In Memory of Elizabeth Reed (Allman Brothers Band) | Paying Tribute to Dickey Betts | Ep. 769
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- čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
- #inmemoryofelizabethreed #allmanbrothers #allmanbrothersband
In this edition of #thedailydoug, I'm paying tribute to Dickey Betts of The Allman Brothers Band, who passed away recently at the age of 80. His guitar work is well respected across the musical universe, and his memory and legacy will live on in the music that he created. RIP Dickey!
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Dickey Lead 1, Duane Lead 2. Saw them 84 times over their run. The road goes on forever. RIP Dickey
Usually harder for me to identify Dickey, so I just figure out Duane's sound and then figure "the other one" is Dickey. Thanks for the help!
Yep exactly.
Eat A Peach baby eat a peach
thanks I never knew who did which lead 🙂
I remember my guitar teacher telling me if I learned and understood Allman Brothers I will have learned everything he has to teach me, jazz, blues and rock all at once
He was not wrong in saying that at all...the diminished line they used to get the next sequence was beautiful!
This song was the centerpiece on what is easily the best live album ever recorded. You'd love the rest of the album.
Made in Japan exists so it's not the best but definetely among the best
IMHO - this song + this performance = about as close to perfection as rock music gets. Never fails to hook me in.
Amazing.
13 minute zenith of live music. Really will never be topped.
RIP Dickey Betts, part of the BEST two lead guitar duos EVER! First solo is Dickey as well as the violin part in the beginning. Duane's solo is after Gregg's organ solo. For me this is the definitive version of this song, long live the original six.
My mentally disabled wife is dealing with both of her parents in the hospital, both at the end of their times. My wife is far and beyond able to cope with this cycle of life that cannot be denied and she vents her anguish and frustrations to me every day. As I try my best to support and comfort her I wish that I could do more for her. Music has always been my coping tool through all of the hard times that life has presented to me and this particular song has been one of my favorite go-to's. It has uplifted me, supported me and carried me through many tough times and tonight I feel blessed to hear it once again. I was not looking for it, but Doug's episode brought it to me when I really needed it! Thank you Doug for helping out a soul in a way that I am betting you never intended to.
This isn't the first time Doug has first listened to a song that someone out there needed the most at that time. He did the same for me last week with another tribute honoring another musician who passed away by reacting to To Our Childrens Childrens Children. Just what I needed with what I've been going through. Its been my favorite Moody Blues album for a few years now.
I wish you all the best my friend, i hope that it all goes as best it can. stay strong
Hey, just wanted to pass along peace, love, and comfort to you and your family. Your words definitely touched me and I only hope mine are half as impactful as yours.
So sorry. Keep up on the music...it can help so much.
Carry on. Be of good cheer. Friend
Dicky Betts ‘was as good as it gets!’ , rest in peace , guitar -god,, and thanx for all the unforgettable music…..__
Among one of the best songs the Allman Brothers did. Excellent guitar work from Dickey and Duane. Rest in peace Dickey Betts.
I consider this to be The Allman Brother's masterpiece!!! The bass work is a testament to the incredible talent of Berry Oakley. I learned this bass line back when this song came out and I can tell you it's a real work out. It very strenuous to keep it up the whole song. Hats off to these guys.
Wasn't Berry a lead guitarist in his own right?
Berry was The Man! His work speaks volumes! A real workout for me is Les Brers in A Minor!
Dicky Betts came into a record store that I worked at in the mid-90's. They were playing just down the street. He sat and chatted for a while. Such a nice dude. He'll be missed.
This album is one of my desert island albums
This album is one of everyone's desert island albums whether they know it or not.
Yeah it's right there with "Band of Gypsys" (original release)
Probably the most iconic southern rock song ever written. It was performed flawlessly live on this album. Dickey Betts was one of the world's greatest guitar players who was influenced by many jazz artists (by his own admission). You can certainly hear the jazz influence on this wonderful live recording (time and scale changes). The whole album is great but this song is a true masterpiece. A group of unbelievable talents at the top of their game. I bought this album when it came out in 1971 and literally wore it out. I have a number of copies on different media forms now and have listened to it thousands of times and it never gets old. I have also seen them live a number of times and their stage presence was amazing. Rest in peace Duane, Gregg, Berry, Dickey and Butch. There will never be another Allman Brothers Band but somewhere out there is a helluva jam session going on.
