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CONDITION: GATEFOLD COVER IN GREAT SHAPE! VINYL IS NM-. ORIGINAL 1973 CP 0111. INCLUDES INSERT WITH SONG TITLES AND AUTHOR PARTICULARY SHOWING THE ORIGINAL SONG TITLE *EARLY MORNING BLUES” BUT ON THE LABEL SHOWS ‘JELLY JELLY’ GREAT ALBUM!
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Album Features
UPC:
No Barcode
Artist:
The Allman Brothers Band
Format:
Vinyl
Release Year:
1973
Record Label:
Capricorn
Genre:
Hard Rock, Rock & Blues-Rock
Track Listing
1. Wasted Words
2. Ramblin' Man
3. Come and Go Blues
4. *Jelly Jelly (Early Morning Blues)
5. Southbound
6. Jessica
7. Pony Boy
Details
Contributing Artists:
Les Dudek
Distributor:
WB
Recording Type:
Studio
SPAR Code:
n/a
Album Notes
Allman Brothers Band: Gregg Allman (vocals, guitar, organ), Richard Betts
(vocals, guitar, slide guitar, dobro), Chuck Leavell (acoustic &
electric piano), Berry Oakley, Lamarr Williams (bass), Butch Trucks (drums,
percussion, congas), Jaimoe (drums, congas).Additional personnel: Les
Dudek, Tommy Talton (guitars).Engineers: Johnny Sandlin, Ovie Sparks, Buddy
Thornton. Recorded at Capricorn Sound Studios, Macon, Georgia. Three songs
into these sessions, bassist Berry Oakley was killed in a motorcycle
accident, eerily similar to the one that had claimed founding member Duane
Allman a year earlier. Given these circumstances, it is amazing that, on
balance, BROTHERS AND SISTERS is probably the Allman Brothers' strongest
studio effort. Songwriter and guitarist Dickie Betts really hits his
artistic stride here; his "Ramblin' Man," for example, not only
has country soul to burn but also features one of the all-time great
fadeouts, with the instrumentation building on itself and soaring into the
stratosphere. Founding member Gregg Allman, whose contributions lean more
toward the band's blues roots, is in equally good form. In particular,
"Wasted Words" and "Jelly Jelly" plumb seemingly
bottomless depths of feeling, and the band, notably pianist Chuck Leavell,
renders them with an effortless textural transparency and swing. Though not
as essential as the Allman Brothers' first four albums, the superb writing
and performances on BROTHERS AND SISTERS still place it among their finest
releases.
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