Allman Brothers Band- Gregg Allman

That  Allman Brothers Band  debut album in 1969 contained the Muddy Waters cover “Trouble No More”, the hypnotic soulful Gregg Allman composition “Dreams”, and the Southern Rock classic, “Whipping Post”. Growing up in the segregated American Deep South near Nashville and later Daytona Beach, Florida in the 1950s and early 1960s, Gregg Allman, the younger of the Allman brothers, had a friend named Floyd Miles.  “He took me, literally, across the (railroad) tracks of town,” Gregg told me before his death in 2017.”Back then, maybe 1960, it wasn’t cool to go over to ‘Black Town’, you know what I mean? He took me to this combination drugstore-barber shop- convenience store-record shop. All in one room. And there was this big bin in there full of records, and they were on sale for, I think, like a buck! And he (Floyd)  saying ‘This is Sonny Boy Williamson, and this is Jimmy Reed, this is Otis Redding, this  is Howlin’ Wolf.’ And the music was gutsy, man, and it had something to hold onto. I just became totally infatuated with it. And every dime I got went to that record store. And I’d set at home learnin’ them licks, learned to play.” 

Had the plane carrying Georgia soul singer/writer Otis Redding and several of his band members not plunged into that icy Wisconsin lake in December 1967, it’s highly unlikely that Redding’s Macon-based manager Phil Walden would have been actively looking to develop new, unknown bands in 1969. Redding was poised to cross over from the soul / r & b world to a wider ( and yes,whiter) mainstream audience at the time of the tragic plane crash, evidenced by his “Sitting on the Dock of the Bay going #1 on the pop charts in early 1968.

Songwriter/organist/singer Gregg Allman and his older brother, guitarist Duane, were at the creative epicenter of the Southern Rock genesis, forming the Allman Brothers Band in March 1969 in Daytona Beach and Jacksonville Florida with a repertoire of blues standards by Muddy Waters, T-Bone Walker, and Willie Dixon – black Americans all . It’s clearly evident that the ABB was integrated from the outset, musically and otherwise, which continued to its recent conclusion. While true that the group would soon become augmented with original songs by the 21 year-old Gregg, how ironic that the Southern Rock movement, led by the Allman Brothers Band on Walden’s Capricorn Records  and later often associated with white Dixie flag-waving good ol’ boys, was actually borne from the musical success, and misfortune, of Otis Redding, a black American. – Redbeard