South's embrace of their music, the blues. I'm speaking of "their music" as kind of the property of all Southerners, which had been largely ignored not only by the rest of the country, but by the record business in particular. It was strictly a black man's game, and yet here was a growin' number of white blues players all through the South who were really getting their influences from most of the famous black men - B.B. King, Jimmy Reed, Freddie King, Elmore James, and even as far back as Robert Johnson. All it took was a guy like Duane to embody that soul, that spirit. That's what he was, man. I really have to hand it to Duane and Dickey - despite all the partying, late-night hours, and just general wildness, it was just understood that the music was not to be tampered with. It was there, intact, automatic. Very inspirational. To me, Duane embodied that respect for music most of all.

J. Stewart

"I'm bad, I'm nationwide"

Muscle Shoals bassist David Hood accompanied Duane on the Ronnie Hawkins, Laura Nyro, John Hammond, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Boz Scaggs, King Curtis, Arthur Conley, and Lulu sessions.

Eddie Hinton, another guitar player, brought Duane up for a session, and it was the first time I had ever seen anybody play bottleneck. I was just totally amazed by this strange creature! Duane seemed like he was from Mars...Back then you could see where he was going, but his playing was a lot more primitive. In fact, it wasn't too much earlier than that that Gregg was teaching Duane a lot of licks on the guitar. Duane was the lesser player in the beginning, even though he soon passed Gregg. ..

Duane was great to work with in the studio. He was very easy. He had no problem getting his part right, and plus he had a lot of ideas. Sometimes they wouldn't work, but it's better to have ideas than not ever say anything. In the studio they would let Duane just sort of go for it, mainly because nobody really knew that much about slide guitar then. It wasn't new or anything - it was an old variation of a way to play - but nobody was playing it that much.

There was a definite change in Duane's slide style after the Allman Brothers got together. At first it was real crude. ...It got much freer by the "Live at the Fillmore" album. There were a lot of prettier jams, and they would go off into little side tangents and ad libs.

Duane liked to play acoustic guitar, sometimes Dobro. ...If you'd go somewhere and there was a guitar there, he'd sit down and play. He loved for people to be entertained, and he liked to show off. To me, Duane Allman totally LIVED what he did, and it was not always great - I mean, his excesses were dangerous and proved fatal to him.

Duane liked to get high, and he was always psyched up. ..He was always up, always high. I never knew him down. He was a good old guy, one of the first hippie musicians I ever came in contact with. ,,,He'd give you anything he had and take anything you had. He saw no wrong and felt everything was equal. He was also lucky. He would get himself into messes and then somehow get out just by luck. I consider Duane one of those extraordinary people that you only meet a few of in your life.

Duane never really liked the session thing. ..He didn't like the regimentation of session life, although there was a whole lot less here than anywhere else.

Duane really popularized several styles, with the slide and the two-guitar harmony he did with Dickey Betts. He helped me in ways that are hard to describe. When I went on the road with Traffic, I was really scared. I had never done much live playing - I was used to working in the studio and having my headphones and being pretty much in control of things. I used to get some spiritual help from listening to the "Live at the Fillmore" tape, even though it was a completely different type of music. I knew that Duane was a perfect, ultimate live player, and I would listen to him and somehow it would calm me down a little bit to where I wasn't nervous. Before then, I never even knew another person could do that to you.

 

Slide technique, discography

Duane Allman and slide guitar. To many devotees of Duane's playing with and without the Allman Brothers, the two will forever be inseparable. Duane's slide style had an unmistakable identity that was solely his own, and he possessed one of the most fluid and expressive bottleneck sounds around. Eric Clapton, when asked about his own slide playing in his August '76 Guitar Player interview, responded: "I think what really got me interested in it as an electric approach was seeing Duane take it to another place. There were very few people playing electric slide that were doing anything new; it was just Elmore James licks, and everyone knows those. No one was opening it up until Duane showed up and played it a completely different way. That sort of made me think about taking it up."