from the wiki article on this live performance in this performance, taken from the March 13, 1971 (first show) concert by the group,[12] Betts opens the piece with ethereal volume swells on his guitar, giving the aural impression of violins.[13][14] Slowly the first theme begins to emerge, Duane Allman's guitar joining Betts in a dual lead that variously doubles the melody,[15] provides a harmony line,[16] or provides counterpoint.[15] The tempo then picks up in the next section[14] to a Santana-like,[3] quasi-Latin beat, a strong second-theme melody driven by unison playing and harmonized guitars arising.[11]
Betts next plays a solo[13][14] using the second theme as a starting-off point.[17] This leads into an organ solo from Gregg Allman, with the two guitars playing rhythm figures in the background. Throughout, percussionists Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny Johanson play in unison, laying what has been described as "a thick bed of ride-snare rhythm for the soloists to luxuriate upon."[18]
Duane Allman then[14] starts quietly rephrasing the first theme, gradually building to a high-pitched climax, Berry Oakley's bass guitar playing a strong counterpoint against the band's trademark percussion. Allman cools into a reverie, then starts again, finding an even more furious peak.[17] Parts of this solo would draw comparison to John Coltrane and his sheets of sound,[17] other parts to Miles Davis' classic Kind of Blue album. Duane Allman biographer Randy Poe wrote that "[Allman]'s playing jazz in a rock context" reflected the emerging jazz fusion movement, only in reverse.[14] Allman himself told writer Robert Palmer at that time, "that kind of playing comes from Miles and Coltrane, and particularly Kind of Blue. I've listened to that album so many times that for the past couple of years, I haven't hardly listened to anything else."[14] Almost two decades later, Palmer would write of the Allmans, "that if the musicians hadn't quite scaled Coltrane-like heights, they had come as close as any rock band was likely to get."[19] Rolling Stone would say in 2002 that the composition's performance found the musicians "lock[ed] together ... with the grace and passion of the tightest jazz musicians,"[20] while in 2008, it said the trills, crawls, and sustain of the guitar work represented "the language of jazz charged with electric R&B futurism."[11]
Following the Duane Allman solo the band drops off to a relatively brief but to-the-point percussion break by Trucks and Johanson reflecting Kind of Blue drummer Jimmy Cobb's work.[21] The full band then enters to recap the mid-tempo second theme, finishing the performance abruptly.[21] Several silent beats pass before the Fillmore audience erupts in riotous applause.[21]
The fact that people love this song enough to pick it apart technically like this is one of the good things in this world.
@@zburnham exactly This is my favorite live song of all time and top 5 song of all time for me
You need to listen to that entire album cover to cover. Often listed as perhaps the greatest live album ever
Sir, you are ready. It's time for Mountain Jam.
Yes, that’s Dicky taking the 1st guitar solo and Duane the 2nd. I once described the difference between Dicky’s playing (which I liked) and Duane’s playing (which, to this day, amazes me) to a friend as the difference between a bow & arrow (Dicky) and a rocket launcher (Duane). That said, it was how they played together and off of each other that made the magic. Thanks for playing this!❤
Besides The Allmans', Wishbone Ash also popularized two lead guitars. Wishbone Ash has been unfairly forgotten over time.
They took the Allman Brother's idea and mixed it with English folk. Both loved the Dorian mode.
Ohhh Live dates!!! Tied for one of the best live recording of the 70's with this one and several others
@@captainpike8908Phoenix is absolutely perfect.
Phoenix and Persephone ~ two great songs !!🤗💯✌
I saw them last year, Argus is one of my go to albums overall. They still bring it!
Duane Allman is wonderful on this fantastic album!
The long-awaited Rick Beato Warren Haynes interview is just out... Warren Haynes has such an incredible breadth of knowledge and humility aside from becoming one of the most accomplished live guitarists in music today... his thoughts on Dickey Betts are absolute must hear.. p
My favorite Allman Bros Song.. Simple and expressive. They have some great Jams, this is one of them.
Saw these guys, 3 times. Because one can't see them just once. They were that good! RIP Dickey!
My favorite Allman’s song and favorite jam song. Orgasmic groove maestros!
I’m a neurosurgeon in mid Pennsylvania. This song has been in my OR playlist for years.
Blue Sky off the Eat A Peach album features one of Duane Allman’s final recordings before his tragic death. This is a Dickie Betts song featuring alternating solos and a duet of Duane and Dickie.
