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Features

Published: 2013/03/01

by John Swenson

Duane Allman: A Matter of Influence

Earlier today we premiered “Happily Married Man” from Skydog: The Duane Allman Retrospective, the seven-CD, 129-song box set which is set for release on Friday, March 19. Today also marks opening night of the Allman Brothers Band’s 2013 Beacon Theatre run. In conjunction with both of these development, we present this article on Duane Allman’s life and music, which originally appeared in our April-May 2009 cover story on the ABB, which celebrated the group’s 40th anniversary.

Electric guitarists defined the rock era. A handful of players with signatures as recognizable as the great poets of history created a landscape that we still enjoy long after they’re gone. There will never be another Duane Allman, just as there will never be another Jimi Hendrix or Jerry Garcia, but generations of unborn players will continue to explore the new vistas that these visionaries charted.

Like Hendrix, Allman’s impact is particularly remarkable in that his achievements were accomplished in only a few years. Considering that The Allman Brothers Band is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, it’s amazing to think that Duane’s defining contributions to the band’s profile took place over the course of just two studio albums, part of a third and a live recording. Nevertheless the band’s signature, multi-show stand at New York’s Beacon Theater in March is an open tribute to Duane’s influence, not just on the Allman Brothers sound itself, but on American music in general.

“We’re making the whole Beacon run a tribute to Duane,” says Warren Haynes, who took over Duane’s role in the band 20 years ago, “and bringing in as many people who were connected with him as possible. His presence is felt quite a lot in the overall spirit of what we’re doing these days. We’re trying to really honor that and trying to even second-guess what his vision would have been and try to imagine where it would have gone.” How does someone who made such a brief appearance on the public stage manage to have such a lasting impact?

The first time you hear him play, Duane Allman alters your perception of how the electric guitar is capable of sounding. Duane’s sound marries seemingly contradictory elements, at once elegant and raw, balanced perilously on the scales of rhythmic and melodic demand. His single-note guitar lines are magnificently phrased constructions played with an arresting vibrato tone, a delicate floral interlace with the resilience of tree bark. His rhythm work is always perfectly suited to the needs of the composition, played with the precision of blues and R&B masters yet fierce in service of the flow and every bit as aggressive as his lead work. Duane’s playing lends urgency to its context, even at moments of reflection.

But Duane’s signature is his slide guitar playing, a chimerical Excalibur of a sound many would imitate but none could wield as he could. Duane’s slide playing sounds like the cry of a human voice, like the clarion call of church bells, like birdsong on a spring morning. Most importantly, Duane never stopped trying to grow as a musician, exploring a connection between blues, rock, country and jazz that is still being plumbed today.
His spirit guides the Allman Brothers every night.

“It was his band and in a very real way it still is his band,” says Derek Trucks, the gifted young guitarist who is celebrating his tenth year with the ABB. “With the guys that knew him who are still in the band you can see Duane’s presence and shadow moving at times. They’re very conscious of his original intention. It still guides the band in a way. He was such a powerful musical persona, such a powerful personality. Some of the ground rules he laid down 40 years ago are still driving the ship. That’s a serious presence.”

Comments

There are 5 comments associated with this post

Jordan March 1, 2013, 17:02:51

Love that you guys ran this article. A lot of young musicians don’t know who Duane Allman was, and they should! Although I enjoyed the article, there are a couple parts that are inaccurate. First and foremost, neither Warren or Derek has ever been a replacement for Duane. They both are simply additions, not replacements. I think even the band would tell you that! And secondly, Rick Hall never asked Duane to be a session guy. Duane went to Rick and asked if he could hang around the studios and be available if they needed him. It didn’t take long before he was offered a job but the beginning of his involvement with session work was all Duane just being Duane.

Andi Gisler March 1, 2013, 17:08:51

Layla and Other Assorted ROCK Songs? LOL Great article though!

Wayne Poole March 1, 2013, 21:13:55

“Ain’t my cross to bear” off the first album is the high water mark of rock & Roll. It don’t git no better than that.

ThatGuy March 4, 2013, 13:50:43

Glad to see you talked about Duane’s love for modal jazz and the influence it had on his music. I get so annoyed with rednecks who lump the Allman Bros. together with bands like Lynyrd Skynyrd, or worse yet, Molly Hatchet, etc. and call it all “Southern Rock,” as if that means something. Those other bands were cheap Allman Bros. knockoffs that didn’t have a technical understanding of music or chops that came CLOSE to Dwayne’s. I mean, to each his own, but I’m tired of rednecks who don’t know the difference between a saxaphone and a sousaphone staking claim to this music by calling it “Southern Rock.” If anything, it was jazz-fusion: blues rock fused with bebop-style jazz improv. In other words, the first GOOD jam band.

zimbo March 14, 2013, 21:18:21

BEST F-CKING BAND EVER!!! EVER!!!:)

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