![]() |
|||||
| Home Guitar Lesson Reviews Rock God Reviews Shred Licks Sweep Licks Legato Licks Contact Dave $$$Got Licks$$$ | |||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||
|
Duane Allman
In 2003 Rolling Stone magazine made a list of
the
100 greatest guitarists ever.
Duane Allman finished in second place behind
only Jimi Hendrix, a fitting placement considering
Hendrix and Allman will be forever linked as icons
of the sixties that passed much too soon. Allman
lived only twenty-five short years on this planet
but in that time his irrepressible slide guitar made
an indelible indent on the world of popular music.
Growing up in Nashville, Tennessee, Duane and his
brother Gregg had lots of opportunities to see great
musicians. In particular, blues legend B.B. King
made a big impression on young Duane. During a King
show in 1959 Duane turned to his brother and said,
“We got to get into this.” Two years later the
Allman brothers quit high school and started their
own band named the Escorts and then later the Allman
Joys.
The Allman Joys were mired in mediocrity for five
years before morphing into another unsuccessful
group known as The Hour Glass. The Hour Glass’
record company wanted the group to be a pop band
even though the band members desired a more bluesy
sound. The two albums released by The Hour Glass
flopped. However some of the songs from this period
were resurrected and appear on the first and second
Duane Allman Anthologies. The songs are radically
improved from the originals mostly because Duane’s
guitar is featured prominently.
The Hour Glass albums did manage to do one important
thing for Duane’s career: they caught the attention
of Rick Hall, owner of FAME studio in Muscle Shoals,
Alabama. In November 1968 Hall hired Allman to play
back up on a Wilson Pickett album. Duane’s
performance on the record blew away Atlantic records
producer Jerry Wexler and soon he was being used as
a session musician on a bunch of R&B records. Allman
recorded with such sixties and seventies legends as:
Aretha Franklin, Clarence Carter, Boz Scaggs, Percy
Sledge, Otis Rush and jazz flautist Herbie Mann.
Even after he formed his own band, Duane would often
just show up at Muscle Shoals and jam with whoever
happened to be recording that day. He didn’t receive
any credit for these impromptu sessions and
consequently it’s virtually impossible to put
together a complete discography.
Duane soon grew weary of the limitations of session
work and desired to start his own band. Allman
recruited his brother Gregg to play keyboards and
sing,
Dickey Betts to play back-up guitar, Berry
Oakley to man bass and Butch Trucks to drum.
The Allman Brothers Band was formed. They
soon became renowned for their live shows,
especially in the Deep South. Even so, their first
album didn’t sell well, not even cracking the
Billboard’s Top 100. A track off the album,
“Whipping Post,” would end up being one of their
most adored concert numbers and in time would be
hailed as a legendary rock song. The Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame included “Whipping Post” in its list of
The 500 Songs that Changed the Face of Rock and
Roll.
The Allman Brothers Band released its second album
Idlewind South in 1970. The album was met
with critical acclaim and jumped onto the Billboard
chart. That same month Eric Clapton attended an
Allman Brothers concert. He met Duane after
the show and a legendary all-night jam session
ensued. The two had immediate musical chemistry and
Clapton insisted that Duane be a part of his new
band named Derek and the Dominos. Duane agreed and
when he wasn’t touring with the Allman Brothers he
would sneak off to Miami to record with Clapton.
Their collaboration can be heard on the album
Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs. Allman
played on almost every track and contributed some of
his best-known work. Duane steadfastly refused to
leave the Allman Brothers despite Clapton’s offer to
play with him full time. In 1971 the Allman Brothers
recorded At Fillmore East, one of the best
live albums ever recorded.
Fans responded enthusiastically to the release of
At Fillmore East and the band was more popular
than ever. Then on October 29, 1971 Allman was
riding his motorcycle in Macon, Georgia when he lost
control and crashed, injuring several internal
organs. He died a few hours later, less than a month
away from his 25th birthday. He truly
was, to borrow Kurt Cobain’s metaphor, the star that
burnt out instead of faded away.
In a bizarre and tragic coincidence the Allman
Brothers bass player Berry Oakley died thirteen
months later in Macon in much the same fashion. They
are buried in neighboring burial plots in Macon.