You know what’s cooler than hearing great tunes on your channel? Watching the unabashed joy you have in grooving with the music. Thanks for making my Wednesday better 🎸🎶🎸🎶
Such an epic player & song. Good choice to honor Dickie.
I seen Dickie & Warren totally cover for Greg when he was too wasted. ABB was a special band that only comes along every once in a while. I never had a chance to see Duane but he and Dickie were the driving force for sure...RIP Mr. Betts
I'm so glad for Greg that he got clean before he died. I've seen interviews where he talks about it. His pain and pride were moving to watch.
I really enjoyed this. Thanks for the background comments on the band.
Im 62, The Alman Brothers were my definitely my top 10 bands in the 70s. I love watching you play the piano, with the group! You were having fun!🎵 Dixie Rock !🇺🇲
Dickey and Duane were listening to Miles and the Trane before Dickey wrote this. You can really hear the Coltrane influence in this piece.
While I was collecting the back catalogs of my 10 favorite bands, I was turned on to this live album and didn't get a chance to buy anything by The Allman Brothers. I was a late bloomer when I heard this album in 1989 spending most of my income on rent, car insurance, and concert tickets. Not much leftover for food and albums. One day soon, I hope to buy this album which has the phenomenal Whipping Post on it also.
Hi Doug. Worth noting - the original lineup was captured on video only very rarely. One of the best clips is a clip of them performing this song. There's also a complete Whipping Post also worth hearing from that same date in 1970. Thanks for checking this out. RIP Dickie ETA: Dickie takes the first solo, then Duane on the second.
not only that, but they were literally inches from each other on stage
The Allmans are seriously and underrated band outside jam band and country music circles in this day. I try and talk about the Allmans and related bands with the common folks my age (30s-40s) and I'm still surprised how many people out there aren't familiar with them.
Rock. Jazz. Bossa nova. Gospel. "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" has it all. Brilliant stuff - I was hoping you would get around to this one at some point. Thank you.
Shhhh Doug! Duane an Dicky are playing!
I agree couldn’t say it better myself… concentrate on the music
Dynamics! and groove. Lots of "blue" notes for flavor. Miles Davis a big influence. Imagine being there and hearing this for the first time. Mind blowing telepathic communication from the band. Duane takes 2nd guitar solo. Duaue was the leader and band director. Just about Nobody except for Greatfull Dead doing this kind of thing at the time.
Doug you could not have picked a better song!
They always have been and always will be my favorite band. A flavor for every mood. I just want to give a nod to the badass bass line that Berry Oakley was laying down. He always gave it just a bit more funk. So glad you gave this a listed, Doug!
Thank you so much for playing this song - it has accompanied me since my youth, and I am 66 now. My suggestion: The Monika Roscher Bigband from Germany, she just won the German Jazzprice 2024 - finest compositions since Frank Zappa imho
Wow, what a great track ❤
my favorite live song of all time
Yes, me too - it's wonderful beyond words
If you haven't already, you should check out Dire Straits' live album from 1993, "On the Night." This album takes music from the album "Brothers in Arms" and other sources. The album was recorded in 1992 from live shows in France and The Netherlands. I think you'll like it.
bought this album in 1971 and it's always been on of my favourites....
The last OG member is known as Jaimo
Great song from the greatest live album.
Thanks for this tribute Doug. By listening to the playing style, phrasing and tone I would say: Dickey was the first solo, Duane the second.
RIP Mr. Betts, "The King of the Major Pentatonic Scale"...I've had the absolute privilege to see your greatness live in the late 80s...
So sorry for his passing. However, Quicksilver Messenger Service pioneered the double melodic lead guitar.
12:40 is when Dwayne starts on lead guitar.
Rip Mr Betts
It was Dicky when you asked. It was Duane in the later solo. For the entire Live At Fillmore Dicky is in your right ear and Duane is in your left ear, assuming you have your headphones on correctly. Awesome jazzy tune, one of the best! Also, in the drum interlude, it's Jaimoe in the left ear and Butch in the right ear.
This song is a jazz/rock masterpiece 😌❣️
When I'm in hospital and on life support, put that song on and play. If my eyes don't open at the end. Unplug!😂
A great piece of art. Maybe the ABB at their pinnacle.
I'm a huge Dickey Betts fan. Thank you. That was nicely done. I love how you explained the music and joined in.