THE SLIDE

Countless objects can be used as slides: Bottle necks, socket wrenches, pill bottles, knives, and brass tubing are just some of the objects that have been seen in the hands of slide players. When choosing a slide, it is important to have something with ample weight so you don't have to press down too hard on the strings, risking a lot of fret and fingerboard noise. In other words, the slide's own weight should help carry it along. Duane almost always used Coricidin bottles, and Lord knows they worked for him. However, the aspiring slide player should be forewarned about a couple of drawbacks to this type of slide. First, it really doesn't have the proper weight to get a truly clean, loud sound keep in mind that Duane played very loud with the Allman Brothers, mainly utilizing Les Pauls and Marshall amps). Also, this slide was shorter than the width of all six strings, making full chording and lower licks on the slide quite difficult to execute. Lastly, this type of slide has a closed-off end, and it can get awfully stuffy in there for your finger. You also lose the ability to use the tip of you finger, which, if exposed, can let you know where the end of the slide is for more accurate playing.

TUNINGS

Duane's favorite tunings were open G D,G,D,G,B,D low to high and open EE,B,E,G#,B,E. These are two of the most popular open tunings for slide guitar, with the latter being more reminiscent of the days of the acoustic Delta blues artists such as Robert Johnson and Son House. Open E is more represented in the later playing of Chicago bluesmen such as Elmore James and Tampa Red, who were important in bridging the gap between the rural and the hotter urban styles.

THE RIGHT HAND

Fingerpicking is essential to proper slide technique, and even though Duane used a flatpick for his lead playing, he always fingerpicked for slide. I recommend a thumb-and-three finger approach to slide playing; this style affords you the greatest damping capabilities so important to clean slide playing.

DUANE ALLMAND DISCOGRAPHY

SOLO ALBUMS (CAPRICORN)
Duane Allman: An Anthology
Duane Allman: An Athologly Vol. II

WITH ALLMAN JOYS
Early Allman Dial records)

WITH HOUR GLASS
Hour Glass , Liberty records
Power of Love, Liberty out of print)
The Hour Glass repackaging of first two), United Artists

WITH 31ST OF FEBRUARY
Duane & Gregg Allman Bold records)

WITH ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND (Capricorn)
The Allman Brothers Band
Idlewild South
Beginnings repackaging of first two)
At Fillmore East
Eat A Peach

WITH ARETHA FRANKLIN (ATLANTIC)

Soul '69
This Girl's in Love with You
Spirit in the Dark

WITH DELANEY & BONNIE & FRIENDS (ATCO)
To Bonnie from Delaney
Motel Shot
Delaney & Bonnie Together out of print)

WITH OTHERS:
-Clarence Carter, The Dynamic Clarence Carter, Atlantic
-Wilson Pickett, Hey Jude, Atlantic
-King Curtis, Instant Groove, Atco
-Boz Scaggs, Boz Scaggs, Atlantic
-John Hammond, Southern Fried, Atlantic
-Arthur Conley, More Sweet Soul, Atco
-Johnny Jenkins, Ton-Ton Macoute, Capricorn
-Derek & the Dominos, Layla, Atco
-Laura Nyro, Christmas and the Beads of Sweat, Columbia
-Ronnie Hawkins, Ronnie Hawkins, Cotillion
-Ronnie Hawkins, The Hawk, Cotillion
-Otis Rush, Mourning in the Morning, Cotillion
-Lulu, New Routes, Atco
-Sam Samudio, Sam - Hard and Heavy, Atlantic
-Herbie Mann, Push Push, Embryo
-Cowboy, 5'll jGetcha Ten, Capricorn

ANTHOLOGIES
The First Great Rock Festivals of the Seventies: Isle of Wight/Atlanta Pop
Festival, Columbia



  Retour à la page des archives sur Eric Clapton.
  Back to the Eric Clapton archive page.

 

  Retour à la page principale sur Eric Clapton.
  Back to the Eric Clapton home page.




Cette page a été réalisée par Vuibert Jérôme le
. e-mail : cf. mon cv.

>