Two posthumous albums were released of Duane
Allman’s work: Duane Allman: An Anthology and
Duane Allman: An Anthology Vol. II. The albums
contain a variety of Duane’s session work and
Allman Brothers band leading. Duane can also
be heard on the Allman Brothers Band album, Eat a
Peach, which the band was working on at the time
of Duane’s death. The unusual title for the album
came from an interview with Duane a short time
before his death. When a reporter asked Allman, a
noted pacifist, what he does for the anti-war effort
Duane responded, “…every time I’m in Georgia I eat a
peach for peace.”
Duane was proficient with every type of guitar but
he is best remembered for his sublime slide guitar
playing. What most people call a “slide guitar” is
actually a technique not an instrument. Slide guitar
is played two ways: the player can hold the guitar
normally or horizontally. If it is held normally
then the player puts what is known as a bottleneck,
(because bottlenecks were the first materials to be
used,) on the left hand and makes a sound by sliding
the bottleneck up and down the strings. If the
player holds it horizontally then a “steel” is used
similar to the bottleneck and this is referred to as
playing a “steel guitar”. Duane played the slide
guitar using a bottleneck.
Duane’s tone on the slide was unique due to a couple
of things. First he used a glass Coricidin Medicine
Bottle. This is not actually long enough to cover
the neck of the Les Paul. Consequently he never
played full chords; he preferred to never reach
beyond triads (3 string chords). He would hold the
slide in such a way that the inside rim of the
bottle would rest on the second knuckle of his ring
finger. He would use the tip of his ring finger to
position the slide and use his second finger to
pinch the strings behind the slide and choke off any
unwanted overtones. In order to achieve this Duane
had his guitars set up with the action high and the
frets low.
Duane’s fretted technique was also quite abnormal.
He used a technique called circular picking instead
of the standard perpendicular movement of the pick
to the strings. This technique softens the attack
and allows one to jump strings with a more
controlled manner. Also, the fact that Duane was a
lefty but played a right-handed guitar made him
unique. It gave him unusual strength and control in
his fretting hand and a very light touch with his
picking hand.
In contradiction to the majority of rock
heavyweights during his era, Duane Allman did not
play a Fender Stratocaster. He preferred to play
Gibson to Fender; he played a 59 Gibson Sunburst and
a 68 Cherry SG. For amplification he generally used
the Marshall 50 watt bass head. When a reporter
asked him the difference between what he and Clapton
played on the Layla album he responded: I played the
Gibson and he played the Fender. Continuing to
explain that the Fender had a “sparklier” sound and
the Gibson had more of a “high-pitch screech.”
The legacy of Duane Allman will always be one of
unreal talent and tragedy that is too real and too
common. He was a brilliant musician that passed
before his genius could be truly appreciated. The
song “Free Bird,” which legendary Southern rock
group Lynyrd Skynyrd dedicated to the memory of
Duane Allman, starts with the lines: “If I leave
here tomorrow… Would you still remember me?” In the
case of Duane the answer is a resounding and
enthusiastic yes.
|
|
![]() |
|||
| Eddie Van Halen | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Joe Satriani | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Eric Johnson | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Steve Vai | |||||
|
|
|||||
![]() |
|||||
| Paul Gilbert | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Jimmy Page | |||||
|
|
|||||
![]() |
|||||
| Randy Rhoads | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Kurt Cobain | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Kirk Hammett | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Stevie Ray Vaughan | |||||
|
|
![]() |
||||
| Yngwie Malmsteen | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Slash | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Robert Johnson | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Pete Townsend | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Jerry Garcia | |||||
|
|
![]() |
||||
| Bo Diddley | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Jeff Beck | |||||
|
|
|||||
![]() |
|||||
|
|
Duane Allman | ||||
![]() |
|||||
| Jimmy Hendrix | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| BB King | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| John Frusciante | |||||
|
|
![]() |
||||
| Joe Perry | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| George Harrison | |||||
|
|
![]() |
||||
| Santana | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Chuck Berry | |||||
![]() |
|||||
| Eric Clapton | |||||
|
|
![]() |
||||
| Dimebag Darrell | |||||
![]() |
|||||
![]() |
|||||
![]() |
|||||
| Home Guitar Lesson Reviews Rock God Reviews Shred Licks Sweep Licks Legato Licks Contact Dave $$$Got Licks$$$ | |||||
![]() |
|||||