Nobody performing today could write something like this, complicated, fused, piece of beautiful music, and we're not better off for it.
There are actually many people capable of this. The tragic part is that they can’t get a record contract and would never get traction in a 20 second TikTok, which is apparently a necessity for commercial success now
From Dickey's opening volume swells to Duane's fiery ending, just superb.
Mountain Jam next :D
Yesssss
The live acoustic version of Elizabeth Reed from An Evening with The Allman Brothers is fantastic.
Doug: You should watch the videos of The Allman Brothers on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Doc Severinsen and some of the brass section from The Tonight Show Band sits in with The Allman Brothers for a song. It's here on CZcams. 😊
P.S. Doug: BTW Johnny Carson was a drummer. I don't think he played professionally, though.
Legendary. And I'm only a few years younger than many of these guys, maybe 10 years. I never get tired of listening to this.
GOAT Live Record. No arguments.
Something i noticed early on... When both lead guitars were playing, it sounded as if both guitars were very slightly detuned from each other, slightly sharp or slightly flat. It gives the guitars a sort of "celesta" effect. It's easy to miss without headphones. This is an effect that is frequently used in theatre pipe organs.
That’s how Robin Brian helped Billy Gibbons find his sound on the first album. Duane and Dickey do not practice that, however. Not intentionally,anyway.
IMHO the best live song ever recorded
An essential listening experience.
Yes Doug, listening to the Allman Bros will always make one want to play; infectious melody play, riffs, players listening and playing. :D Enjoy you enjoying!
Liz may be my favorite from Les Brers, although "Les Brers", "Dreams I'll Never See", and "Revival" are right up there. And Mountain Jam. And Gregg's "Multi-Colored Lady". When Liz Edwards died I wrote an "In Memory" for her. Thanks for your tribute to Mike Pinder. He was an inspiration, a lodestone, and a touchstone. A stony guy. Cathartic.
@@user_aikensc927 Amazing times and memories. Did Red Dog wear a load of turquoise and silver? I vaguely remember a party where someone connected with the band, who was decked out as mentioned, and had some smoke that turned me into a vegetable for an hour or so, and who, now that I recall, resembled Benjamin Orr of the Cars. I was and am again in Charlotte, up the street.
I love the Am9 to start, played way up the neck. You get the bow effect commonly with volume swells
First solo is DIckey
Amazing solo - a great example of the play a wrong note, make it a feature approach. Dickey turns a mistake in that first phrase into a melodic motif until you hear it as normal - really thinking on your feet!
Yes. Plays slightly cleaner tone.
@@grahamnunn8998 interesting way of hearing/looking at it, but im pretty sure thats actually part of the scale hes playing? Doesnt really matter though cool either way!
@@lorenzo6mmMy understanding is that Dickey used a 100-watt Marshall head in this era, in contrast to Duane’s 50-watt. As a result, Duane’s amp started breaking up at a lower volume, which gave him the dirtier tone and Dickey the cleaner (which makes sense when I think about it, given Dickey’s country influences)
@@johnhoerl7326
Yes. He also used distortion boxes with weak batteries. Quote from Berry O.
Try "Stormy Monday" from this album. That is one great live song. So well done.
My favourite album and this song is my favourite piece of recorded music.
dicky right headphone, duane left side
That's my favorite song by the Allman Brothers Band
If there was ever a video to demonstrate how little interest Doug has in musical solos/improvisation, it's this one. He couldn't just listen for more than 10 seconds lol.
The first concert I ever saw was the Allman Brothers Band in 1975. I was almost 12, and it was life changing. Duane and Berry were gone, but with the pick up of Chuck Leavell was something really cool. Watching Dickey and Chuck trade off solos and Gregg was amazing. When they played this tune, Chuck took the first solo on piano, then Gregg's solo, then Dickey took the final solo. And for the rest of his time in the band, Dickey always would take the solo slots that were once Duane's. A little side note, just four years after I saw the ABB in '75, my cousin Debbie gives birth to a baby boy and they name him Derek. And before his 20th birthday, Derek would be announced as the new guitarist for the band. That summer of '99 with Derek and Dickey was a very special one. Rest well Ranger. You've done a damn good job.
I was lucky enough to go to the same high school as Greg and Duane. Greg always called Daytona home.
My FAVORITE Allman Brothers song!
