Showing posts with label Allman Brothers Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allman Brothers Band. Show all posts

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Old music made new again: My favorite reissues of 2014



In my last post I listed my favorite music from 2014.

Everybody and their dog compiles annual best-of lists, and I’m no exception. My son, daughter-in-law, and a few friends do the same.

Many of these pet-and-owner combos also make annual lists of favorite repackaged music – reissues, music recorded years ago, but reconfigured or spruced up and sold again for one reason or another.

There are several general types of reissues:  First, since the dawn of the CD era, in the late 1980s, every year has produced a crop of albums that originally appeared on vinyl and are being reissued in digital format (often remastered from the original source tapes). Another type of reissue: Increasingly, the annual reissues include box sets – artist retrospectives or deluxe editions of significant recordings on the anniversaries of their original release. And the last several years have seen an increase in archival releases of concerts that are years or decades old. In most cases these concerts have never been released, although a few have seen release in limited form.

Well, 2014 was a significant year for each kind of reissued, repackaged music. Here are the ones that I really liked:

 “The Album Collection Vol. 1: 1973-84,” Bruce Springsteen: Bruce’s first seven albums, from “Greetings from Asbury Park” through “Born in the USA.” These are the records that established Springsteen as a rock legend and made him a superstar. All are freshly remastered, allowing fans to hear instruments and arrangements with new clarity. Not quite as significant as the Beatles complete albums in mono, but these are a big deal.

“Carter Barron Amphitheater, Washington D.C. July 17, 1976,” The Band: This concert was recorded not long before The Band called it quits. But Robbie Robertson, Levon Helm and the others still played with passion and precision, even if they couldn’t stand to be near each other. Do we need another live recording by the The Band, which gave us “Rock of Ages,” one of the great live albums of the rock era? Sure, why not? Not only is this a good performance, but it’s just the five of them, without the added horn section from “Rock of Ages.” That makes it  a different experience. 

“The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings,” The Allman Brothers Band: “Live at Fillmore East,” released in 1971, might be the greatest live album ever in rock music. It’s a stunning showcase for the Allman Brothers’ blend of blues, jazz and improvisation. This six-disc set consists of all the concerts that make up the source material of that landmark album, four shows from two nights in March. As a bonus, one disc consists of the June 1971 closing show at the Fillmore. As such, these complete, unedited performances don’t maintain the breath-taking brilliance of the original live album, but for the Allman Brothers fan, there are six hours of live performance here from the band’s creative peak, with plenty of improvisational magic. Not long afterward, leader Duane Allman and bassist Berry Oakley were both dead, and the band was in decline, destined to break up. But by the late 1980s they had reformed, replaced the fallen members, and were riding another creative peak. Performances from this era are documented in “Play All Night: Live at the Beacon Theater 1992,” a surprisingly strong two-disc set. Together, these two archival releases present almost eight hours of performance by one of the greatest live bands ever, from two different (but strong) eras.  

“The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11,” Bob Dylan: The original tapes from the legendary sessions recorded in 1967 by Dylan and The Band were discovered recently, restored, and released in two configurations: a six-disc complete set and a two-disc “raw” version. The Basement Tapes weren’t intended for release, but found their way to the public first as a bootleg in 1969. Then 16 of the recordings were officially released in 1975 by Columbia Records (albeit with overdubs).  These are the unadorned original recordings, restored to pristine sound and digitized. Not only are they historic, but they are a great listen.

Led Zeppelin remasters (I, II, III, IV and “Houses of the Holy”): Like the Springsteen box set, these are the albums on which a band’s legendary reputation is based. Fresh remasters of Led Zep’s first five albums make it possible to hear this music anew, even though repeated listenings might have dulled the music’s power and robbed it of its surprises. Each album comes with an extra disc. The debut album’s extra is a 1969 concert, but the others consist of alternate versions, instrumental tracks, extras, and such. Still, it’s essential listening.

