In my feeble mind, he had nothing to
prove. Being a part of the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame meant a lot to him. His
place in music history, and his legacy as part of the Allman Brothers Band is
secure. I have the feeling that as Gregg
Allman, solo artist, he must have thought he still had something to prove, if not to
himself, then to his fans every night on the concert stage. He need not have worried on that score. His fans were with him regardless of whether
he was in a big band started by his big brother Duane or in his own band.
When Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks
announced that 2014 would be their last year as part of the Allman Brothers
Band, the proverbial writing was on the wall.
Butch Trucks didn't want to read that writing, and he wasn't shy about
saying as much. If Jaimoe had any
opinions about the Allman Brothers Band finally calling it a day, I never heard
him express any feelings publicly one way or the other. But it was Brother Gregg who made it
official. Publicly, he expressed the
need to concentrate on his own career.
What we in the listening public didn't know at that time was that Gregg
Allman was slowly dying.
The liver cancer that he had prior to his
liver transplant in 2010 had returned in 2012, and this time it spread to one
of his lungs. Rather than go through
further cancer treatment (as a spouse of a cancer survivor, I know that chemo
and radiation therapy are tough), he accepted his time on Earth was short. He wanted to be at the top of his game until
he could no longer perform. His feeling
was that cancer treatment would affect his voice, a situation he thought
unacceptable. It was with that same
determination to give all to his fans that he decided to make one final album,
a gift for his fans and a chance to say goodbye and thank you to us in his own
way. That album, Southern Blood, dropped today, three and a half months after he
breathed his last in late May.
Until now Gregg Allman's last musical
statement was 2011’s Low Country Blues. That record, made with T-Bone Burnett,
contained covers of old blues songs and one original song he wrote with Warren
Haynes (Just Another Rider). I think Low
Country Blues is a fine album. But it bugged Gregg that he didn't record it
with his own band. That would change
with Southern Blood. When he decided to make this album, it was
going to be with his own road band instead of studio musicians, and he was
going to do it at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. This is the same studio where his brother
Duane made his first musical mark when he recorded Hey Jude with Wilson Pickett in 1968. Duane and Gregg’s band Hourglass recorded
their BB King Medley here [it’s on
the Duane Allman Anthology]. Gregg's own musical circle would indeed
remain unbroken.
Like Low
Country Blues before it, Southern
Blood is filled with covers and one
final original song. Gregg wanted to
tell the story of where he's been, and where he was going. The songs he chose to tell that story sound
like they were written especially for him, but of course they weren't - they
just fit that well. Gregg's song choices
were impeccable, and as there are several surprises as to the songs themselves
and who wrote them, he demonstrated he still had a few musical tricks up his
sleeve. While the content on Southern Blood is mostly covers like Low Country Blues, the production sounds
like 1997’s Searching for Simplicity,
while the feel is like Laid Back,
Gregg’s first solo album. Like that
first album, there are female choir voices, a steel guitar here and there, and
the recording itself has a very warm feeling to it. According to producer Don Was, the songs were
recorded mostly live. Gregg had been
playing with this group of musicians for years, and they were tight. This album demonstrates how tight they were.
The
songs:
My
Only True Friend – The only Gregg Allman original on
the album, this would be the last of his own songs that he would
record. Written with guitarist Scott
Sharrard, this is Gregg Allman’s ode to life on the road. Sharrard said he was staying at Allman’s home
and working on songs a few years ago when he “had a vivid dream where Gregg was
talking to Duane.” He remembered the words and started working on a song he
envisioned “as a conversation across the universe between Duane and Gregg.” This song speaks to Gregg’s journey, that he
was nearing the end of his life, and that he wanted people to remember him long
after he's gone. A humble and sensitive
man, Gregg Allman underestimated his own importance to the fans who loved
him. He need not have worried that he
would be forgotten.
Once
I Was – One of Gregg Allman’s favorite songwriters was
Tim Buckley. He used to play this song
for an audience of one – Scott Sharrard.
When it came time to make the record, Sharrard convinced Don Was of the
need to put this one down. Always
thought of as a rhythm & blues purist, one forgets that Gregg had a folkie
side, the product of his association with Jackson Browne. This song is the first surprise of several on
Southern Blood.
Going
Going Gone – A Bob Dylan original that first appeared
on the Planet Waves album he did with
The Band in 1974, the original context of the title involved Dylan’s impending
split with his first wife Sara. The
circumstances of Gregg’s recording of this song make these dark lyrics even
more dark:
I've
just reached a place
Where the willow don't bend
There's not much more to be said
It's the top of the end
I'm going
I'm going
I'm gone
Where the willow don't bend
There's not much more to be said
It's the top of the end
I'm going
I'm going
I'm gone
I'm
closin' the book
On the pages and the text
And I don't really care
What happens next
I'm just going
I'm going
I'm gone
On the pages and the text
And I don't really care
What happens next
I'm just going
I'm going
I'm gone
I
been hangin' on threads
I been playin' it straight
Now, I've just got to cut loose
Before it gets late
So I'm going
I'm going
I'm gone
I been playin' it straight
Now, I've just got to cut loose
Before it gets late
So I'm going
I'm going
I'm gone
Black
Muddy River – From Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter,
this slow ballad first appeared on the Grateful Dead’s In The Dark album [1987].