It's hard to believe a man Doug's age had never heard that before! It's ubiqitous as (in many people's opinion) the best song on the best rock live album ever. Well, now he has, and seems to have enjoyed what the rest of us hve known about for decades.
And just roughly 2 1/2 years earlier ? Gregg was not known as a keyboard player, per se. He was brought into the band by his brother for his vocals. They bought Gregg a Hammond, put a large red bow on it, along with some beer & massive joints and told him. "Surprise, it's yours- we need you to learn this thing".....
An accomplished musician already, this was no problem for Gregg....
🚬😎👍
Nice Jazz feel to this. A bit of a fusion approach for a rock band.🤔
I love the build of this song. I keep thinking they cant possibly one up the last go around. Surprise they do. They are absolutely cooking on this live version. My goodness
Thanks for doing this one, Doug! Duane Allman is on my Mount Rushmore of guitar influences and Dickey (this song in particular) is not far behind. I literally practiced with this album 2x a day for an entire summer in middle school to learn every single note and still remember most of it 20+ years later.
ABB Opus 🎼🎸they were so young, how old was Duane or Dicky when they recorded this LP🙏🏼
Jessica was named for his daughter and Blue Sky was named for his wife Sandy Bluesky.
I am in New Orleans, Greg loved it here he would go to the small not crowded bars and just sit at the bar and have a beer
I saw Gregg sit in at the Maple Leaf, a few years before his death. He was headlining Gretna Fest, and the band scheduled for the Leaf a night or two prior was his backing band, but most people didn't know that.
He sat in for three or four tunes during their second set. My dad and I headed over to Jacques Imo's for some late night eats after Gregg left the stage. He was then seated next to us, about ten or fifteen minutes later. My dad (about Gregg's age) spoke with him for a few minutes as we both were leaving.
Rest in Peace Dickey!
FYI: When you play the shaker, the volume of the music drops back substantially.
Also, though Jai Johanny Johanson (aka 'Jaimoe') is occasionally listed on percussion, he is actually on drums, playing a small jazz kit. He was the original drummer, though Butch Trucks was added to increase the robustness of the rhythm section. It did MUCH more than that, especially with the Berry Oakley's constantly prowling bass lines. Like Duane and Dickey, the rhythm section were also stars - they made this music move.
A friend of mine called the Allman Brothers Band 'the Count Basie Band of rock 'n' roll', which is surely apt.
'Les Breres in A Minor' and 'Mountain Jam' (inspired by Donovan's 'First There is a Mountain') are two other great instrumentals, as is the band's interpretation of the Spencer Davis Group's 'Don't Want You No More', which opens the first album.
🙏RIP Dickey 💗
Hello from Denmark
He’s rolling the volume knob with his pinky while playing the notes.Watch a live Jeff Beck to see that technique
Great driving song
We enjoyed a 3AM, 45 minute jam of "Elizabeth Reed" at the State Bridge venue in Colorado, about 12 years ago, with six guitarists 🎸... only a couple dozen of us (workers or guests) were still awake for it.
Btw: Allmans were the last act at Watkins Glen: July 28, 1973.
Yes, I was there...
Dickey plays the first solo , Duane the second solo.
Cheers Doug,
ABB happy memories of Richard Forrest Betts.
Thank you Doug, this was awesome!
Was at that concert...
Thank you, I needed this..
"Seven Turns" is a great D.B. song. If you have never stopped off in Macon, you're missing something special if you are an ABB fan. The Big House where they lived and is now a museum, is not far off I 75. The cemetery is across the interstate, but it has it's on intrigue with the brown river and train tracks just down the hill from some of the bands final resting place.
Volume swells on the guitar in the beginning, very quickly hitting the note and rolling up the volume knob from 0.
Hi Doug. Thanks for the tribute to Dickey Betts. Just a small correction, the drummers name, affectionately called Jaimo, is pronounced "Jay Johnny Johnson", despite the spelling. Duane even pronounces his name on the Eat a Peach album at the end of "Mountain Jam". He says, "Berry Oakley, Dickey Betts, Butch Trucks, Jay Johnny johnson, Gregg Allman, and I'm Duane Allman. Thank you."
IMHO this is in the top 10 of greatest songs ever❗️
I just saw in the paper that P. D. Q. Bach died. Last member of the Bach family. I'd love to request a reaction to one of his works. His 5th symphony, Oedipus, Overture, and Fugue are all worthy starting points.