“Performs Trouble No More Live at Town Hall, July 31, 2003,” John Mellencamp: I like Mellencamp’s populist take on heartland rock, but I’m not a huge fan of all his work. Nonetheless, I was bowled over by 2003's “Trouble No More,” in which he covered old blues, country and folk songs with simple, bracing arrangements. This is a live recording of that album, with a couple Mellencamp hits thrown in for good measure.

“Live in Nashville 1995,” Steve Earle: In which the alt-country hard-core troubadour performs songs from “Train A Comin’,” his 1995 album that signaled a comeback from drug addiction and prison. Earle is backed up by an all-star roster of acoustic pickers such as Norman Blake, Pete Rowan, and Roy Huskey, with guest appearances by Emmylou Harris and Bill Monroe. Beautiful and badass at the same time.

Worth further study: I haven’t heard any of the several “From the Vault” series of 1970s and 1980s concerts by The Rolling Stones. But I imagine before another year passes, I will.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

The Allman Brothers call it a career



A long, strange yet remarkable chapter in the history of popular music ended early the morning of Oct. 29. The Allman Brothers Band played the last encore of its last concert ever, capping a 45-year, off-and-on career marked by the deaths of two original members, All-World guitarist Duane Allman and bass guitarist Berry Oakley, and the firing of a third founder, co-lead guitarist Dickey Betts. Between 1969 and 2014 the Allman Brothers Band also experienced other personnel comings and goings, as well as drugs, celebrity marriage and divorce, decline, dissolution, redemption, and a resurgence over the past decade during which they played their improvisational blend of rock, blues and jazz with as much fire and daring as the early, glory days.

The Allman brothers formed in March 1969. They were just achieving creative and commercial breakthroughs by 1971, when Allman died in a motorcycle accident. Oakley died on a motorcycle a year later. The band might have folded. But Allman was replaced by a pianist, the gifted Chuck Leavell, and Lamar Williams filled Oakley’s bass seat. The newcomers joined original singer-keyboardist Gregg Allman, guitarist Dickey Betts, and drummers Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny Johanson, and by 1973 the band had its biggest hit, “Ramblin’ Man,” as well as the reputation and fame to headline stadium shows and massive rock festivals. But wealth and celebrity soon helped blow out their creative spark amid drugs, betrayal, and conflicting loyalties.

The Allman Brothers Band spent much of the 1980s on hiatus while some of the members pursued solo projects. In 1989 they re-emerged. With Allman, Betts, Trucks and Johanson joined by new second guitarist Warren Haynes, bassist Allen Woody and percussionist Marc Quinones, a re-energized band issued several studio and live albums in the ‘90s. But they couldn’t tolerate success again, and by the turn of the century, Haynes and Woody had left and Betts had been fired.

Yet the Allman Brothers Band reinvented itself again. Betts was replaced by Derek Trucks, the young nephew of Butch Trucks. Haynes returned, and bass guitarist Oteil Burbridge joined Quinones, Gregg Allmann, Trucks and Johanson. Their 2003 release “Hittin’ the Note” might have been their best album since 1973. They released a series of archival concert recordings from the early 1970s, some of which were very nearly as good as the classic 1971 “Live at Fillmore East.” And they have been releasing pristine-sounding CDs of virtually every concert they have played in recent years. A fan can go on their website today and order a box set of their entire last stand of shows at New York’s Beacon Theatre. As I write this, I’m waiting for my mail carrier to deliver a 3-CD set of the final concert, which according to several published reviews was marked by fiery and precise playing and singing matched only by a few concerts over the decades.

So this time, it appears that the reports of the death of the Allman Brothers Band will stick.

A fan video (not professional quality) of “Blue Sky” from the Allman Brothers’ final week of shows at the Beacon Theatre at New York:

Sources:



Allman Brothers Band website: http://www.allmanbrothersband.com/


Paul, Alan: Allman Brothers put focus on Duane at final Beacon Theatre Show”  posted Oct. 29, 2014, at Billboard.com: http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/6297018/allman-brothers-band-final-beacon-theatre-show-new-york