Gregg was never a Deadhead [that was Dickey Betts’ thing], so this song
is a bit of surprise. In Gregg’s hands,
this turns into a full-blown country song, complete with steel guitars and [for
the first time] mandolins.
I
Love The Life I Live – I forget with whom he did the
interview [it might have been The Big Interview with Dan Rather], Gregg said
that he and his brother Duane always listened to the blues greats on Nashville’s
WLAC, that they especially liked Muddy Waters, Lightning Hopkins, and that they
owned everything Howlin’ Wolf ever cut.
It’s no surprise that Gregg would include something from Muddy Waters on
Southern Blood. Gregg did Muddy’s I Can’t Be Satisfied on Low
Country Blues. Here’s another Muddy
Waters song which I like much more than the original. Gregg’s “unreconstructed Southern masculinity”
oozes from every note he sings. You can
almost see the swagger in his walk when you hear this.
Willin – Brother Gregg finally does something from Little Feat. It first appeared on 1972’s Sailin’ Shoes, this is an ode to living
the life of a trucker, with bad weed and cheap wine.
Blind
Bats And Swamp Rats – This funky [yes. you read that
correctly] song is as fun as it is unexpected.
The song title was familiar, but I couldn’t remember where I heard it
before. Then it came to me – Johnny Jenkins,
Ton-Ton Macoute! – the Duane Allman
solo album that got away. After Dickey
Betts left the Allman Brothers Band, the Brothers had started to play Dr. John’s
I Walk on Gilded Splinters from the
same album [Duane played on it]. Gilded
Splinters worked extremely well for the Brothers, and Brother Gregg does an
equally fine job with Blind Bats and
Swamp Rats. This is my favorite from
Southern Blood.
Out
Of Left Field – This is a Percy Sledge song written by
Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham. Gregg liked
Percy Sledge. He once recorded a demo of
When a Man Loves a Woman [which can
be found on One More Try: An Anthology]. Given these lyrics, this song tells me he’s
singing about his wife Shannon. After
his previous marriage ended he publicly mused that he probably wouldn’t marry
again. But as the song says, “fate stumbled
in…”
When
least expected
Fate
stumbles in
Bringing
light to the darkness
Oh,
what a friend
I
needed someone to call my own
Suddenly,
out left field
Out
left field, out left field
Love
came along, ooh
Love
Like Kerosene – I first heard this one on Gregg Allman Live: Back To Macon, GA. Scott Sharrard wrote this one. Gregg and the band give a very spirited
performance.
Song
For Adam – Gregg Allman’s history with Jackson Browne
is well-documented, so I won’t rehash it here.
Browne wrote this song in memory of a friend who died from an apparent
suicide. But it reminded Gregg of
someone else who died young – his brother Duane. Gregg made a demo of this song in 1974. That demo can also be found on One More Try: An Anthology. He never put the song on an album until
now. According to producer Don Was, “once
Duane passed away, I think it really reminded him of his brother. He’d always
wanted to record it.” If you didn’t know
the story behind the song, one could easily think it was about Duane.
Well,
I still remember laughing
With our backs against the wall
So free of fear, we never thought
That one of us might fall
With our backs against the wall
So free of fear, we never thought
That one of us might fall
Given everything I’ve read about the early
days of the Allman Brothers Band, this describes Duane and Gregg to a T. Those were the good times, then came the
bad. The original lyric went like this:
Though
Adam was a friend of mine, I did not know him long
And
when I stood myself beside him, I never thought I was as strong
Still
it seems he stopped his singing in the middle of his song
Well
I'm not the one to say I know, but I'm hoping he was wrong
Gregg changed the words very subtly, but
when he did the meaning changed and you know that he’s singing about Duane:
And
when I stood myself behind, I never felt so strong…
Here’s the gut punch – when he sang this
line, he couldn’t do the line after it.
It was too emotional for him, and he choked up. If you’re listening on
headphones, you can hear his voice crack:
Still
it seems he stopped his singing in the middle of his song…
Duane Allman never finished his metaphorical
song. Don Was is a pretty good producer,
and when he heard Gregg stop suddenly in mid-song, he must have known he was
onto something cosmic and left it that way.
Gregg heard this mix of the song the night before he went to sleep for
the final time. He liked what he heard
and told Don Was to leave it the way he heard it.
David Bowie did it with Blackstar, and Warren Zevon did it with The Wind. Leonard Cohen did it with So You Want It Darker. As each man found out he was dying, each
decided to make a final statement to say “goodbye” on their own terms. They pulled it off rather well. I believe Gregg did what he set out to do in
making Southern Blood. This album is simply stunning.
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